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Jewish World Review Jan. 28, 2011 / 23 Shevat, 5771 A Perfunctory Performance By Paul Greenberg
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |
"He shall from time to time give to --Article II, Section 3, U.S. Constitution "I have noticed that a politician always has a special halo around him, due to the simple fact that he holds a particular office. It has nothing to do whether he is good politician or a complete fool; the position itself lends that person a special aura." -- There comes a time in just about every American president's tenure when his rhetoric must slip into the perfunctory. Only the great presidents and only when they are facing great crises -- a But the perfunctory can be a kind of relief, for it indicates that the crisis is easing. Yet the president must always act, and certainly speak, as if he were in command of events rather than events in command of him. It's almost a duty of the office, and presidents forget it at their and their country's peril. See the sad examples of A president must be a happy warrior, especially when the country isn't happy. That has become especially necessary since the Republic became a mass, televised and internetted democracy. But there does come a time, usually in the middle of a president's first term, perhaps after the almost customary course correction following his party's setback in midterm elections, when the temptation is to just go through the motions, to deliver a patchwork State of the Union address, and only pretend to be in command. Watching the ceremonies attendant upon the Chinese president's visit to ours in Such is the job of a president when no crisis is evident (never fear -- one will arise soon enough) and business is, thank goodness, slow. Perfunctory can be a relief. And yet the pressure remains, at least on an American president, to speak boldly of change, for change is the atmosphere in which America, a synonym for hope, lives. Preferably transformative change, to use the political scientists' banality-of-the-day. For Americans can stand almost anything except standing still. So our president must appear always in motion, leading, vigorous as And so We the People get to be addressed at least once a presidential term as if we were all simpletons. It is a fine thing to present ideas simply, but not if they're just simplifications. And phony ones at that. Tuesday night, the president promised to cut spending while proposing more of it. Did he think we wouldn't notice? Delivering on schedule, the president gave a yawning nation a platitude a minute. I counted them, or tried to before sleep set in: "The future is ours to win. … But we have more work to do. … We should have no illusions about the work ahead of us. … None of this is easy. … All of it will take time. … The future lies ahead of us." All right, I made up that last one, but it would have fit right in. This year's State of the Union was less an address than a series of soundbites in search of a theme. It is in the constitutional nature of the State of the Union that it be an occasion on which a president reads a legislative laundry list to For vague example, the president spoke about increasing the number of college graduates in the country, but not about how well they would be educated, or how thoughtful they would prove as citizens. In the hour of words, words, words our president laid on us Tuesday night, there seemed a curious absence of any need to address the fact hovering over that great chamber Tuesday night: that he had been handed a vote of No Confidence by the American people just weeks ago. A natural like There was one moment of Reaganesque inspiration at the end of No wonder the dry-as-dust Republican response, courtesy of Rep.
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JWR contributor Paul Greenberg, editorial page editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, has won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing. Send your comments by clicking here.
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