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Tags: george will | state of the union | barack obama
OPINION

Obama's Speech Confounds

George Will By Thursday, 28 January 2010 02:43 PM EST Current | Bio | Archive

 Barack Obama tiptoed Wednesday night along the seam that bifurcates the Democratic Party's brain. The seam separates that brain's John Quincy Adams lobe from its Sigmund Freud lobe.

The dominant liberal lobe favors Adams' dictum that politicians should not be "palsied by the will of our constituents." It exhorts Democrats to smack Americans with what is good for them — healthcare reform, carbon rationing, etc. — even if the dimwits do not desire it.

The other lobe whispers Freud's reality principle: Restrain your id, the pleasure principle, and the impulse toward immediate gratification.

Settle for deferred and diminished but achievable results.

Obama was mostly in Adams' mode Wednesday. His nods to reality were, however, notable.

Such speeches must be listened to with a third ear that hears what is not said. Unmentioned was organized labor's "card-check" legislation to abolish workers' rights to secret ballots in unionization elections.

Obama's perfunctory request for a "climate bill" — the term "cap and trade" was as absent as the noun "Guantanamo" — was not commensurate with his certitude that life on earth may drown in rising seas.

On Feb. 24, when unemployment was 8.2 percent, Obama said in the second sentence of his speech to Congress that the economy "is a concern that rises above all others" and later that his agenda "begins with jobs."

After 11 months of healthcare monomania, he said Wednesday that "jobs must be our number one focus." Unemployment is 10 percent.

He called Wednesday for a third stimulus (the first was his predecessor's, in February 2008) although the S-word has been banished in favor of "jobs bill."

It will inject into the economy money that government siphons from the economy, thereby somehow creating jobs. And you thought alchemy was strange.

Not until the 33rd minute of Wednesday's 70-minute address did Obama mention healthcare. The weirdness of what he said made it worth the wait.

Acknowledging that the longer the public has looked at the legislation, the less the public has liked it, he blamed himself for not "explaining it more clearly." But his faux contrition actually blames the public: The problem is not the legislation's substance but the presentation of it to slow learners.

He urged them to take "another look at the plan we've proposed." The plan? The differences between the House and Senate plans are not trivial; they concern how to pay for the enormous new entitlement.

On Feb. 24, with a grandiosity with which the nation has become wearily familiar, he said, "Already, we have done more to advance the cause of healthcare reform in the last 30 days than we have in the last decade."

He was referring to the expansion of eligibility to an existing entitlement:
 the State Children's Health Insurance Program. But that expansion was minor compared with the enormous new Medicare entitlement for prescription drugs created under Obama's predecessor.

Before the Massachusetts nuisance, this year's speech was to be a self-coronation of the "last" president to deal with healthcare.

On Feb. 24, he said he had an activist agenda because of the recession, "not because I believe in bigger government — I don't."

Ninety-seven days later, he bought General Motors.

Wednesday night's debut of Obama as avenging angel of populism featured one of those opaque phrases, the "weight of our politics," that third-rate speechwriters slip past drowsy editors.

Obama seems to regret the existence in Washington of . . . everyone else. He seems to feel entitled to have his way without tiresome interventions in the political process by the many interests affected by his agenda for radical expansion of the regulatory state.

Speaking of slow learners, liberals do not notice the connection between expansion of government and expansion of (often defensive) activities referred to under the rubric of "lobbying."

Lamenting Washington's "deficit of trust," Obama gave an example of the reason for it when he brassily declared: "We are prepared to freeze government spending for three years."

This flagrant falsehood enlarges Washington's deficit of truth: He proposes freezing some discretionary spending, about one-eighth of government spending.

Obama's leitmotif is: Washington is disappointing, Washington is annoying, Washington is dysfunctional, Washington is corrupt, verily Washington is toxic — yet Washington should conscript a substantially larger share of GDP, and Washington should exercise vast new controls over healthcare, energy, K-12 education, etc.

Talk about a divided brain.

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GeorgeWill
Barack Obama tiptoed Wednesday night along the seam that bifurcates the Democratic Party's brain. The seam separates that brain's John Quincy Adams lobe from its Sigmund Freud lobe. The dominant liberal lobe favors Adams' dictum that politicians should not be palsied by...
george will,state of the union,barack obama
717
2010-43-28
Thursday, 28 January 2010 02:43 PM
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