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Victor Davis Hanson: Obama’s ‘They’-Did-It Campaign (Brace for an October Surprise.)
National Review Online ^ | June 20, 2012 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 06/21/2012 6:43:08 PM PDT by neverdem

The next five months should be interesting — given that Barack Obama is now experiencing something entirely unique in his heretofore stellar career: widespread criticism of his performance and increasing weariness with his boilerplate and his teleprompted eloquence.

Starting with his Occidental days, and going on through Columbia, Harvard, Chicago, the U.S. Senate, and the 2008 campaign, rarely has Mr. Obama faced much criticism, much less any accountability that would involve judging his rhetoric by actual achievement.

Yet what worked for so long now does no longer. Obama simply cannot run on 40 months of 8 percent–plus unemployment, a June 2009 recovery that sputtered, $5 trillion in new debt, serial $1 trillion–plus annual deficits, and dismal GDP growth. Few believe any more that what he and the Democratic Congress passed in the first two years of his administration worked — and fewer still that the Republicans are to blame in the last 17 months for stopping him from pursuing even more disastrous policies. He cannot turn instead to the advantages of Obamacare, a dynamic foreign policy, national-security sobriety, a scandal-free administration, or stellar presidential appointments. The furor over security leaks makes it harder to keep conjuring up the ghost of Osama bin Laden.

What then to expect if the race remains tight or Obama finds himself behind?

1. There will be lots more “the dog ate my homework” excuses for the dismal economy. The troubles in the EU, the Japanese tsunami, the East Coast earthquake, ATM machines, Wall Street, inclement weather, the Republican Congress, the Tea Party, and George W. Bush have pretty much been exhausted. But there is always hurricane season, a Greek exit from the euro, or a Middle East flare-up. Expect sometime before October to hear that a new “they” upset the brilliant recovery and is to blame for the chronic economic lethargy. One of the strangest aspects of Obama’s rationalizations is their utter incoherence and illogic: He brags that America pumped more oil and gas under his watch, even as he did his best to stop just that on public lands; he brags that he put in fewer regulations than did Bush, even as he boasts that he reined in business; he brags that he had to borrow $5 trillion to grow government in order to save the country, even as he claims he reduced the size of government. Why does Obama try to take credit for things on Tuesday that he damned on Monday? Is his new campaign theme: Despite (rather than because of) Obama?

2. Mitt Romney is a tough target. If Obama once loudly admitted to abuse of coke, Romney quietly confesses to avoidance even of Coca-Cola. His personal life is blameless. His family seems the subject of a Norman Rockwell painting. And Romney has more or less succeeded at most things he has attempted. No matter, he is Mormon. Expect legions of Obama surrogates to focus on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, especially its supposed endemic racism, sexism, and homophobia. Religious bigotry is not especially liberal, but the race/class/gender agenda trumps all such qualms, and in any case Obama and his team have never claimed to be especially tolerant or fair-minded in using any means necessary to achieve noble ends. Whereas the Reverend Jeremiah Wright and Trinity Church were off the table in 2008, Mormonism will be very much on it by late summer.

3. We will read and hear about race 24/7. Racism is not an easy sell today, given that without tens of millions of white voters, Barack Obama would not have been elected. Nor is it easy to condemn America as racist when the white vote in 2008 was split far more evenly than were the 96 percent of African-American voters who preferred Barack Obama. Nonetheless, racial relations are at an all-time low. Almost weekly a member of the Congressional Black Caucus levels yet another bizarre charge of racism, and a Hollywood actor or singer blurts out something that would be deemed racially offensive were he not African-American; the polarization over the Trayvon Martin case threatens to overshadow the polarization over the O. J. Simpson trial; flash mobbing in the inner cities is as much daily fare on the uncensored Internet as it is absent from the network news; and both Barack Obama (the Skip Gates affair, the Trayvon Martin quip, the “punish our enemies” call, etc.) and Eric Holder (“cowards,” congressional oversight is racially motivated, “my people,” etc.) have made it a point to make race essential, not incidental, to their governance. If in 2008 liberals celebrated the election of Barack Obama as proof of a new postracial harmony, in 2012 a tight race will be cited as greater proof of a new ascendant racism. The idea that to elect Obama wins the nation racial exemption, and to defeat him earns condemnation, is illogical. No matter: By late fall, expect a desperate Obama administration to be dredging up the charge overtly, nonstop, and in person.

4. We should look for new furor against the “system” in direct proportion to the praise heaped on it in 2008 for being redeemed. The polls, if unfavorable, will be described as innately biased. The uncivil Rush Limbaugh, talk radio generally, Fox News, and tea-party bloggers, we will be lectured, are subversive, peddle hate, foment violence, and should be silenced. Whereas David Brooks, David Frum, Peggy Noonan, and Christopher Buckley were recommended reading in 2008, given their balanced and fair-minded critiques of George W. Bush and their appreciation of Barack Obama, in 2012 we will learn that they are right-wing attack dogs for losing their enthusiasm for the first-class mind and temperament of Barack Obama. Whereas a Pat Buchanan on MSNBC railing against Bush’s war and McCain’s neocon advisers was a reminder of how the libertarian Right has positive affinities with the liberal Left, in 2012 such a paleocon “racist” must be kept off the airwaves. Voter-registration laws and voter-ID requirements, remember, are designed to exclude the oppressed and must be relaxed. Advertising has warped American politics. Super PACs are Romney conspiracies. If big Wall Street money went for Obama in 2008 and thereby won investment banking and the stock market exemption from charges of greed and corruption, in 2012 investors may swing to Romney and thereby incite calls to rein in “big money” and furious op-eds about the toxic mix of politics and cash. If Romney outraises Obama, we will hear again the calls for public campaign financing, which were ignored when a cash-flush Obama renounced public financing in 2008. In 2008, academics, foundation people, the Hollywood crowd, journalists, and liberal politicians confessed that they had fallen in love again with an America that had proved it was not hopeless after all; in 2012, America may prove unsalvageable, with thousands vowing to move to Canada.

5. Suddenly around October the world will become absolutely unsafe. In these dangerous times, Americans must forget their differences, come together, and embrace a bipartisan unity — given that it may be necessary, after all, to hit the Iranian nuclear facilities, since we’ll have learned that the bomb may be a reality by, say, mid-November. Just as we have been reminded that Barack Obama has saved us by his brave decisions to use double agents in Yemen, computer viruses in Iran, Seal Team Six in Pakistan, and philosophically guided Predator assassination hits, so too a strike against Iran may suddenly be of vital national-security interest, though keenly lamented by a Nobel laureate nose-deep in Thomas Aquinas. Cancellation of the Keystone Pipeline delighted greens; the war on the war on women pleased feminists; gays are now on board after Barack Obama decided he really did favor gay marriage; Latinos got nearly a million illegal aliens exempted from immigration law. And yet all those partisan gifts have not yet resulted in a 50 percent approval rating or a lead over Mitt Romney. Something more dramatic is needed, given that there are only so many Obama heroics that can be cobbled together and leaked from classified sources.

We do not know who is going to win the 2012 election, only that it will be closer than the 2008 one — and if Obama keeps it up at his present rate he may destroy the Democratic party for a generation. There is no longer an incumbent George Bush to blame. Romney is a feistier candidate than was John McCain. Fundraising is no longer lopsided. The novelty of the first African-American president has become passé. And “hope and change” has been replaced by a concrete record of three and a half years. Given those realities, if his being an unknown quantity was a reason to vote for Barack Obama in 2008, his being all too familiar will be cause for rejecting him in 2012.

NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the author most recently of The End of Sparta, a novel about ancient freedom.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: obama; octobersurprise; vdh; victordavishanson
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To: Isabel C.

Would that not be “appropriate”?


61 posted on 06/21/2012 10:01:14 PM PDT by pistolpackinpapa (Why is it that you never see any Obama bumper stickers on cars going to work in the mornings?)
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To: Cementjungle

Well, I have confidence that he can manage to do so (lose the Election). It was tough for McCain too, but he managed to pull it off.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Hmmmmm........ Have to disagree. 2008 was nothing like this Election years. In 2008, the country had Bush/Republican fatigue, Obama was Black, charismatic, youthy, and offered a lot of promises that he never intended to keep. He mesmerized the Nation. Even Hillary Clinton could not defeat him. It was definitely NOT McCain’s to lose. It was his to win from the git-go. An almost impossible task. They could have had a video of Obama in bed with a dead girl or a live boy and he’d still have won. So, your premise is wrong; sorry.


62 posted on 06/21/2012 10:11:37 PM PDT by pistolpackinpapa (Why is it that you never see any Obama bumper stickers on cars going to work in the mornings?)
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To: Cementjungle
2008 was a completely different situation. BHO was an unknown quantity- in fact, people projected what they wanted to see in him. Those of us who saw him for what he was were ignored.
Now we have had 3 1/2 years of disaster. I can't imagine anyone but hard core union members voting for him. The Supreme Court ruling today didn't help them at all either.
No- the Emperor is wearing no clothes and everyone knows it but him.
ps- on McCain- he ran an absurd and lame campaign. I personally do not think he would have been a very good President. He would have “crossed the aisle” as he is so fond of saying, repeatedly and we would all be calling for his head right now. Plus, the country would not be much better off but we would be to blame instead of BHO. (and we wouldn't have the House...)
63 posted on 06/21/2012 10:12:57 PM PDT by luv2ski
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To: blueunicorn6
“The dog ate my homework” excuses?.....more likely, “I ate the dog that ate my homework.”

OUCH!



Where there's a shell, there's a way.

25 years ago, we had Ronald Reagan, Johnny Cash, and Bob Hope.
Today we have Obama, no cash, and no hope!

If you can't appreciate the pure beauty of the violin after hearing this, something's wrong with your ears.

Or you can get raw with these strings.

How about this gamechanger from America's Got Talent (which they SHOULD have won).

Either way, the violin is sweet yet lethal.

Do it!

64 posted on 06/21/2012 10:14:07 PM PDT by rdb3 (If you were tried in court for being a Christian, would there be enough evidence to convict you?)
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To: pistolpackinpapa

I agree with this. Would be brilliant and effective. Romney has been saying things about the amnesty move that paint it very candidly as the shameful pander it is. I just hope he keeps it up. Romney may be a bit boring but, you have to admit, he’s very steady and doesn’t make many mistakes.

He just needs to pick a decent running mate.


65 posted on 06/21/2012 10:24:42 PM PDT by my small voice (A biased media and an uneducated populace is the biggest threat to our nation.)
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To: luv2ski

I hope you’re right. Perhaps I’m not yet very confident because I’m in L.A. these days and continue to be amazed on a daily basis to see the extent of the loyality toward the Dem party, and toward Obama himself.


66 posted on 06/21/2012 10:30:16 PM PDT by Cementjungle
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To: Hammerhead
its not going to be closer that 2008. give me a break

What makes you so sure Mittens will win in a landslide?
I think you underestimate rat vote fraud.

67 posted on 06/21/2012 10:36:04 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: my small voice

He just needs to pick a decent running mate.
______________________________________________________________

Who would you suggest? I like Marco Rubio of Florida, Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, Rob Portman of Ohio and Susan Martinez Gov. of New Mexico. I’d be happy with any of these. Although I think Paul Ryan’s youth and youthy looks would be against him.


68 posted on 06/21/2012 10:40:17 PM PDT by pistolpackinpapa (Why is it that you never see any Obama bumper stickers on cars going to work in the mornings?)
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To: pistolpackinpapa

I personally think he has lost his mind to pick anybody other than Rubio. Rubio is articulate and conservative. Rubio will deliver Florida and split the Hispanic vote which would help in NV and CO. It will almost assuredly lock up the Presidency for 16 years as Romney should find himself (whether deserved or not) on Mt. Rushmore for just standing aside and allowing the American Machine to blaze anew. Just removing the current traitor will do wonders for the economy and confidence.

I agree with you about Ryan. Martinez, Portman, and Pawlenty are good people and probably great choices, but...I just don’t feel it.


69 posted on 06/21/2012 10:49:51 PM PDT by my small voice (A biased media and an uneducated populace is the biggest threat to our nation.)
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To: my small voice

We’re on the same page. Rubio is my choice. You might notice I listed him first in my list. I agree with your reasons as well. I’m 90% sure Romney is going to pick him. He’d be crazy not to do so.


70 posted on 06/21/2012 11:01:09 PM PDT by pistolpackinpapa (Why is it that you never see any Obama bumper stickers on cars going to work in the mornings?)
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To: pistolpackinpapa

Actually, it seems to be a very good idea! It could work, if he did it like you describe!


71 posted on 06/22/2012 1:26:49 AM PDT by dsutah
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To: dsutah; pistolpackinpapa; neverdem; ntnychik; dixiechick2000; onyx

72 posted on 06/22/2012 1:34:05 AM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hussein: Islamo-Commie from Kenya)
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To: neverdem

His October Surprise will be “FORGIVING STUDENT LOAN DEBT”!!! He will get 75% of the vote with OUR MONEY!


73 posted on 06/22/2012 3:45:09 AM PDT by Ann Archy ( ABORTION...the HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: Venturer; Cementjungle

I don’t see how He’s doing the best He can to lose it so far. He’s actually doing better than I thought. Much better than McCain.


74 posted on 06/22/2012 4:26:26 AM PDT by justice14 ("stand up defend or lay down and die")
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To: Two Kids' Dad
If every Romney non-fan decides to hold his/her nose and bump his numbers, the popular vote would be an anti-Zero referendum even if it doesn't sway the electoral college numbers.

If it doesn't matter, your strategic undervote/3rd-party vote target (i.e., the object of your greater derision) would be Romney, since he's the guy screwing up the party that can help you more if he's not in the picture.

In Texas, the State will easily go Romney, so our task is less to record an undervote for Romney and keep his numbers down, than to vote 3rd party, which will be noticed even faster. Our ultimate objective is for Romney to carry Texas (so he can't complain and bitch -- he's already been taking us for granted and laughing at us, no really, he has) by about 100 votes and a huge, giant stink about recounts, and simultaneously rack up about an 8-12% third-party vote. That will be noticed really fast.

75 posted on 06/22/2012 4:30:08 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: justice14

Much better than McCain isn’t saying a lot.


76 posted on 06/22/2012 4:32:12 AM PDT by Venturer
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To: my small voice; pistolpackinpapa
I personally think he has lost his mind to pick anybody other than Rubio. Rubio is articulate and conservative.

Sorry, folks, but Rubio is almost certainly constitutionally ineligible, same as Obama and possibly Mitt Romney, too.

In fact, Romney, if he's ineligible, is the reason the RNC has rained death on the "Birfers" and told everyone who'll listen -- and the talk-radio hosts especially -- that anyone who brings up Obama's eligibility and documentation issues is radioactive and Banned from the Human Race.

They're protecting their Golden Boy, Mittens.

FUMR and FYNWO.

77 posted on 06/22/2012 4:38:51 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: Venturer

No, but it’s a start. And also, better than the opposite.


78 posted on 06/22/2012 4:46:04 AM PDT by justice14 ("stand up defend or lay down and die")
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To: Two Kids' Dad
Not sure I'll do it, but at least it's worth considering.

Seems fairly likely, given your tagline.

79 posted on 06/22/2012 5:16:08 AM PDT by j_tull (Massachusetts once lead the American Revolution. Under Mitt Romney, it lead the demise.)
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To: Tallguy
So, I think Obama will have to look elsewhere for his war.

1. Find white and/or Christian group;
2. Compare to Hitler;
3. Bomb the crap out of them.

80 posted on 06/22/2012 5:18:03 AM PDT by palmer (Jim, please bill me 50 cents for this completely useless post)
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