Posted on 07/20/2015 6:15:52 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Ive never written a column like this. Readers rarely believe it, but I am not on any political team. Generosity toward the high and mighty isnt among my few virtues. But this needs to be said: Americans are lucky to have Barack Obama as president and we should wake up and appreciate it while we can.
President Obama will go down in history as an extraordinary president, probably a great one. He will have done this in an era that doesnt aggrandize leaders and presidents, but shrinks them. All presidents have had profound opposition, vicious enemies and colossal failures. A few were beloved and others deeply respected in their day, but none in the modern era and certainly not Obama.
Why? Marcus Aurelius said, Man is puny in the face of destiny. If the stoic king were writing about modern, democratic sovereigns, he might say, Kings are puny in a world blind to destiny, a world seen through the sacred screens of televisions and computers that can view only the puny.
Many presidents fared better in history than in office. But it would be a morale booster and a sign of civic maturity if more Americans appreciated what an exceptional president they have right now. It could be a long wait for the next one.
One can hate Democrats, disagree with Obama on big issues, dislike his style or be disappointed the excitement of his election didnt last. But his accomplishments, ambitious goals, dignity and honesty under tough circumstances demand admiration and appreciation.
This is, of course, perverse liberal-media propaganda to conservative Obama-haters. Its wobbly centrism to a left flank frustrated that Obama hasnt done more for them. And its naive hot air to Washingtons political clans that think Obama doesnt play the game well.
Changing minds with a keypad is a fools errand; Im surely a fool, but not on that count. I simply offer some points for the open-minded to ponder:
* The Iran deal: Time will reveal if the deal worked, not todays talking and tweeting heads. What cannot be in dispute is this was a momentous initiative, a gutsy political risk, a diplomatic success and, potentially, a giant step in defusing a long-ticking time bomb.
* Obamacare: In the midst of the worst economy since the Great Depression, Obama delivered one of the most important domestic programs since the New Deal. Obamacare has survived two challenges in the Supreme Court and constant, kabuki-style congressional votes to repeal. It will evolve and improve. One day it will be taken for granted, and people will say, Keep the government out of my Obamacare.
* The financial meltdown: Obama inherited it, then managed the recovery to the degree possible in the global economy. The recovery has been steady, though slow. The worst-case predictions didnt happen. He began to reverse the deregulation of the financial industry. He delivered a significant Asian trade deal. Yet few give Obama much credit.
* The First: Becoming the first black president is itself an epic triumph. Obama doesnt get much good will for that any more. We properly canonize Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson and Martin Luther King. Of Obama, we ask, What have you done for me lately? Thats fair, hes president. He doesnt ask for credit for being the first black one. He and his family are at risk every day, and we take their courage for granted.
* Dignity and honesty: Obamas administration has been as free of corruption and, well, peccadillo as any in memory. A few will stay in paranoid lather about Benghazi or Fast and Furious, but those pseudo-scandals dont compare to Watergate, Iran-Contra, Bill Clintons carnal antics or the phony evidence used to justify attacking Iraq.
Obama has weathered a recession, invisible racism, a reckless Republican Congress, a lily-livered Democratic Party, attacks from the richest pressure groups ever (Super PACs) and a 24/7, ADHD press corps under existential pressure to deliver page views and Nielsen ratings. He has done it with the No Drama Obama style that befits the office.
Obama isnt a performer like Reagan or a preacher like Clinton. Hes head over heart, cool over warm. Yet he did his pastoral duties after Sandy Hook, the Boston Marathon and Charleston. He wasnt a catalyst for same-sex marriage, but nourished the culture that made it possible.
It is harder than ever to see the big canvas and thus find fresh perspectives. We view current events as puny rivers of tweets, not grand chapters in the ultimate story history.
In that longer view, we should feel well-served. So, Mr. President, on behalf of an ungrateful nation, thank you.
I can understand this. My German aunt believed Adolph Hitler was a hero. He saved his people and did many things for the German people.
The Holocaust was all Himmler’s idea.
BULL#$%^!
If Jimmy Carter hadn’t done away with insane asylums
people like this writer wouldn’t be wandering the
streets and getting into print.
Can you say delusional?
Millions of Germans, the most literate nation in history, thought Adolph Hitler was smarter than God,too. He wasn’t.
You are right...a wasted effort.
Obama could kill the author’s entire family ...and he’d still say that obama is great
The Liberal Mind is a terrible thing to.........use.
Another enemy islamist or facilitator.
Couldn’t get past the second sentence. Barf
P.S. Pass the Koolaid.
But he’s not on any political team. He said so.
This goes waaay beyond Titanic Hurl alert. More on the order of a Saturn V hurl alert. From here to the moon everyone beware.
“A few will stay in paranoid lather about Benghazi or Fast and Furious, but those pseudo-scandals dont compare to Watergate, Iran-Contra, Bill Clintons carnal antics or the phony evidence used to justify attacking Iraq.”
Every single item in this statement is totally false, with no shred of truth to them. We all know what LIVs are; now we know what a low information “writer” is.
Dick Meyer is the Chief Washington Correspondent for the Scripps Washington Bureau and the author of Why We Hate Us: American Discontent in the New Millennium.[1] He previously served as As Executive Producer for the BBCs news services in America and Executive Editor for National Public Radio.
Meyer was born in Glencoe, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. He graduated from Columbia University in 1980 with a bachelor's degree in religion and from the University of Oxford in 1982 with a master's degree in politics.
Meyer began his journalism career as an election-unit researcher in 1985 for CBS News, covered the 1988 presidential campaign as an off-air producer and filed reports for CBS Radio News. He spent over twenty-three years at CBS News, eventually serving as a producer for the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather and later, editorial director of CBS News online.
In 2008, Meyer joined NPR as Editorial Director for Digital Media[2] and played a key role in expanding the organizations digital journalism and integrating the broadcast and digital newsrooms. From 2009 to 2011, he served as NPRs Executive Editor, with responsibility for managing NPR's worldwide news operation on-air and online.
What. The. Actual. F**k?
Ugh!
I almost blew my quags!
Where dat barf alert at?
Dick Meyer ought to be renamed Dick Sucker - for being a sucker and being attached to the front of Obama’s pants.
Obama hasn’t been stroked like this since his last trip to Man’s World.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.