Pages

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Ich Bin Ein TelePrompter

President Obama's speech to a more selective audience (puppet show to follow, naturally) in Berlin (5,000 instead of 200,000 the last time he was there) didn't go over well:

As The National Journal noted, “he didn’t come away with much, winning just a smattering of applause from a crowd that was one-hundredth the size of JFK’s,” and far smaller than the 200,000 boisterous Germans who had listened to his 2008 address as a presidential candidate. JFK had a clear message when he came to Berlin a half century ago – the free world must stand up to Communist tyranny. 24 years later, President Reagan stood in the same spot famously calling on the Soviets to “tear down this wall.” Reagan’s speech was a seminal moment that ushered in the downfall of an evil empire, and gave hope to tens of millions of people behind the Iron Curtain. It was a display of strength and conviction by the leader of the free world, sending an unequivocal message of solidarity with those who were fighting for freedom in the face of a monstrous totalitarian ideology.

In stark contrast to that of his presidential predecessors, Barack Obama’s message on Wednesday was pure mush, another clichéd “citizens of the world” polemic with little substance. This was a speech big on platitudes and hopeless idealism, while containing much that was counter-productive for the world’s superpower. Ultimately it was little more than a laundry list of Obama’s favourite liberal pet causes, including cutting nuclear weapons, warning about climate change, putting an end to all wars, shutting Guantanamo, ending global poverty, and backing the European Project. It was a combination of staggering naiveté, the appeasement of America’s enemies and strategic adversaries, and the championing of more big government solutions.

But there's a reason for that, of course, that has nothing to do with the president's policies and the European worry about whatever we do or don't do, and regardless of who or who is not our president (tip to Instapundit). Chris Matthews will let nothing interfere with his ongoing leg tingle for our president (although those commercials keep saying leg tingles that last more than four hours--let alone four years--should prompt immediate medical attention):

“I think a lot of the problem he had today was the late afternoon sun in Berlin ruined his use of the teleprompter and so his usual dramatic windup was ruined,” Matthews said immediately after the speech. “I think he was really struggling with the text there.”

Yeah, Matthews goes through those little Blue State Pills like they are M & Ms.

It's a sad defense when you admit your hero is only as good as his speaking crutch.