news-record.com

OPINION

Advertisement | Advertise with Us

Ed Cone: Obama needs to hurl more lightning bolts

Sunday, October 11, 2009
(Updated 3:00 am)

 

During the 2008 presidential campaign, it was alleged in certain quarters that Barack Obama was some sort of closet radical. The charge was implausible at the time, and now, after 11 months of plodding pragmatism, it seems downright laughable.

Sometimes, though, I wish Obama would look in that closet to see if there's just a little radicalism in there. Not just in terms of his agenda, although there are areas in which he could do more and do it faster, but in his tone and moral leadership.

What seems lacking in this presidency is a sense of urgency, and a sense of outrage. Obama does not do urgency or outrage. He is serious about the issues at hand, but his style is cool and wonkish. That may be a wise approach in terms of policy, but it feels inadequate in terms of politics. Sometimes, you need a bully in that pulpit, a little less Spock and a little more Kirk.

Maybe Obama is doing things right, moving calmly in the face of multiple crises, reminding us of the danger of fear itself. It takes time to turn a battleship around, and Obama is trying to steer a whole fleet of them. Perhaps, as Jon Stewart said about the health care debate, Obama is playing a Jedi mind game and will end up with much of what he wanted in the first place.

His administration has had some important successes. The financial system, although less healthy than it pretends to be, appears to have been rescued from a Depression-spawning spiral. The stimulus program, although weaker than it should have been, is working more or less as planned. There have been smaller wins, on things like the Internet policy of network neutrality, which bode well for the future.

But the New Normal feels too much like the Old Normal. The message is that we're going to heal slowly and resume business as usual, but that's not really the message we need.

I'd like to hear some passion from the president about undoing unemployment and his vision for future growth. What is it that puts Americans back to work, and how do we help people in the meantime? How does an economy built on consumer spending thrive when consumers are wisely sitting on their wallets, and when some measure of thrift is desirable even in flush times? What replaces the borrow-and-spend model that got us into this mess?

We also need a clear and inspiring message on Afghanistan, a problem that Obama inherited and now owns. Strategy, execution and end point, please.

And I'd like a bit more fire in the belly when it comes to taking on Wall Street. We need substantial reform of the financial system, but we are discussing incremental changes. I understand that we just took these guys off life support, but we also just passed billions of dollars to Goldman Sachs, the better to pay out bonuses to the same people who fueled the bubble.

Challenging corporate power and standing up to the corporate wing of the Democratic Party is no easy thing, and it shows. Obama has made noises about transparency and lobbyist reform, but the lobbyists are thriving and the insurance companies are licking their chops over health care reform, on which the pharmaceutical industry already cut itself a nice deal behind closed doors. Maybe some of that is necessary horse-trading, but it smells like horse-something-else.

I understand that the guy can't clean the stables all at once, and not every problem involving a Democrat -- I'm looking at you, Charlie Rangel -- is his to solve. Slow motion on issues like gay rights, Gitmo and Iraq is frustrating, but it's better than the retrograde motion it replaced.

For all that, Obama need look no further than his most vocal critics for proof of passion's peril. If he does win on health care, it will be in some part because they punched themselves out and shouted themselves hoarse without accomplishing much of anything. (Anyone who thinks anger at Obama is all about race has forgotten the Clinton era -- this country's deep paranoid streak is at least partially color blind.) When the opposition is reduced to cheering against an American city hosting the Olympics, it's forgotten what it set out to oppose.

And when opponents claim that the Democratic health care plan is "radical," even though the version moving through Congress is less bold than the vision Obama outlined in a campaign he and his party won handily, and even though a substantial majority of Americans favor some sort of public option, they are acknowledging that the nation is ready for what they call radical change.

There's a lesson in there that cautious Obama would be wise to heed.

Edward Cone (www.edcone.com, efcone@mindspring.com) writes a column for the News & Record on alternate Sundays.

 

Comments

This article has been closed to new comments. Comments are generally closed after 14 days. However, comments may be closed earlier at the discretion of the News & Record.

Inappropriate content? Please notify us.

mamaboilermaker

October 11, 2009 - 7:18 am EDT

If he's going to hurl bolts of lightning, let him hurl them at terrorists in Afghanistan, not at hard-working Americans who want to take care of their families and and don't just line up to get "Obama's money."

Interested

October 11, 2009 - 7:39 am EDT

Is that not what the author said?

rmacz

October 11, 2009 - 8:51 am EDT

Hey Mama, there's 905 from Dell he can send.

Sawdust

October 11, 2009 - 9:11 am EDT

Ed Cone??? Are you sure this column wasn't written by Rip Van Winkle? Cone laughs at the charge that Obama is a closet radical. Well, I guess he does have a small point. Obama came roaring out of the closet this past January 20.

Let's take another quick look at those accomplishments. As for the financial system, from what I can gather, banks still aren't lending much money. The stimulus bill, according to Rip Van Cone, "is working more or less as planned". Let me remind Rip that Obamessiah promised that unemployment would peak at 8% with his wonderful porkulus bill. With the official rate at 9.8% and rising, and the real-world rate at about 16% and rising, I guess we can safely put that down as "or less as planned".

Obama seems totally unconcerned with the unemployment figures. Could it possibly be that he wants high unemployment, so that he can ride to the rescue of those without jobs, thereby expanding the power of government?

"A crisis is a terrible thing to waste"-Rahm Emmanuel

Obama's approach to Afghanistan seems to me to be less of a calm, cool assessment of the situation than simply not having a clue about what to do. He hired McChrystal to do the job, but is reluctant to take his advice or to grant his troop requests for fear of his political future.

Obama's health care reform efforts seem to be aiming less toward real medical care and more toward expanding the reach and power of the federal government. Why must we pass this bill today if it won't take effect for three years? Does that make sense? Why rush a bill through without so much as three days for the voters to peruse it when the bill won't take effect for over three years? Does that make sense? Why not require proof of citizenship if the bill isn't going to cover illegals? Does that make sense? But if the principal purpose of health care reform is to expand the power of government, it all makes sense.

It becomes clearer every day that Obama is the most radical and least competent President this country has ever had, and that nothing he says can be trusted. Wake up, Rip.

rmacz

October 11, 2009 - 9:24 am EDT

Maybe Ed thinks the lightning bolts will come out of his telepromter.

Sawdust

October 11, 2009 - 6:35 pm EDT

At this point I'm beginning to think that the TOTUS is the only sign of competence in the White House.

rmacz

October 11, 2009 - 7:30 pm EDT

Then.... beam me up.....Dusty.

eclipse3

October 11, 2009 - 10:19 pm EDT

A closet radical? No. He is an open up front in your face radical. BUT, he is afraid to tackle anything without his heavies around him. It really is the "Chicago Way".

Friends of Barry's that attended Harvard with him said that when it came to debate, after Barry had spoken and left the room, both sides thought he was for their side. This hasn't changed and is the main reason that I did not vote for him. What a dangerous, dangerous game to play with the world at our expense. He really needs to get over himself and set about doing some of the work for the people. He wants so badly to be "popular" that he is willing to risk our futures and those of our children to remain in the star spotlight.

I am counting the days until there are enough changes made in Congress to rein him in. Before he makes us into the thrid rate country the is aiming for.

I think Cone missed this one by a mile.

eMail Updates

Advertisement | Advertise with Us

Featured Ads

Search

Advertisement | Advertise with Us
Advertisement | Advertise with Us
Advertisement | Advertise with Us

News & Record Network Sites

Triad Weather

  • Current Condition: PARTLY CLOUDY
  • Current Temperature: 53°
  • UV Idx: 2
  • Forecast High/Low: H: 56° L: 46°

User Tools

  • Social Networking
  • RSS
  • Share
  • Sign in to MyNR

Search