I like Barack Obama. The Clintons, not so much. But the Clintons are right
and Obama is wrong.
Over the last week, the Obama camp has tried to suggest, insinuate, whisper
or wink that the Clintons are somehow racist. Obama's staff sent out a memo
compiling some quotes that allegedly demonstrate the "racial insensitivity"
of Hillary Clinton's campaign. The Obama folks are fanning the overreaction
to her suggestion that President Lyndon Johnson was a more substantive agent
of change on civil rights than the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Obama is also
fueling the flatly erroneous view that Bill Clinton called Obama's historic
run as the first credible black presidential candidate a "fairy tale."
(Clinton used that phrase in reference to Obama's claim to have been
consistently antiwar.)
However poorly the Clintons or their subalterns may have chosen their words,
does anyone seriously believe the Clintons are racists? Anyone? Anyone? Of
course not.
And this points to the real reason Obama's candidacy is a fairy tale, and it has nothing to do with being black or opposing
the war. It's because he's selling a dream, not reality.
Obama's whole campaign is based on some of the most noble and inspiring
sentiments in political life: hope, togetherness, bipartisanship. As he
proclaimed last February at a Democratic National Committee meeting: "There
are those who don't believe in talking about hope. They say, ŒWell, we want
specifics, we want details, and we want white papers, and we want plans.'
We've had a lot of plans, Democrats. What we've had is a shortage of hope.
And over the next year, over the next two years, that will be my call to
you."
He's stayed true to that pledge. Not only does he talk about hope - a lot -
he talks about the importance of talking about hope. He talks about how he
hopes to talk more about talking about the importance of talking about hope.
Hopefully.
He touts unity the same way. If we all buy into his "message of hope," he
explains, then everybody - blacks and whites, men and women, Republicans and
Democrats, lions and gnus, bears and park rangers, Superman and Lex Luthor -
will be united!
But united toward what end, exactly? Or does it all boil down to being
united about being hopeful and hopeful about being united?
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