Obama's Point of No
Return
By
J.R. Dunn
AmericanThinker.com
There comes a moment in a failing
presidency where the incumbent, through some single gesture, action, or
statement, crosses a certain line from beyond which there is no return. Through
his own will and behavior he so underlines his failings, so frames his negative
image, that no further action can ever erase it. Fate, accident, and
circumstance have nothing to do with it. It is the president himself who puts
the period at the end of his own sentence.
Such moments are obvious in
retrospect, though not always at the time. With Richard Nixon, it was the "eighteen-minute
gap." An oval office
tape recording turned over to Judge John Sirica, who was overseeing the
investigation of the Watergate incident, turned out to have a lengthy period
of silence smack dab in the middle of a conversation between Nixon and chief
of staff H.R. Haldeman. The White House claimed that Rose Mary Woods, the
president's secretary, had inadvertently hit the wrong button for those
eighteen minutes. This might well have been true, but in light of Nixon's
long reputation as Tricky Dick, it sounded like the cock-and-bull story to
end them all. Nixon had been holding his own in the Watergate battle up to
that point. The voting public viewed the uproar with bemusement rather than
indignation. But the tape gap finished him. In less than a year, he was
forced into resignation.
For Jimmy Carter, it was the
"malaise
speech" of July 15,
1979, in which he attempted to shuffle the blame for his tepid performance
as president from his own administration onto the shoulders of the American
people. Carter claimed that a national "crisis of confidence" (he never
actually used the word "malaise") made it impossible for him to adequately
grapple with the country's problems. It was America's fault, not Jimmy
Carter's. The public reaction was open disgust and the abject collapse of
any support for the Carter presidency.
With Obama, we have an abundance of riches: the
multiple vacations, the legal harassment of the state of Arizona on behalf
of illegals, the clownish response to the Gulf oil blowout. But when
historians come to select the moment when Obama went over the edge of the
world, I think they'll find the great Iftar mosque speech of August 13, 2010
hard to beat.
During a White House dinner celebrating Ramadan
the president found it appropriate to come out in favor of religious
freedom. Not in support of Christians being attacked by janjaweed gunmen, or
Bahais tormented by Iranian mullahs, or Jews being stalked by assassins, or
even American citizens being told that they cannot pray in public, but in
favor of a shadowy foreign foundation with suspicious financing and
disturbing Jihadi connections that wishes to build some kind of victory
monument congruent to the site of the 9/11 massacre.
These doomsday statements work by putting previous
suspicions and surmises about the president -- always negative -- into sharp
relief, acting as verification and confirmation. Nixon had suffered a
reputation as a conniver since his knock-down, drag-out 1950 battle against
Helen Gahagan Douglas (it was Douglas who coined the "Tricky Dick"
nickname). The tape gap fit so perfectly into that narrative as to crowd out
everything else. Carter's inept performance as president was rendered even
harder to bear by his continual sanctimony and moral preening. The malaise
speech merely added the patina of a whiner.
With Obama, suspicions have
involved his status as an American. The foreign parentage, the
registration
in an Indonesian school noting him as a Muslim, the uproar over the birth
certificate, aroused misgivings that, despite media scorn heaped upon those
noting them, he has never quite been able to put to rest. As of last
weekend, his opportunities to do so are ended. Impressions trump arguments,
and for most of the country, Obama will, from here on in, be a strange and
untrustworthy figure -- a man who does not understand what Ground Zero means
to America, who utilizes American law and custom to support foreign
interests, who speaks to strangers more clearly than to his own.
Nothing either Nixon or
Carter did enabled them to recover from their faux pas. Even as the tape gap
story broke, Nixon was supervising a massive airlift of supplies and
ammunition to Israel, which was involved in life-or-death struggle against
massive Arab attack in the Yom Kippur War. It gained him nothing, scarcely
earning a mention amid all the public speculation about Watergate. Less than
three months after the Carter speech, Iranian "students" (actually
professional revolutionaries under the control of the Ayatollah Khomeini)
sacked the American embassy in Tehran, taking nearly a hundred American
hostages. I can attest that I was not alone in thinking, "Great -- and we've
got Mr. Malaise is charge." The year-and a-half-long hostage crisis,
climaxed by the disastrous Eagle Claw rescue mission, hastened the collapse
of the worst presidency of the later 20th
century.
The past two years are the
best Obama will ever see. The real crises of his presidency are still to
come, and are easily visible as they move toward us -- Iran, terrorism, the
economy, the collapse of the national health care system hastened by his own
policies. He will meet them under a cloud of his own making, attempting to
overcome them as a president who takes endless vacations, who will not
defend his country's borders, who sat out the Gulf oil crisis, who overlooks
the sacrifices of his own countrymen in favor of dubious foreign figures.
Some lines of Shakespeare occurred to me while Obama
was dawdling over a response to the oil blowout. They can also serve to
cover the entire morass:
There is a tide in the affairs of men,
Which, taken at the flood, leads us to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
The tide has gone
out for Barack Obama. It is all epilogue from here on in.
J.R. Dunn is consulting editor of American Thinker, and
will edit the forthcoming Military Thinker.
Home | Articles | BLOG | Quotes | Photo Gallery | Favorites | Stupid Frogs Game | Store | Feedback | Search | Subscribe | About Us