Townhall
The
Uncool President
by Victor Davis Hanson
Nov 01, 2012
In
2008, Barack "No Drama" Obama was
the coolest presidential candidate America had ever seen -- young, hip,
Ivy
League, mellifluous and black, with a melodic and exotic name. Rock
stars vied
to perform at his massive rallies, where Obama often began his
hope-and-change
sermons by reminding the teary-eyed audience what to do in case of mass
fainting.
Money,
like manna from heaven, seemed to drop
spontaneously into his $1 billion campaign coffers. Ecstatic Hollywood
stars
were rendered near speechless at the thought of Obama's promised Big
Rock Candy
Mountain to come -- peace, harmony, prosperity and "5 million new
jobs" in renewable energy alone.
Even
the cynical Europeans went crazy over his
anti-George W. Bush candidacy, one gussied up with faux-Greek columns
and Latin
presidential mottoes. Huge rainbow-colored Obama signs sprouted like
weeds on
America's upscale suburban lawns, and hip-hoppers rapped out Obama
themes. All
of America, it seemed, wanted to believe in this largely unknown
newcomer.
The
giddy media declared Obama a "sort of
god," and "the smartest man with the highest IQ" ever to assume
the presidency. Somehow, even legs got into the hero worship, as
pundits
praised the sight of Obama's "perfectly creased pant," and one
commentator felt "this thrill going up my leg" when Obama spoke.
And
why not, when the soft-spoken, adaptable
African-American candidate preached civility and visions of a
postracial
America -- changing his speech from a white suburban patois to Southern
black
evangelical cadences as needed to woo widely diverse audiences.
Obama,
the most partisan member of the U.S.
Senate, promised a new post-political nonpartisanship. Almost by fiat,
he
declared an end to big debts, corruption, lobbyists, wars, unpopular
American
foreign policies and unlawful antiterrorism protocols…
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