this article briefly mentions Rick Perry's secession remark.  This week on Real 
Time, Bill Maher talked about that again too.  He pointed to Perry's secession 
comment and added:

but now that the flu is getting worse, suddenly being alone on the Mexican 
border doesn't seem so romantic anymore! 

A flu virus is evolution we can see.  A virus has to adapt and change to stay 
alive.  You don't get to oppose evolution, global warming & stem cell research 
and then run to science just because you get the flu! 

Creationism and evolution are not opposing, but equally legitimate theories and 
deserve to be treated as such.  It is possible to accept both at the same time.

Viruses adapt to survive, Just like all other organisms, with the possible 
exception of the RNC!!

Enough With the 100 Days Already 
By FRANK RICH
Published: May 2, 2009 
BELIEVE it or not, there are Americans who have a "very negative" opinion of 
Barack Obama (13 percent, in the Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll). Some are 
even angry at him (10 percent, New York Times/CBS News). As the First 100 Days 
hoopla started to jump the shark last week, I tried, as an experiment in 
empathy, to see the world through their eyes.

 
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Frank Rich 

It was difficult at first, but an interview with the official White House 
photographer, Pete Souza, on CNN, pushed me over the edge. Souza was showing 
all those beguiling behind-the-scenes pictures that, though government issued, 
were more or less passed off as journalism by virtually every news outlet in 
the land. 
Inevitably we got to The Dog. "I want to show this picture because I find this 
to be a fascinating picture," said the CNN anchor John King, who found almost 
every picture fascinating. "The president running down the hall with his new 
jogging partner there, Bo." What, he asked Souza, is it like "to add this to 
the diversity of your work at the White House?" 

I'll leave the photographer's answer to your imagination. But for a second, 
anyway, I could imagine what it's like to be among the Limbaugh-Cheney 
deadenders who loathe Obama. Those who feel the whole world is against them. 
Those who think the press corps is in the tank. Those so sickened by the 
fawning that they'd throw a brick through the television screen if the 
Bush-Cheney economy had left them with enough money to buy a new set.

But only for a second. I confess to being among the 81 percent (per Wall Street 
Journal/NBC) who like the guy. And I share the belief of nearly two-thirds of 
the American people (per every poll) that he has made an impressive start. The 
new president is largely doing what he promised, and he is doing it with the 
focus, brainpower and preternaturally calm temperament that kept his campaign 
on track even as the political press dismissed him as a hope-mongering naif 
next to the supposedly far more organized and more moneyed Hillary. 

That the same crowd is over the top now in its praise says more about the news 
business than Obama. The journalism industry is fighting for its life. Obama is 
the one reliable product that moves the market for newspapers, magazines and 
television. No wonder so many special sections, special issues and special 
cable marathons have alighted on the 100 Days. 

All those great report cards! Trying to stand out in this over-caffeinated 
throng of hagiographers, a Time pundit sprinkled his evaluations with A-pluses. 
One of them was for Michelle Obama, whose approval rating is even higher than 
her husband's. Hard to believe that just a year ago some of the same 
commentators were questioning her pride in America, and that Christopher 
Hitchens, writing in Slate, was seriously arguing that her 1985 Princeton 
thesis linked her by association to the views of Stokely Carmichael and Louis 
Farrakhan.

Of course the high marks, mine included, are all ludicrously provisional. It's 
too early to judge the results of any Obama policy. What we do know is that his 
leadership is restoring the country's faith in itself and the future; the spike 
in the number of Americans who say we're on the "right track" is eye-popping. 
And, for all the politicians and pundits who complain that Obama is attempting 
too much at once, many of us like the breadth of his ambition. Doing too much 
at the same time, even at the risk of failure, is a core American trait that 
built the nation. It's as American as Benjamin Franklin, "Moby-Dick," the New 
Deal and a double cheeseburger with all the toppings. 

We'll see how Obama's vast plans play out. We'll see what unexpected 
nightmares, bigger than the swine flu, materialize on his watch. The 100 Days 
celebrations could not fade soon enough, because neither he nor the country 
should be lulled into resting easy. There are at least two toxic fiefdoms to 
keep the president and us awake at night: Pakistan and Wall Street. Both could 
wreak further untold catastrophe. Obama has control over neither, and in the 
case of the financial sector, he is fielding a team dominated by Robert Rubin 
protégés whose wisdom remains, to put it generously, unproven.

But if those are the obvious hotspots for this presidency, there is also the 
domestic political culture to worry about. The Republican Party has collapsed, 
and that is not a good thing for the country or for Obama. We need more than 
one functioning party, not just to ensure checks and balances and pitch in 
ideas at a time of crisis, but to temper this president's sporadic bursts of 
overconfidence and triumphalist stagecraft. No one is perfect. We must remember 
that there is also an Obama who gave us "You're likable enough, Hillary," a 
faux presidential seal and a convention speech delivered before what Sarah 
Palin rightly mocked as "Styrofoam Greek columns" hauled out of a "studio lot."

That Obama needs a serious counterweight in the political arena. But the former 
party of Lincoln and liberty has now melted down to a fundamentalist core of 
aging, rural Dixiecrats and intrusive scolds - as small as 20 percent of the 
populace in the latest polls. Its position on the American spectrum of ideas is 
somewhere between a doomsday cult and Scientology. 

Arlen Specter's defection is the least of the Republicans' problems, a lagging 
indicator. Though many characterize his departure as a "wake-up call" for the 
party, it's only the most recent of countless wake-up calls the party has slept 
through since 2006. That was the year that Specter's Pennsylvania Republican 
colleague in the Senate, Rick Santorum, lost his seat by a margin of more than 
17 percentage points. Despite that rout and many more like it of similar 
right-wing candidates throughout America, the party's ideological litmus test 
is more rigid than ever. The G.O.P. chairman, Michael Steele, and enforcers of 
Republican political correctness like William Kristol and the blogger Michele 
Malkin jeered Specter and cheered his departure. A laughing Limbaugh seconded 
e-mail from listeners commanding Specter to "take McCain with you - and his 
daughter." 

You can't blame the president if he is laughing, too. As The Economist recently 
certified, the G.O.P. is now officially in the throes of "Obama Derangement 
Syndrome." The same conservative gang that remained mum when George W. Bush 
praised Putin's "soul" and held hands with the Saudi ruler Abdullah are now 
condemning Obama for shaking hands with Hugo Chávez, "bowing" to Abdullah, 
relaxing Cuban policy and talking to hostile governments. Polls show 
overwhelming majorities favoring Obama's positions. But his critics have locked 
themselves in the padded cell of an alternative reality. Not long before The 
Wall Street Journal informed its readers that 81 percent of Americans liked 
Obama, Karl Rove wrote in its pages that "no president in the past 40 years has 
done more to polarize America so much, so quickly." 

>From derangement it's a small step to madness. Last week, the president of a 
>prime G.O.P. auxiliary, the Concerned Women for America, speculated that the 
>president's declaration of "a state of emergency about the flu was a political 
>thing" to push through Kathleen Sebelius's nomination as secretary of health 
>and human services. At those tax-protesting "tea parties" on April 15, signs 
>and speakers portrayed Obama as a "fascist," a "socialist," a terrorist and 
>Hitler. Republican governors have proposed rejecting stimulus money for their 
>states (only to fold after constituents rebelled) or, in the notorious 
>instance of Rick Perry of Texas, toyed with secession from the union. 

But this is funny only up to a point. It was in 1937 - the year after the 
Democratic landslide left the Republican national ticket with a total of eight 
electoral votes - that a hugely empowered F.D.R. made two of the biggest 
mistakes of his presidency. He tried to pack the Supreme Court with partisan 
allies and, overconfidently judging the economy recovered, retreated from the 
New Deal by instituting spending cuts that prompted a fresh economic tailspin.

In the current climate Obama mustn't drink his own Kool-Aid. As the 100 Days 
rollout reminded us, he remains a master at promoting and controlling his and 
his family's image for maximum effect, down to each picture of Bo. The Obama 
White House has been more adept and broad-based than any of its predecessors at 
working the media, whether "Access Hollywood" or ESPN, Leno or YouTube, Us 
Weekly or what remains of newspapers. As Angela Burt-Murray, the editor of 
Essence, a magazine aimed at black women, recently told The Los Angeles Times 
after negotiating access to the Obamas for a photo spread, "There's definitely 
a science to the way they're approaching this."

That's why it was alarming to learn that a White House official had authorized 
that idiotic public-relations photo shoot for Air Force One at the Statue of 
Liberty. We've just lived through a hubristic presidency that delighted in 
staging propagandistic stunts to remake reality - Friday was the sixth 
anniversary of "Mission Accomplished" - and we don't need another. The real 
Obama, unlike his predecessor, is more than strong enough as he is, without the 
steroids of excessive stage management. It will be incumbent on him now to 
remain grounded when there is so little opposition, in the political arena or 
most anyplace else, to challenge his high-flying course.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/03/opinion/03rich.html?_r=1

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"WebTV Dawgs/Dittos" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/WebTV-Pals
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

<<inline: ts-rich-190.jpg>>

Reply via email to