Drunk On Obama!
IS EUROPE "HIGH" ON OBAMA?
The substance of the German speech was somewhat thin - it was,
in the end, merely an appeal to work more closely together - but
like all good sermons it had a strong undertone of repentance.
Do we really need "forgiveness" from the Europeans? If so, for
what?
"I know my country has not perfected itself," said Mr. Obama,
"We've made our share of mistakes and there are times when our
actions around the world have not lived up to our best intentions."
"Too true," said Bernd Brueggemann, a 40 year old teacher, "I
just hope they pay attention at home." He gestured towards the US
network camera teams who have been chaperoning the candidate. The
Senator has not maintained the pretence of being on a
"fact-finding" trip rather than election tour. He was presenting
himself as the listening President of the future. Partnership, he
said, "requires allies who listen to each other, learn from each
other and, most of all, trust each other".
Can Obama's speech rival JFK or Reagan?
That seems to have struck the right note with both Chancellor
Angela Merkel and her foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier. "It
was a very open conversation that didn't just scrape the surface,"
said government spokesman Ulrich Wilhelm, cloudily. They talked
apparently about the Middle East, about Iran, about global warming
and about free trade.
It is the last theme that is particularly nagging the
Chancellor: a President Obama could, the Merkel team fear, turn out
to be a protectionist if America slides towards recession. The
German economy too is slowing down - and Ms Merkel has a general
election to win next year. The body language was good except, as
one observer noted, Mr. Obama draped his arm over the Chancellor's
shoulder. Ms Merkel does not like that.
The Chancellor watched the speech from the quiet of a hotel
room in Bayreuth; her summer holiday began the moment that Mr.
Obama left her office at noon and she hastened to southern Germany
for the beginning of the annual Wagner festival.
On television, she will have heard a distinctly unoperatic
performance from Mr. Obama; serious in its mission to revive the
transatlantic relationship but lacking great inspiration.
It did make clear to American audiences one thing: that a
President Obama would be committed to polishing up the tarnished
image of America abroad. Television pictures of tens of thousands
of cheering Germans, drinking beer and wearing free Obama t-shirts
may well have made that point.
So far the tour has been without any serious gaffe, if only
because Mr. Obama has been extremely cautious. This speech was no
exception. "Messiah or seducer?," asked the cover of Stern magazine
this week, but neither quality was really on display at the
rally.
The crowd was enthralled by the moment, by the sense as
commentator Kurt Kister put it, that the "good American" was making
a public appearance again. The Bush years have been hard on German
self-esteem. When the then chancellor Gerhard Schroeder opposed the
Iraq war, he was treated like a classroom dunce and the government
was publicly snubbed; Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld went out of
his way to avoid shaking the hand of German ministers. Mr. Obama by
contrast appeared to be promising a partnership of equals. "America
has no better partner than Europe."
But it was certainly not the coming of the "Messiah" and if
there was seduction it was between consenting adults. Many in
Berlin would have preferred a speech that took more risks and
proposed real solutions.
"I was there when Kennedy came to West Berlin, this was a bit
more artificial, fake, I mean it's easier nowadays to make a speech
like this," says Rainer Cornelsen, a 67 year old businessman, "You
don't need to be particularly brave. But he has something of the
Kennedy freshness." Yet the Kennedy visit has been mythologized.
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was no great fan describing him as a
"cross between a junior naval officer and a Roman Catholic boy
scout." And when Ronald Reagan in 1987 proclaimed, "Mr. Gorbachev,
tear down this Wall!" he was widely dismissed in Germany as naive
or reckless. Later the myth-making machine cranked into action
however and both presidents came to be hailed as prophets.
Has Obama been on a "fact-finding" trip at taxpayer's expense or
spreading his socialistic philosophy to a world audience at our
expense? American voters are easily "duped" by smooth rhetoric and
false promises. When our economy is dumping, why does he promise
the world our money (Global Poverty Act - $850 Billion)?
American working taxpayers are struggling to buy food, gasoline
and to keep a roof over their heads and Obama wants to pander to
and feed the world?
Just how much does this "Wanabee Messiah" of the world think the
US Taxpayers can afford?
Don't you think he should be concerned with helping homeless,
starving people in America before feeding the world to enhance his
"rock-star" image?
To many "thinking people" in Europe and in America, this man is
all too transparent!
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