All Presidents have huge egos. Every indication is that Obama wants to be an accomplished President, that's why I do not worry about him.
Ooooooooh he
wants to be an accomplished President!!!
Well that changes everything.
Everybody who
wants to be accomplished at something becomes accomplished at it!
That's why everybody's accomplished! What a wonderous world of hope and change we live in!
Let me remind you that if wishes were horses beggars would ride.
Every man who's been President has wanted to be an acccomplished President. There are all kinds of things that go into accomplishment on this scale -- and they don't include a work record of success at campaigns followed by mediocre accomplishment in the job, strings of broken promises, pretending in word to be one thing and then in deed being another, taking credit for accomplishments that are unearned or earned by others, and being a master at seduction while churning out disappointing policy and legislation.
Did you see Michiko K's review of the Wolfe campaign book in the Times yesterday? Sounds like a pretty safe and shallow book, but the indications are that Obama is working very hard studying the issues. He may not be a policy wonk like the Clintons, but he is becoming very knowledgeable and has surrounded himself with very good people.
It is an amazing learning process for me, seeing over the past year intelligent people like you get sucked into the ObamaNation seduction.
Yes I read Michiko's review. I also am partway through the ARC. It's nauseating. But instructive. It's called "Renegade," which is perfect because Barack Obama is anything but a renegade and making up an image is what Obama is all about.
The book was written by Richard Wolffe, who used to write for Newsweek but they severed ties after this book. Wolffe now works in Public Relations, about which Wolffe says, "I offer strategic advice to clients on how to interact with the public, whether it’s their stakeholders or public opinion."
Obama proposed the book idea to Wolffe while Wolffe was covering him on the campaign trail ("Why can’t you write a book about [the campaign]? Like Theodore White. Those are great books," Obama suggested to Wolffe, according to Wolffe in Renegade. This, Wolffe tells us, was on March 20, 2008, two days after Obama's big speech on race) and was given special access to Obama the seducer, and it's evident throughout the book that Wolffe is smitten with Obama.
The book copies the idea (there is little that Obama doesn't copy from someone or something) of Theodore White's Making of the President series about JFK (and subsequently others), and as White did of JFK, Renegade paints Obama in a heroic light.
This, which I just read last night, is an example of what Wolffe tells us, describing the Obama campaign’s media strategy: "They had little aptitude for or interest in winning the daily or hourly news cycle." That's classic Obama-style image-engineering and is completely at odds with
the truth of his campaign's mastery of the minute-to-minute combat of the 2008 news cycle. It's also completely at odds with what's known about David Axelrod's strengths and style. The book is propaganda, and laced with lies, plain and simple.
That you take a New York Times book reviewer's descriptions from a fawning piece of propaganda as trustworthy in describing who Obama really is, provides the most perfect way of showing how Obama supporters see him and why they see him that way.
Perhaps your problem lies elsewhere?
What I said about Obama during the campaign has turned out to be true, and we're only months into his Presidency. Obama supporters here would love to show how I was wrong, but they can't. ObamaCo is proving me right. The problem lies in ObamNation.