Back in July you’ll recall that John McCain’s campaign ran a YouTube video that dubbed Barack Obama “the biggest celebrity in the world” and compared the candidate (still in the middle of his first term in the Senate) to Paris Hilton.
You know you’re over the target when you start receiving Good Morning America, and they and the rest of the enraptured legacy media were collectively infuriated by this ad:
Co-host Diane Sawyer hyperbolically derided the spot as a “political nuclear attack” and asserted that the campaign is taking “a strange new turn.”
GMA news anchor Chris Cuomo seemed equally flummoxed. He opened the show by asserting, “Some odd campaign news today. There’s a round of new campaign commercials that really have us scratching our heads here.” A bewildered Sawyer agreed: “What sort of committee meeting do you have where you say, ‘Let’s use Britney!’ ‘Let’s use Paris!’ Yes, that’ll be a blow!”
And for a time it was. In mid-September, when McCain was still leading in some polls, Rich Lowry wrote:
The enduring scandal of the McCain campaign is that it wants to win. The press had hoped for a harmless, nostalgic loser like Bob Dole in 1996. In a column excoriating Republicans for historically launching successful attacks against Democratic presidential candidates in August, Time columnist Joe Klein excepted Bob Dole — not mentioning that Dole had been eviscerated by Clinton negative ads before August ever arrived.
The press turned on McCain with a vengeance as soon as he mocked Barack Obama as a celebrity. Its mood grew still more foul when the McCain campaign took offense at Obama’s “lipstick on a pig” jab. “The media are getting mad,” according to Washington Post reporter Howard Kurtz. “Stop the madness,” urged Time’s Mark Halperin, exhorting his fellow journalists to fight back against the McCain campaign’s manufactured outrage.
One of the reasons why the “Celebrity” ad so angered the MSM was that it spoke to the heart of Obama’s appeal–it’s not ideas and policy oriented, it’s “largely aesthetic and personality-based”, as Peter Wehner writes in an excellent article at Commentary. Read the whole thing, but the main thesis is here:
Obama’s appeal, while widespread, is largely aesthetic and personality-based. This explains why a somewhat unsettling cult of personality has arisen around Obama. His appeal is not rooted in ideas or political philosophy or governing achievements; indeed, it is not grounded in any acts of governance. Yet some people already speak of him as a Lincolnian and Messiah-like figure.
But precisely because this appeal is largely aesthetic rather than substantive, because it is not grounded in things deep or permanent, its durability is limited. Reality will intrude. A million watt smile, fashionable sunglasses, and a nice jump shot are fine – I wish I possessed each of them – but one can confidently assume that Kim Jong Il, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Ayman al-Zawahiri, Hassan Nasrallah, and Hugo Chavez are immune to their charms. Inflation, deflation, and unemployment will not be determined by the eloquence of Obama’s rhetoric, the dinners he attends, or the columnists and reporters he seduces.
My point is really a rather simple one: Obama will be judged by the outcome of events. The other things are fine — but in the end, they are far less important, and in some cases they are evanescent. People magazine and the Style section of the Washington Post are fun, but they are not serious.
Right now Barack Obama, having been President for all of three days, appears to be sitting on top of the world. He is a bright, talented, and able man. But the world is an untidy and unpredictable place. Pakistan may convulse. Iran may well go nuclear on Obama’s watch; if so, Saudi Arabia and Egypt might soon follow, and the most unstable region in the world would be home to several nuclear powers.
Hard decisions need to be made, often based on incomplete information and rapidly changing events. Inter-agency clashes will occur. People and agencies thought to be competent will prove to be unreliable. Intelligence agencies will not be able to tell the President all that he wishes. A massive federal bureaucracy, an emboldened Congress, and other nations will begin to assert themselves. The law of economics will not be suspended. Entitlement programs remain unreformed and therefore unsustainable. Wasteful programs will refuse to die. The deficit is exploding. People’s expectations are soaring, and soon enough they will insist on results.
Barack Obama may or may not succeed as president; but whether he does or not, the things people are taken up with now will not be determinative. And if things get worse rather than better, if Obama appears overmatched by events, then what are viewed as strengths now will be seen as weaknesses later. The day’s vanity will become the night’s remorse.
Barack Obama is President of the United States, not a crown prince on a white horse. Fairy tales are fine; but fairy tales are childish things.
Which is my Michael Novak is speculating on “The Coming Fall”–when it will occur, and what might cause it.
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