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TOPIC: Obama's Tone Deaf Health Campaign (WSJ 08.10.09)


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Obama's Tone Deaf Health Campaign (WSJ 08.10.09)
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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204251404574342653428074782.html

Obama’s Tone-Deaf Health Campaign

The president shouldn’t worry about the protestors disrupting town hall meetings. He should worry about the Americans who have been sitting at home listening to him 

It didn’t take chaotic town-hall meetings, raging demonstrators and consequent brooding in various sectors of the media to bring home the truth that the campaign for a health-care bill is, to put it mildly, not going awfully well. It’s not hard now to envision the state of this crusade with just a month or two more of diligent management by the Obama team—think train wreck. It may one day be otherwise in the more perfect world of universal coverage, but for now disabilities like the tone deafness that afflicts this administration from the top down are uninsurable.

Consider former ABC reporter Linda Douglass—now the president’s communications director for health reform—who set about unmasking all the forces out there “always trying to scare people when you try to bring them health insurance reform.” People, she charged, are taking sentences out of context and otherwise working to present a misleading picture of the president’s proposals. One of her key solutions to this problem—her justly famed message encouraging citizens to contact the office at flag@whitehouse.gov if they got an email or other information about health reform “that seems fishy”—set off a riotous flow of online responses. (The word “fishy,” with its police detective tone, would have done the trick all by itself.)

These commentaries, packed with allusions to the secret police, the East German Stasi and Orwell, were mostly furious. Others quite simply hilarious. Ms. Douglass, who now has, in her public appearances, the air of a person consigned to service in a holy order, was not amused.

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rabinowitz
rabinowitz

Neither has she seemed to entertain any second thoughts about the tenor of a message enlisting the public in a program reeking of a White House effort to set Americans against one another—the good Americans protecting the president’s health-care program from the bad Americans fighting it and undermining truth and goodness.

She intended no such outcome, doubtless. That this former journalist, now a communications director, failed to notice anything amiss in the details of that communiqué is a bit odd but not altogether surprising.

Crusades are busy endeavors, the enlistees in this one, like those in every undertaking of this White House, concerned with just one message. Which is that the Obama administration is in possession of vital answers to ills and inequities that have long afflicted American society (whether Americans know it or not), and that those opposed to those answers and that vision are cynics, or operatives of the powerful vested interests responsible for the plight Americans find themselves in (whether they know it or not), or political enemies bent on destroying the Obama administration.

It shouldn’t have been surprising, either, that the tone of much of the commentary on the town-hall protests was what it was. There was Mark Halperin for one, senior political editor for Time, bouncing off his chair, Sunday, in agitation over all the media coverage of this rowdiness—“a horrible breakdown of our political culture, our media culture” and so “bad for America,” as he told CNN’s Howard Kurtz. “I’m embarrassed about what’s going on, as an American.” The disruptions and coverage thereof distorted serious discussion, he explained. Mark Shields said much the same on Friday’s PBS NewsHour, if with less excitation, pointing out that these events were “not good for the democratic process,” and were a breakdown of civil debate.

 

There was no such hand-wringing over the decline of civil debate, during, say, election 2004, when cadres of organized demonstrators carrying swastika-adorned pictures of George W. Bush routinely swarmed about, and packed rallies. There was also that other “breakdown of our media culture,” that will dwarf all else as a cause for embarrassment, the town-hall coverage included, for the foreseeable future. That would be, of course, the undisguised worshipful reporting of the candidacy of Barack Obama.

That treatment, or rather its memory—like the adulation of his great mass of voters—has had its effect on this president, and not all to the good. The election over, the warming glow of those armies of supporters gone, his capacity to tolerate criticism and dissent from his policies grows thinner apace. His lectures, explaining his health-care proposals, and why they’ll be good for everybody, are clearly not going down well with his national audience.

This would have to do with the fact that the real Barack Obama—product of the academic left, social reformer with a program, is now before that audience, and what they hear in this lecture about one of the central concerns in their lives—his message freighted with generalities—they are not prepared to buy. They are not prepared to believe that our first most important concern now is health-care reform or all will go under.

The president has a problem. For, despite a great election victory, Mr. Obama, it becomes ever clearer, knows little about Americans. He knows the crowds—he is at home with those. He is a stranger to the country’s heart and character.

He seems unable to grasp what runs counter to its nature. That Americans don’t take well, for instance, to bullying, especially of the moralizing kind, implicit in those speeches on health care for everybody. Neither do they wish to be taken where they don’t know they want to go and being told it’s good for them.

Who would have believed that this politician celebrated, above all, for his eloquence and capacity to connect with voters would end up as president proving so profoundly tone deaf? A great many people is the answer—the same who listened to those speeches of his during the campaign, searching for their meaning.

 

It took this battle over health care to reveal the bloom coming off this rose, but that was coming. It began with the spectacle of the president, impelled to go abroad to apologize for his nation—repeatedly. It is not, in the end, the demonstrators in those town-hall meetings or the agitations of his political enemies that Mr. Obama should fear. It is the judgment of those Americans who have been sitting quietly in their homes, listening to him.

Ms. Rabinowitz is a member of the Journal’s editorial board.

 

 

 



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gold

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A more skilled communicator would have a better chance of convincing Americans that this health care reform bill might be a good idea.  Obama is a great orator, but not a great communicator.  The other problems here are that Obama doesn't seem to know exactly what is in the bill (he should do his homework like HC does) and in addition he is selling a clunker.  A lot of what I hear about this bill I don't like (and I wanted health care reform) or I don't quite understand the specifics of how things will work.

I also do think Americans want more details.  The Dems need to choose a few major points from the bill and they need to fully explain these to the American public.  They also should remain open to making changes, since the bill as it stands now has major problems.  They've wasted a lot of time calling people racists and "un-American."  That was a dumb strategy.


-- Edited by thebword on Wednesday 12th of August 2009 04:22:43 PM

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gold

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According to Rasmussen, this is how well the Democrats' name-calling strategy is working:

8/11/09
"Support for Congressional Health Care Reform Falls to New Low"
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/august_2009/support_for_congressional_health_care_reform_falls_to_new_low


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Laura, if it were ACORN, SEIU, or one of their affiliates, it would have been okay. The country has been devastated by this administration. No one has the old patriotic hope they use to.

"That treatment, or rather its memory—like the adulation of his great mass of voters—has had its effect on this president, and not all to the good. The election over, the warming glow of those armies of supporters gone, his capacity to tolerate criticism and dissent from his policies grows thinner apace. His lectures, explaining his health-care proposals, and why they’ll be good for everybody, are clearly not going down well with his national audience."

Those fools who supported him have no idea what they've done.

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The latest "performance" by Obama was today. Yes, I watched a tiny bit of it and found it another disgusting display and, of course, the teleprompter was ever present.

Although, he claimed that nothing was staged in the townhall, it was very obvious that it was another "show". It was almost like deja vu, as this Obama meeting seemed more like his canned election speeches in front of a admiring hand-picked audience members. They even broke out into "Yes We Can" at one point.

This town hall was entirely different with the adoring "fans" from the town halls with the Congress people who actually have the nerve to conduct one . . . there is real raw emotion in many of these town halls that I have seen on Fox. This Obama one was so staged that it should be up for an Emmy Award. Maybe he could be up for an award for his fake smile.

Just my take on it.



-- Edited by thebword on Wednesday 12th of August 2009 04:21:53 PM

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Platinum

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brave people to watch the fraud.i just can't i have a very weak stomach.barf

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Bump

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Oh, that disaster of a "townhall meeting" yesterday? Well, Obama has more on the slate for later this week that aren't supposed to be so "staged" - I'll believe it when I see it.

This is where community organizing breaks down - he's not supposed to be in campaign mode any more - Congress should be the ones stuck selling this plan, not him. He thinks he was elected King by the way he acts.

-- Edited by thebword on Wednesday 12th of August 2009 04:20:25 PM

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