http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2008/07/obamas-real-pat.html?loc=interstitial
skip

or

http://tinyurl.com/6n5mcu

- - -

Echoes of these attitudes can be found in Obama's now infamous explanation
that "bitter" working-class rural voters won't embrace him because they
"cling" to God, guns and bigotry. But Obama's sometimes messianic rhetoric
about "remaking" America - and the explicitly revolutionary aesthetics of
his campaign - also rings a bell. "I am absolutely certain," he proclaimed
upon clinching the Democratic nomination, "that generations from now, we
will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment
when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless;
this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet
began to heal." So wait, America never provided care for the sick or good
jobs for the jobless until St. Barack arrived? That doesn't sound like the
country most Americans think of when they wave their flags on the Fourth of
July.

Obama went on to say that he will "remake" the country. Well, what if you
don't want it remade? And Michelle Obama - who believes America is
"downright mean" and is proud of America for the first time because of her
husband's success - insists that Barack will make you "work" for change and
that he will "demand that you, too, be different." What if you don't want to
work for Obama's change? What if you don't want to be "different"?

America's 'Jedi Knight'

Liberals might giggle at what to them sounds like paranoia. But if you
aren't already entranced by Obama, Obamania can seem not only vaguely
anti-American but also downright otherworldly. Star Wars creator George
Lucas recently proclaimed that it's "reasonably obvious" Obama is a Jedi
Knight. Mark Morford, a particularly loopy San Francisco Chronicle
columnist, says Obama isn't really "one of us." Rather, he's a
"Lightworker," the sort of being who can help us find "a new way of being on
the planet." Self-help guru Deepak Chopra insists that an Obama victory
would bring about "a quantum leap in American consciousness." Even NBC's
Chris Matthews has been entranced by Obama's Jedi mind tricks. Obamania, he
says, is "bigger than Kennedy. . This is the New Testament."

The notion that what America needs is a redeemer figure to "remake" America
from scratch isn't necessarily unpatriotic. But for lots of Americans who
like America the way it is, it's sometimes hard to tell when it isn't.

- - -

And note this:

http://tinyurl.com/3ps3kj

Underneath all this messianic balderdash is "yet another rich liberal"
hanging out with the same tired old crowd of corrupt Dem party hacks,
promoting the same policies that caused real misery and poverty for millions
across the globe in the last century. The only consolation I take in all
this ridiculous hype is the apparent fact that he is really less of a
revolutionary and more of a fraud.

- Bob



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