The election is over. In my view, the good guys lost, though unlike what
the winner would have claimed had he lost, I don’t think that the election was
rigged. But it was skewed by the fact that so many states run by
Republicans have instituted practices that reduce the number of putatively
liberal, that is, Democratic, voters. I’ll let those who follow discussions of
polls more assiduously than I do to figure out just how these measures affected
the outcome of Trump vs. Clinton.
What’s for sure is that the constitutionally mandated creation of the
electoral college can lead to a divergence between the actual number of US
voters and the number of delegates to the electoral college, as it did this
time around. So, live with it, buddy.
But
Barack Obama successfully went against the system and was elected. There was
nothing obvious about that first victory. He was the first one in quite some
time to show up on that top-level scene who was articulate, indeed, eloquent,
and obviously brainy. Give American voters credit for propelling that kind of
person to the country’s highest office. Not to mention that he was African
American!
And now, in
not many weeks, he will step down and return to civilian life. He accomplished
a lot, considering that he was none-stop combating an establishment that was
not ready to accept a president the color of whose skin was not white. (My
pessimistic prediction is that racial prejudice will not disappear in any
foreseeable future.) Considering the odds stacked against him, he did very
well, indeed. It’s always mostly a guess as to what future historians might
say, but mine is that they will list him among the better president.
He
might “rate” higher if he had been more successful in persuading other
politicians, in the House and the Senate, to push his goals, prodding in the
style of Lyndon Johnson. That would have taken more than eloquent speechifying.
Rather, more arm-twisting and pressure tactics not excluding blackmail. For
that, Obama was too professorial, to blame my own genre.
As for
the real world, Obama accomplished a lot, though too many of the good things he
brought into existence are not protected from future wiping out by his
successor. But before Obama disappears into history—and into a job, I hope,
with an income greater than he has ever had, I want to salute him as one of the
better US president, if not of the very top layer. By way of brief PS, I don’t
know that conditions (weasel word) are such that at this time it is at all
possible for someone to rise to the level of a Lincoln or an FDR.
With
strong feelings about the past eight years, I say, “well done” under very tough
circumstances and best wishes for you and your wife’s future. Barack Obama has
been a scholar and a gentleman. Now a rare characterization of a politician.
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