WHY PEOPLE LOVE HIM

I have been thinking a lot lately about Barack Obama.

What is it that made Americans vote into office this largely untested, unproven man? This young man–what is he, like 47?  That’s like a baby in political years, I think.  And of course, most surprisingly, this black man.  The son of a Kansas woman and an African immigrant? 

I am not a person who thinks much about politics, and even when I do, I am at heart a pragmatist.  Which is to say, beating up on George Bush or his mistakes is just boring and unproductive:  I am not someone who is extreme or passionate in his political opinions.  I remember mocking the tax refund back in 2001, and then gleefully spending it the very instant my check arrived.  I could probably easily be convinced that invading Iraq was the right thing to do, if I thought it would help me put a down payment on a house or make me [even more] attractive to women.

So I have been surprised to find myself such an ardent and passionate supporter of Barack Obama, who against all odds was elected President a couple of months ago.  But I have been even more surprised at the number of other people, many of them far far less obviously “liberal” in their political thinking than I am, who also have found themselves not just supporters, but enthusiastic supporters, of this man.

I can figure it out for myself, I think–as a pragmatist, the way Obama has already made it clear he plans to work with conservatives rather than against them is very exciting to me.  You can complain about all the things you would have gotten done if only the other side hadn’t blocked you, but compromising a little and actually getting things done is way better.  His lack of interest in chest-beating, in name-calling, is refreshing almost to the point of being alien, at least compared with many of his forebears in the political arena. 

But the thing that is harder to figure out is the emotional power of Obama.  The thing that turns me and millions–seriously, think about it, millions–of people into supporters.  The thing that causes what, 60 or 70 thousand people to show up for a speech?  In Germany?  And while he was still only a candidate, not the designated president-elect?  The thing that made people stand in line for hours and hours just to early vote.  The thing that has people still excited even though the country is deep in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression?

Barack Obama is a STATESMAN. It was politics that put him where he is, and it will be politics that allows him to push policy through Congress and effect the sort of change he was voted into office on–politics that is often ugly and cynical but (apparently) necessary in our idiosyncratic system. But it’s Obama’s Buddha-like calm, his unnerving confidence, his palpable sense of force that makes us listen.  It’s the way he speaks honestly, and then stops talking when he’s done speaking honestly. 

Not since Martin Luther King Jr himself has a single man of any race been able to capture the hopes and imagination of the world in such a way.  Not since the mighty final chorus of King’s great speech have so many people believed so strongly in a man.  Not since Martin Luther King Jr was gunned down in cold blood, in a decade where it seemed all great men met this fate, has such a redemptive voice of peace held such sway over so many.

Next week Barack Obama will be inaugurated President of the United States, and the hopes of an entire nation will walk up the steps and take that oath with him.  This is the first epochal moment since 9/11, the first moment that history will look back on and differentiate clearly between “pre-” and “post-.”  From this moment on, every child born will be born into a world where a black man, the son of an immigrant and a single mother, can become the most respected man in the world, and hold the highest office in his country. 

For better or worse, I believe in this man as well, and above all else wish him safety and success.  This one voice let us keep for a little bit.  And in the spirit of Obama, I wish myself the grace and tolerance to be patient with the man when he has to make odd decisions for the greater good.  If there’s anything we need right now, it’s surely greater good.  Godspeed, Barack Obama, and rest in peace Dr. King, the intellectual antecedent of our next President.  I can’t tell you how pleasurable it is to describe him thus.

January 16, 2009 | BLOG | 3 Comments |

3 Responses

  1. Well put — I too have high hopes, and like you was taken by surprise by how high they were, and still are.

  2. Tiny says:

    Dear Brother,

    Your words are encouraging. I am delighted to hear that so many others are encouraged about our newly elected-President. If you listen long enough you should be able to hear the sighs of my long gone ancestors thanking GOD Almighty for this season. The moans and the groans of those holding out of a new day did not go unnoticed.

    I cannot articulate just how much all of this means to me and my loved ones, but I am going to Washington to get “caught up” in this new day. I shall celebrate for those who died banking on this very day. Yes, 20 January is of great import, but I must live this answered prayer out is every aspect of my life for the balance of my life.

    We ALL are Barack Obama!

    Barbie

  3. LOOKA says:

    You know, me myself, I'm very un-flattered by politicians and by politics. Mostly because, where I live, politicians means Bushes.

    Obama is the best incarnation of what a well rounded, aware politician is, in a long, long time. I can see that from here, from my small spot far away from the USA. It's a relieve to see a person with an open mind in the position he is in.

    —————

    Us here, we had no change since the 40's. It hasn't changed, it's crazy. We had multiple re-elections of political staff in Austria over the last decade and saw our stupid (in the worst meaning of the word) voters cut back to overlooking the not so distant history.

    We have members of parliament who openly admit their closenes to post-Nazi ideologies – and that's neither a minority nor a freetime activity. Besides ideolizing a massmurdering and inhuman time only 60 years ago, it's forwarding a stagnation enabled by the strong economy we had, paying for all the mistakes made and not looked at. Above all there HAS still been enough money to not feel those mistakes.

    Now that things look dire and there is not so much money around to make mistakes in a continuing fashion, I hope it won't come to the same, ahem, *%$? again and again.

    Now for closing, that's possibly why Obama is so well received in Europe: because we lack such personality and such personnel in our politics.

    Where I live, we need someone with what he's got! All the good stuff to you guys over there!

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