A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

The speech

I haven’t read much of the commentary, but I thought this Obama speech was pretty darn brilliant. Not only did he convincingly refute the worries that he was too close to his fiery and eccentric pastor, he wove the issue into a broader narrative about race, resentment, and injustice in America. Not only that, but Obama gave the best articulation I’ve seen yet of how his “unity” theme flows into his policy positions: we can overcome what divides us precisely by dedicating ourselves to a vision of the common good, a vision oriented around rectifying those injustices which give rise to division and resentment in the first place.

This isn’t to say I buy all of Obama’s policy prescriptions, but he’s shown that he can tell a compelling story about them and how they fit into his larger vision. And can you imagine any other major politician in the US giving a speech this honest and reflective? Obama continues to sound like a real person and not a poll-tested automaton (or at least less so than most other pols), which, to me, is a big part of his appeal.

4 responses to “The speech”

  1. Excellent observation, however, what exactly divides is to continualk reference and insistence to being looked at differently, to being treated differently- the policies supported, if any, only serve to divide and not unite-

    Yes, eloquent speaker, confident, humble, but hypnotizing with with empty words that he has neither practiced nor endorsed- Perhaqps he shoul spend 4 years in the Senate really trying to put into action what he espouses and then the American people will know the real Barack

  2. Other observations and opinion on Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, politics, and the road to the White House: http://bolsonon.wordpress.com

  3. this “uniter” managed to defend a black racist and his moral right on a hate speech. Wright is as bad as Obama’s grandmother? This guy is a hypocrite . What is so brilliant? he did admit in his speech the fact that he denied a few days ago on the Fox : that he heard hate speech of his mentor. On the fox he did deny it.
    He started divisive rhetoric: Poor white and blacks are both victims? Victims of whom ? Rich whites? Us versus them?
    MLK was the uniter. Obama is a member of hate organization for 20 years and his wife’s anti-American rants are clearly not a slip of the tong: these are realities of Obama’s divisive ideology

  4. Interesting comments you drew, on this one.

    I’m with you, of course. And “me, too” for that part about him seeming a real person.

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