That
was before the death of irony in this century, where vitriol now passes for wit
and meanness for meaning.
Such
nostalgia is prompted by Peggy Noonan’s latest emanation about the President:
“Mr.
Obama’s problem now is that people think he is smart.
“They
think, as they look at his health-care vows, that either he didn’t know how bad
his program was, what dislocations it would cause, what a disturbance it would
be to the vast middle class of America.
“Or
he knew, and deliberately misled everyone...
“They
think he knowingly quelled people’s fears when he knew they had every reason to
be afraid.
”Which
makes him just another dishonest pol, just another guy hiding in the
deliberately obscure paragraph on page 1,037 of the omnibus comprehensive
reform bill.
“He
has taken himself down, lowered his own stature.
“Commentators
like to decry low-information voters—-the stupid are picking our leaders. I
think the real problem is low-information leaders. They have so little
experience of life and have so much faith in magic—-in media, in words-—that
they don’t understand people will get angry at you when you mislead them, and
never see you the same way again.”
There
is much to criticize in the President’s history with the ACA, but dishonesty
does not make the list of any fair-minded critic, with such sledgehammer logic.
If
Noonan represents GOP “thinkers,” there should be little wonder that party
Neanderthals are yowling about impeachment in Congress. Too bad that William F.
Buckley isn’t still around to show us the wit and elegance that true
Conservatives used to display.
Then
again he would probably be considered too tame for Fox News and the Wall Street Journal.
Those
who still think words matter will want to rinse their minds with Barack Obama’s
eloquent discourse today on the American economy.
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