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    Alienating the Middle

    Mona Charen's column is released once a week.

    It doesn't come as a huge surprise that President Obama has decided to embrace the Occupy Wall Street movement. There has always been a certain drum circle flavor to this administration. In fact, nothing illustrated the point so well as when, a couple of weeks ago (before the president decided that OWS was his ticket to re-election), Vice President Biden referred in a radio interview to one of the agitators as "Van Jones, whoever he is." The program's host interjected that Jones was the former "green jobs" czar in the Obama administration. Ah.

    But that's no longer an embarrassment because the administration and the Democratic Party have decided to join (or at least support) the throngs chanting, "What do we want? Revolution! When do we want it? Now!" Nancy Pelosi is pleased. "God bless them for their spontaneity." The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee announced in a fundraising letter that it is seeking 100,000 signatures on a petition declaring "I stand with the Occupy Wall Street protests." And David Plouffe, the president's senior campaign advisor, sounded upbeat for the first time in a while. "We intend to make it one of the central elements of the campaign next year," he told the Washington Post. "One of the main elements of the contrast will be that the president passed Wall Street reform and our opponent and the other party want to repeal it."

    This strategy has, to put it mildly, a number of potential pitfalls. There is, for starters, the fact that, unlike the orderly and respectful Tea Party protesters, OWS has already done a number of things likely to alienate the average American. They've defecated on police cars, screamed anti-Semitic rants, trampled on the American flag and, as noted above, shouted themselves hoarse for revolution. Their signs bear such clever slogans as "F**k the rich." Again, in contrast to the Tea Party, they seem not so much opposed to bailouts in principle as simply wanting a piece of the action. One of the planks of their "platform" is the forgiveness of all debt. Another is "free" university education.

    An additional complication for the Obama strategy is that it requires people to forget that he has been president. He will run again as the outsider, the man of the people against the plutocrats of the Republican Party. But this president supported the Troubled Asset Relief Program. He bailed out the auto companies. He was the darling of Wall Street bundlers in 2008. And one exasperated Wall Street insider told Politico:

    "The president's Treasury Secretary was in charge of the New York Fed (during the start of) the bailout. The president reappointed Ben Bernanke, a key architect of the bailout ...The president's White House national economic council director took almost a million dollars from Goldman Sachs before joining the administration ... The president's national security advisor is a former top Fannie Mae lobbyist, and both of his OMB chiefs have ties to big banks. Obama's current chief of staff is from JP Morgan Chase, and his predecessor was on the board of Freddie Mac ... If the president really wants to send Wall Street a message, why doesn't he just convene a meeting of his senior staff?"

    Also, voters have a tendency to judge presidents by results. Despite Plouffe's hope that "as people make the decision about who to go vote for, the gut check is going to be about, 'Who would make decisions more about helping my life than Wall Street?'" the more likely scenario is that voters will consider whether their lives are better or worse since the president took office. To paraphrase Samuel Johnson on second marriages, Plouffe and Obama would like voters to choose hope over experience.

    A recent poll by The Hill newspaper suggests that while embracing OWS may encourage Susan Sarandon, Michael Moore, Roseanne Barr and others among the president's more frothing supporters, it will hurt him among average voters. When likely voters were asked whom they blamed for the country's recent financial crisis and recession, 56 percent said "Washington" as opposed to 33 percent who cited "Wall Street." Asked whether the OWS protests would help or hurt the president's reelection, 38 percent said hurt, while 28 percent thought it would help.

    OWS is America's version of the Greek throngs in the streets — screaming for more bailouts and subsidies when the well has run dry. It's a depressing image of self-delusion and national suicide. But far from the "99 percent," OWS represents only a sliver of the electorate — and the president's embrace of them only confirms his marginality in American politics.

    To find out more about Mona Charen and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

    COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM

     

     

     

     
     
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    38 comments

    • Robert  •  7 mths ago
      The problem with the OWS crowd is that they believe that making everything equal solves all the problems in this country. It doesnโ€™t and it never has anywhere it has been tried. The real problem is the integrity of mankind. We have very little if any. We justify dishonesty with โ€œwell thatโ€™s just the way things get done.โ€ President Obama tells everyone how awful the Wall Street companies are and yet takes millions from them for his campaign and then bails them out. I call that dishonest. President Bush was no better. As long as people believe that maintaining โ€œTHEIRโ€ way of life justifies using others for their own gain, we will have this problem. Look at Illinois; its last two Governors are either in jail or on his way to. One Republican, one Democrat, both dishonest. Today is no different than it was a hundred years ago; then it was the big, bad railroads fleecing the people. If the OWS crowd really wants to change things, then they should first; know what they are asking for and second; seek out honest people to run for office. Same applies to the Tea Party. Get rid of dishonesty in politics and then you have a chance to fix things. This of course will never happen and this great experiment is as doomed to fail as all other forms of government have before us. Hope you like the next dark ages.
    • CurtisG  •  7 mths ago
      So there we have it. Another classical debate over behavior instead of the issue. I am PRO Tea Party and agaist the mis-quide over expessiveness of a few that make the rest of the OWS look foolish at the least. The issue for all of is simply personal responsibility and accountability. What exactly does OWS propose to accomplish that is actionable by all of us? I'm listening. Greed is a bigger problem for us all. We have too many takers and do few givers. Why do some C levels make so much more than us other working professionals. Why do as many as 50% of the populuation not pay taxes and yet take. Where am I in the landscape. I am a part of the declining Middle class with family, am part of the few that pay more than our fair share of taxes and lastly am ready for sustainable and thoughtful change. What should all of us really do now? How about starting in your own neighborhood and making a change there first. Guarantee you that you neighbor needs your generosity now and go from there until we all can show up where change is really needed.
    • Mayday  •  7 mths ago
      Since when does Mona speak for the Middle Class. She speaks for the bankers and the Wall Street traders .
    • Dark Cloud  •  7 mths ago
      pres. ; PS Who do you call the Middle Class?? X X X The working poor. That is what the Middle-Class has been reduced to.
    • whocares  •  7 mths ago
      could a article get more lopsided than this. Guess someone has not paid much attention to polls or listened to people around them unless they only have conversation with closed minded corporate tools. I hear people from all partys saying that corporate america and wall street needs a leash. They are sucking all of america except for the privaliged few into a black hole.
      • David Kowalski 7 mths ago
        Whocares. Coorportations are not to blame. You and I and the rest of the country who use their products and services are. Do you think coorporations would exist if it was not for the consumer. I'm not bothered by people making billions. These corportations have provide me jobs all my life. I just want to earn a good living and take care of my family and myself. I don't want to waste time being envious of people who have earned more than me.
      • whocares 7 mths ago
        David. uh sure dude whatever fantasy you want to believe. good luck with that thought.
      • noone 7 mths ago
        David, I also worked for huge corporations and made money and have a comfortable retirement because of those years and those companies. That said, I also saw exactly how far they'd go to hit quarterly earnings targets and how much they didn't care about consumers beyond their purchase and use of products. That whole 'we care about you' stance that corporations tried to sell is baloney, they care about getting rich and not a single other thing.
    • derekk  •  Denver, United States  •  7 mths ago
      anybody see any you tubes of these OWS idiots? its mind boggling how clueless they are.
    • noone  •  7 mths ago
      Not supporting or not supporting OWS - but I do have to say that a "free university education" seems far more positive than wars that go on forever and cost billions in dollars and thousands in lives - of the two, I'd rather see the money and effort go towards education - that seems like a better road to progress than war.
    • Geoffrey W.  •  7 mths ago
      Obama got his start as a mob organizer (sorry "community organizer") and his instincts are still to side with the mob. It's time that America realized his true face and saw how dangerous an anarchist he really is.
    • Cody  •  7 mths ago
      BB...
      American values is taking care of your people, giving them opportunity, affordable education, and healthcare that doesn't bankrupt anyone that gets sick. Responsible government isn't starting two unpaid for wars, gutting the treasury with unpaid for tax cuts to the wealthy, and taking away people's rights to vote. Self reliance isn't, "I've got mine, sorry about you." And being informed isn't believing that the government is setting up death panels.
    • Political Agnostic  •  7 mths ago
      For those who are not students of history, please take a look at how things were during the middle of the 19th century. Our country had little in the way of laws regulating business and we had things like company towns where people were virtually enslaved to the company stores, massive pollution in and around manufacturing cities, no 40-hour work week, no health care, and no paid vacations. If you were lucky you might get Sundays off. There were robber barons and land speculators. People had little in the way of protection against unscrupulous business practices. From the 1790โ€™s there were four depressions prior to the Great Depression of 1929.

      Is this the kind of country we want for ourselves? It this the kind of country we want for our descendants?

      Maybe it is time to revive the Bull Moose Party (Progressive Party). This party advocated for citizens reclaiming the government and strict limits and disclosure of campaign contributions and strong governmental regulation of industries to protect the middle class. Remember that the presidential nominee was Theodore Roosevelt a former Republican. He foresaw many of the very problems we are facing today, yet here we are 100-years later still dealing with these same issues.

      It is time for life to imitate art. People go open your window and shout, "I'm mad as hell and I am not going to take it anymore!" Before you vote please take the time to really learn about the candidates you plan on voting for and what their vision is for this country
    • JAMES  •  7 mths ago
      If the OWS movement is a sign of the times, we are in trouble. I agree that something needs to change and I'll vote for it at election time. But if acting like some kind of idiotic mob is what is expected, you can all go hang. I don't want the government to take care of me. I don't expect them to send me a large pile of goodies just because I rant and rave. Sooner, rather than later, this mess is going to blow up. When it does, there will be all kinds of dead bodies scattered around. If you don't want to be one of them, I suggest that you stay home and bug hell out of your congressman.
    • American Spirit  •  7 mths ago
      Mona is still hoping folks will believe her drivel...
    • John Connor  •  7 mths ago
      You cins keep saying that OWS is insignificant, but you can't stop talking about. Your fear is showing and it motivates us...
      • wes 7 mths ago
        Whenever a group of children throw a temper tantrum it is not trivial. The children are just showing the lack of intelligence to think of a solution to the problem.
    • Cody  •  7 mths ago
      BillyR...
      OWS is also young people who are looking at a bleak future because the fat-cat corporations have taken everything for themselves - they just want a piece of the American pie - the same pie you've been eating for years. And... The hippies of the 60's were almost exclusively responsible for stopping an unjust war before another 58,000 kids died senselessly for absolutely NO REASON!
      • David Kowalski 7 mths ago
        How have corporations given American youth a poor future? What if they earned degrees in science and engineering that could be applied anywhere in the world for good money? My guess is that most of these protesters are angry because they racked up huge student loans on worthless degrees and believe that they should not have to pay if they can't find a job. This is what happens when you coddle children and don't expect them to earn their way in the world. Most kids now days do not go out and find a job when they are 16. Now Mom and Dad just takes care of them. Take responsibility for yourself and grow up time is running out.
    • Big Jones  •  7 mths ago
      So the author is incensed at the rambunctious OWS crowd. News flash: Typical Tea Party member - 50s., OWS protester - 20s. What don't you get? Ah, to be young and full of juice again!
    • Cody  •  7 mths ago
      "...unlike the orderly and respectful Tea Party protesters..." Huh??? You must have been watching Fox News because the Tea Partiers I saw on every other news broadcast were screaming, red-faced and incoherently, at anyone that disagreed with them. I saw them spitting on people, I saw them calling out racial epithets at non-whites and calling people traitors and un-American if they supported Obama, or his health plan. The saigns they so proudly carried had racial slurs, misspellings and just plain dumb slogans and messages like "Death Panels." The OWS crowd, far from being unruley, just wants what the conservatives and far-right wingnuts had but gave up to the corporations - a future.
      • TexVet 7 mths ago
        You must watch MSNBC. The congressman spit on said it didn't happen. The racial slurs at congressman, not one video or audio tape of it even though there was a $100,000 reward for such. The racial signs, other wide angle pics showed only one sign and those people were asked to leave the TEA Party events. The hundreds of thousands of TEA Party events were ignored by the media, except if they saw something to "expose" it. The OWS crowd is Woodstock without the music and it is on all the major news. Of course the MSM votes 90% Democrat.
      • BB 7 mths ago
        Well said TexVet. There are obviously several people here finishing their first glass of Kool-Aid and reading Yahoo.
      • Cody 7 mths ago
        Sorry, Tex, but I saw this with my own eyes. The Tea Baggers couldn't even provide a coherent answer to the basic question of "what are you protesting?" They always fell back on right-wing talking points and outrageous, proven-false "facts."
    • malco  •  7 mths ago
      In every poll I have seen the OWS are supported in much larger numbers than the dropping support for the Teabaggers....Unlike the T P that the Koch Bro`s paid and bussed in to town hall meetings to shout down Demarcate congressmen while caring signs with the Presidents likeness and Hitler under it and some wearing guns... The OWS is a spontaneous movement that has moved to over 900 places around the world...
      • BILLYR 7 mths ago
        Malco, name and post the numbers! Otherwise you are a lier!
      • yougottabekidding 7 mths ago
        Post numbers? Bill Malco didn't reference any posts. BTW the correct spelling is lair idiot.
    • American Spirit  •  7 mths ago
      Still praying at the altar of Jack Kemp, Mona?
    • Monst  •  7 mths ago
      If the Middle Class is so alienated as Charen claims why does every poll show overwhelming support for the OWS movement?

      Popular support is much higher for the OWS movement than for the Tea Party. Mona is jealous!

      Story is bunk.
    • Truth.  •  7 mths ago
      Slanted article, it all depends on your definition of the middle.
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