Barack Obama echoes anti-Americanism of Europe in calling voters stupid 
President Obama and his fellow Democrats are mocking Republicans and the 
Tea  Party as stupid. But they could be the ones who look foolish on election 
day. 

 

 
 
Toby Harnden's American Way 
Published: 7:16PM BST 23 Oct  2010



 
 
 
So what is the closing argument of Barack Obama's Democrats before next  
Tuesday's midterm elections? The President is no longer the self-proclaimed  
"hope-monger" of 2008, who vaingloriously declared that his vanquishing 
Hillary  Clinton marked "the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow 
and 
our  planet began to heal". 
 
He has stopped patting voters on the back for  choosing, by voting for him, 
to listen not to their doubts or fears but to their  "greatest hopes and 
highest aspirations". Instead, he is berating _Americans_ 
(http://http//www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/)  (most of 
whom now do not 
believe  he deserves a second term) for not being able to "think clearly" 
because they're  "scared". 
 
Having failed to change Washington or, as he promised that  night in St 
Paul, Minnesota in June 2008, to provide "good jobs to the jobless"  
(unemployment was 7.7 per cent when he took office and is 9.6 per cent now),  
Obama is 
changing tack. 

 
Boiled down, the new Obama message to Americans is: you're too stupid to  
overcome your fears. To be fair, it's not entirely new. During the 2008  
campaign, Obama was caught on tape at a San Francisco fund-raiser saying it was 
 
not surprising that voters facing economic hardship "get bitter, they cling 
to  guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them".  
At a fund-raiser in Massachusetts this month, Obama spoke of Democrats 
having  "facts and science and argument" on their side. As opposed, presumably, 
to the  lies, superstition and prejudice that Republicans rely on.  
This year, Democrats have embraced with gusto the notion that Republicans,  
and by extension anyone thinking of voting for them, are dimwits. Their 
mirth  over the likes of Tea Party figures like Christine O'Donnell, the former 
 anti-masturbation activist who once she had "dabbled" in witchcraft and is 
now a  no-hoper Senate candidate in Delaware, seems to know no bounds.  
The most chortling of all about the populist Tea Party and its anti-tax,  
anti-government uprising against the Republican establishment can be found on 
 the shows of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, the edgy liberal satirists 
on  Comedy Central. Mocking Republican candidates last week, Stewart declared 
the  midterm elections as "the best chance ever for a bowl of fresh fruit" 
to be  elected.  
Three days before the elections, Stewart will hold a "Rally to Restore  
Sanity" in Washington on the same day as Colbert, who adopts the character of a 
 Right-wing talk show host, leads a "March to Keep Fear Alive". The  
thinly-disguised message: Republicans are crazies who trade on fear.  
In choosing California and Massachusetts, two of the most liberal states in 
 the union, to demean ordinary Americans during election campaigns, Obama 
did not  display a whole lot of his much-vaunted intelligence. But Obama's 
decision to  plug Stewart's rally approvingly and appear on his show three 
days beforehand is  even more foolish.  
In the 1990s, Democrats managed to get away from their image as "eggheads" 
in  the 1950s or "pointy-headed liberals" in the 1970s. Bill Clinton spoke 
like a  Good Ol' Boy from the Deep South, ate junk food and enjoyed trashy 
women. He was  clever, but he did not look down on people.  
Obama, by contrast, has become a parody of the Ivy League liberal smugly  
content with his own intellectual superiority and pitying the poor idiots who 
 disagree with him. It is an approach that shares much with the default  
anti-Americanism of British and European elites, who love to mock the United  
States as a country full of gun-toting, bible-clutching morons.  
David Cameron has made nods to this sniffy condescension, speaking of the  
Sarah Palin phenomenon as being "hard for us to understand" (how about 
giving it  a go, Dave?) and describing American conservatism, inaccurately, as 
moving in a  "very culture war direction". This might be part of the reason 
why he seems to  have hit it off with Obama.  
The problem for Obama and the Democrats is that belittling the Tea Party  
movement, which is taking hold of much of Middle America, merely fuels the  
popular sense that the party in power is out of touch. It also highlights the 
 reluctance of Obama and the Democrats to discuss the Wall Street bail-out, 
 economic stimulus and health care bills because they know they are not 
vote  winners.  
Joining the Europeans in mocking ordinary Americans for their supposed 
idiocy  may play well at big-dollar fund-raisers. In adopting this as a 
political  strategy, however, the Democrats could be the ones who end up 
looking 
stupid. 


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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