Wednesday, January 27, 2010

The State of Barack Obama

What is being said about Obama, by friends and opponents alike, was said about John Kennedy when he was president. Too aloof, too much head and not enough heart, a manager but not a leader. Eloquence gets tiresome when it doesn't set people on fire, and he should live up to his own stirring language. Suddenly, Kennedy was gone, and he seemed lovable, warm, a member of the family, and of course he had been right all along.

Obama's State of the Union tonight was superb--he knows his Lincoln--and it is always thrilling to see a man actually thinking on a live telecast. The conversational tone towards the end had to attract every ear: he spoke as a friend or family lawyer giving his somewhat slow clients the straight talk they are resistant to hear.

My point here is that Barack Obama, as exceptional presidents always are, will be gone before we know it, and then the great period of catch-up to what he was all about begins with the people. How much better it is to pay close attention now and see the fight he is in, and, in sensitive response, join him.

It all ends suddenly.

Monday, January 25, 2010

I Hope He's Not Lost

The news tonight is that President Obama will call for a large freeze--lasting three years--on domestic spending Wednesday night in his State of the Union Address. Is this a new idea cooked up to please the people who hate him the most? Does he believe that he has the everlasting support of all those who voted for him in 2008 and that they will meekly swallow this while the Pentagon budget goes untouched? He would be wrong in each case. My doubt about him these days does not mean that I have given up on him, but he does need some wins any time now. That health care bill--is that not domestic spending?--needs to be passed and signed or the entire first Obama year will be judged a failure. Where is he right now? And where are we? We cannot be lost.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Brett Favre, Thanks For the Memories

The game between the Vikings and the Saints tonight was entertaining in its way but not what would be called a great game. Minnesota fumbled so often that one came to expect it every time they had the ball. I think they are the better team but just not tonight, as Brad Childress said. How many times can you hand the ball to a 14-3 team and still expect to win? Not as many times as the Vikes did in New Orleans. I don't have any interest in a Super Bowl between the Colts and the Saints and the network and NFL bosses are even now contemplating the lost viewers and dollars caused by a game without the drama of Brett Favre leading the Vikings. They were magic this year but every player and fan knows that magic cannot be repeated. It is only remembered.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Miep Gies, 100 Years

Miep Gies died Monday at age 100. Most people may not know her name but she is mentioned frequently in one of the best-selling books of the 20th century, Anne Frank: The Diary of A Young Girl. Miep was an employee of Otto Frank in his Amsterdam business and for two years, 1942-44, she helped hide the Frank family from the Nazi occupiers. She brought them food, kept the secret, and went into the hidden rooms where they had lived after they were taken away. Anne's diary was lying on the floor after the Nazis had ransacked the place. Miep Gies put it in her desk and kept it there until Otto Frank, the only member of the family to survive the concentration camps, returned in 1945. The diary was published in 1947.

A noble life has ended and the good that rippled from it is incalculable.