Barack Obama’s Presidential Con

18 February 2008 1:11 am by Taylor Marsh

Barack Obama’s Presidential Con
cross-posted at Huffington Post




Rhetorical flourishes are inspiring, especially when they’re authentic. The
problem comes when they’re canned. Jake
Tapper
has a good run down on Obama’s convenient oratory. It would be one
thing if they came from the heart, or if what he was saying was actually original.
Unfortunately, they don’t and they aren’t. They’ve all been said before. “Yes,
we can reuse slogans!”
says
Ben Smith
. “You bet your life we can,” quips Deval Patrick. Si
Se Puede.
The word bamboozled comes to mind.

Deval Patrick in October, 2006:


” … All I have to offer is words, just words. ‘We hold these truths
to be self evident. That all men are created equal.’ Just words. Just words.
‘We have nothing to fear but fear itself.’ Just words. ‘Ask not what your
county can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.’ Just words.
‘I have a dream.’ Just words.”

Barack Obama in Wisconsin, February 16th, this past Saturday, as he tries to con Wisconsin voters in preparation for Tuesday’s primary:


“Don’t tell me words don’t matter. ‘I have a dream.’ Just words. ‘We
hold these truths to be self evident. That all men are created equal.’ Just
words. ‘We have nothing to fear but fear itself.’ Just words. Just speeches.”

A reader from Massachusetts emailed me this last night:


I confess, I’ve been lurking for several weeks now. I live in Western Massachusetts.
Guess what the lead-off story was on the local broadcast news tonight? Yes,
“Plagiarism?” It was all about how Obama’s “just words”
riff was strikingly similar to Deval Patrick’s speech from 2006. The story
included a grainy video of Patrick delivering his speech, and then the clip
from Obama’s speech the other night. The reporter mentioned that the two shared
campaign strategist, and that borrowing from others’ campaigns wasn’t that
uncommon. However, it could cause a problem for Obama because it raises the
idea that he may be just reading from a script. Then cut to the Hillary Clinton
saying it’s going to take more than speeches, it will take hard work.

It’s what the New York Observer wrote about earlier in January. Via writer
Steve
Kornacki
:


One small Obama-related detail from last night: The “Yes we can!”
refrain that Barack Obama trumpeted in his concession speech was actually
the campaign theme adopted by Deval Patrick, a top Obama supporter who rode
the slogan to the Massachusetts governorship in 2006.

Oh, but wait! Before the bleachers come crashing down, Governor Deval Patrick issued a statement on the mutual mission of Patrick and Obama, which also just happens to include mirrored language and speeches that are exactly alike. Patrick’s statement comes complete with… wait a minute. Excuse me, but the word gypsy must have run all out. Tapper offered Patrick’s ramblings in an update:


UPDATE: The Obama campaign has issued a statement from Gov. Patrick: “Sen.
Obama and I are long-time friends and allies. We often share ideas about politics,
policy and language. The argument in question, on the value of words in the
public square, is one about which he and I have spoken frequently before.
Given the recent attacks from Sen. Clinton, I applaud him responding in just
the way he did.”

Tapper’s
comments afterwards
are spot on.

The
Boston Globe
joined Deval Patrick with Barack Obama back in April of 2007. That was
two months after I reported on Obama’s flyover to skip the first issues debate in Carson
City, Nevada, which was followed by his subsequent phone in presentation, as he showed up unprepared
for the first health care debate
. (This all happened long before I became a partisan for Clinton.) Now it’s all these months later and all we’ve got today is a gullible traditional media sharing the same hope soda, while aiding and abetting
a political con job that’s sucked in independents by the droves in a DEMOCRATIC
primary race
.

Cons eventually catch up with you. Obama’s played his supporters for suckers.
They bought into the hope hype, sucking up this stuff with a straw, only to
find out Obama’s not an original, he’s a knock off, of a governor, no less. Siphoning off of a winning campaign to try to win the presidency with a formula. Hey, it’s politics. One campaign model fits ‘em all. Put your twenty bucks in the bucket and shut the hell up!

The traditional media, cable talking heads, and quite a few large progressive
blogs have regurgitated the Obama story like a pack of nomads wandering in the political desert in search of sustenance; people bankrupt of political or factual integrity looking for the answer and refusing to see what was in front of their faces all along. The question is whether the journalists who bought into the Obama hype, along with the cable talking heads who propped his campaign up, and the Obama blogs who didn’t care one whit about the facts or his record but were only interested in spreading their Hillary hatred, have got so much invested they won’t have the honesty, the integrity, and the moral courage to
back peddle on their craven cave in before it’s not only too late for them,
but too late for the Democratic party.

Barack Obama isn’t an original. He’s the first 21st century L. Ron Hubbard of politics, Elmer Gantry, name your huckster.

“I have a dream” just became “I have a con.”

 
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