Breaking down the Obama spin on his snobbery

April 12th, 2008 by everett

Ed Morrissey has the best breakdown on Obama’s aloof, elitist statement at a San Francisco fundraiser last weekend:

Let’s break this statement into its component insults:

“[T]hey cling to guns…” Cling to guns? Americans have “clung” to guns since the founding of the Republic. It’s such a core value to this nation that its founders placed it second on the Bill of Rights, right after freedom of speech and religion. Speaking of which …
“or [they cling to] religion …” People don’t become religious because the economy hits a few bumps in the road. Obama may have chosen his religion based on politics, but most people follow a religion out of a deeper sense of spirituality. I can’t think of a more condescending and contemptuous analysis of religious dedication than this statement.
“or [they cling to] antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment…” Small-town voters are bigots and xenophobes; there’s no other way to read the first part of this statement. The second part, about them being “anti-immigrant”, is a non-sequitur. They may be anti-illegal immigrant, but that’s a far different issue. Obama offers no proof that small-town voters are xenophobes, but the Frisco audience didn’t demand any, either. It’s part of their own bigotry that makes them see middle America in those terms.
“or [they cling to] anti-trade sentiment …” And this is just jaw-droppingly hypocritical. This comes from the same candidate who opposes the Colombian free-trade agreement and wants to throw NAFTA out the window. Who’s clinging to anti-trade sentiment? Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Big Labor.

It would be difficult to be any more condescending or insulting in so many ways to so many voters in a single sentence. It reveals a deeply elitist and shockingly callow candidate. It’s the “Let them eat cake” of 2008.

Spot on analysis. Obama wants to paint small-town America as out-of-touch xenophobic gun-toting religious racists. Instead, he paints himself as an elite snob, and he’s got a pattern developing that supports my opinion. He remarked about the price of arugula at Whole Foods while in Iowa - where there are no Whole Foods to be found. He tried connect with the common man by showing off his bowling skills - and scored a 37. Then, while campaigning in Philly, he opts for rare imported Spanish ham instead of the traditional cheesesteak.

Now he bags on small-town America, making an emergent picture grow ever more clear of Obama as yet another Limousine Liberal claiming to know what’s best for the rest of us.

Campaign openness

December 10th, 2007 by everett

Governor Huckabee seems to be hiding his sermons from his time as pastor at two Southern Baptist churches, according to Mother Jones.

When asked for copies of the sermons Huckabee delivered at Immanuel Church, an employee there claimed none could be found. A Beech Street Church pastor’s assistant maintained that much of the archival material from Huckabee’s tenure as pastor had been destroyed during a remodeling. The rest, she said, was not available to the press.

When Mother Jones contacted the Huckabee campaign and asked if it would help make his previous sermons available, the campaign replied in a one-sentence email that it had received multiple requests for such material and was “not able to accommodate” them.

Huckabee seems reluctant to make his old sermons available; Clinton is not making records from her time in the White House available. It’s not a good trend to see candidates seeking the highest office in the land reluctant to have key parts of their past reviewed in light of current claims and stances.

Glenn thinks Huckabee is taking Matthew 6:6 too seriously