Sandy Hook

Sandy Hook

Friday, December 11, 2009

Obama's Nobel speech draws praise

Within a span of five months The Washington Post gave op-ed space to Sarah Palin to display her ignorance on rhe economy and on climate change. In the latter piece she urged President Obama to boycott the climate conference in Copenhagen. Perhaps feeling the sting from the resulting criticism, the newspaper carried a collection of three columns today praising the president's acceptance speech as he received the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo.

Eugene Robinson, in an op-ed piece, began by observing, "Hawks who suspected -- and doves who hoped -- that Obama was a secret pacifist will see that although he did not set out to be a "war president," he has accepted his fate."

A senior administration official, speaking not to be quoted by name, told me this week that the day Obama decided on the troop increase was the toughest so far for the president. The options, according to this official's account, were all bad.

Kathleen Parker called it "An American triumph at Oslo."Anyone still questioning whether he is really a Christian, rather than a Muslim aligned with fanaticism, needs to seek therapy forthwith."

Obama's speech, an artful balance of realism and idealism, was both a Judeo-Christian epistle, conceding the moral necessity of war, and a meditation on American exceptionalism. He was, in other words, the unapologetic president of the United States and not some errant global villager seeking affirmation.

I was listening to a couple of women on the street being interviewed by NPR. They complained that the president had not mentioned America and that he had not praised America. This kind of criticism not only indicates that they are deaf or they simply don't listen but also that they are members of a well-known faction that likes to shout down everyone else.

Of the 4,000 or so words Obama uttered, those most soothing to American ears, if not so much to those sitting closer, were Obama's paean to the sacrifices and gifts of his countrymen. He reminded the world that, whatever mistakes we've made, the United States has shed its blood and spent its treasure to enable democracy and to promote peace and prosperity around the world.

Dan Balz tries to reconcile Obama's early antiwar rhetoric with prevailing realities.

The incongruity of a president accepting the peace prize at a time when his nation is conducting battles in Iraq and Afghanistan was lost on no one, most notably Obama. He confronted this head-on.

Now Obama is commander in chief, and Afghanistan is his battle. Finishing the fight with bin Laden and al-Qaeda is his responsibility. In Oslo, he confronted all those realities, bearing burdens that no candidate ever does.

Finally, the mainstream media is featuring the president in a positive light instead of focusing on the antics of the crazies - the ones on the street and the ones in Congress. In a refreshing change, The Washington Post has been joined by most of her sister papers.

8 comments:

  1. The American Corporate media has always beat the war drums. They no longer investigate anything. They only parrot the Pentagons orders.

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  2. Sadly, that's true most of the time but the media became unrelentingly critical of the Vietnam War.

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  3. I just got a chance to see it tonight. It was a great speech. I excerpted it and just made a post about it.

    I believe future Americans will quote it when defining America and war.

    Thankfully it will replace the quote lately about America and war, something about "Dead or Alive."

    Amazing how a little class can so totally change perceptions.

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  4. What always impresses me about Obama is his relentless will to be credible and, in his own words, "tell you not just what you want to hear, but what you need to know".

    I noted his comment on the deployment of additional troops to Afghanistan, "some of them will kill, and some of them will be killed", as being reflective that the evil of war is not just the suffering you incur, but the moral weight of the actions you take.

    The president before him, being a shallow and incurious man, thought moral weight came of its own with leadership. That if you wore the suit, sat in office, and talked the talk, then righteousness would be self-manifesting.

    Obama. on the other hand. demonstrates the conviction that you have to be concerned with justice and humanity as a place to begin to decide, and then execute policy. It's a hell of a sea change.

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  5. 'The president before him, being a shallow and incurious man, thought moral weight came of its own with leadership. That if you wore the suit, sat in office, and talked the talk, then righteousness would be self-manifesting.'

    Sadly, this a long-standing belief in many corners of Western civilization.

    Jean-Jacques Rousseau believed that, during an election, a higher power worked through the citizens as they voted for their leaders and policies. The resulting decisions were the holy 'will of the people' and were entirely sancrosanct, representing ALL of the people, even the losing side. He believed elected government was therefore divinely ordained; the elected government had the same power and purvue as any king and its decisions were automatically moral.

    Hello French Revolution.

    Thomas Jefferson thought democracy made voters smarter and more moral and ensured the correct decisions would always be made. Modern American conservatives tend to share this Jeffersonian notion that democracy ensures moral and intellectual superiority.

    Unless they lose, of course.

    Then the winner is a Satanic Communist.

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  6. RZ: Why did I have a feeling you were going to zero in on "became?" ; )

    Tom: I think reading the speech is actually more beneficial and even powerful. There are copies everywhere but here's one:

    http://annette-justmylittlepieceoftheworld.blogspot.com/2009/12/pres-obamas-nobel-acceptance-speech.html

    Magpie: I cut the following, along with other text, because the piece was getting too long. It may have been a mistake. Anyway, Robinson remarked:

    "A senior administration official, speaking not to be quoted by name, told me this week that the day Obama decided on the troop increase was the toughest so far for the president. The options, according to this official's account, were all bad."

    ER: Thanks for the background.

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