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Patrick Buchanan
Pat Buchanan
14 Feb 2012
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The Untouchables

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To watch the contortions over that New Yorker cover cartoon of the Obamas is to understand whom it is impermissible to offend in the America of 2008.

The cartoon is a caricature of Michelle as an urban terrorist in an Angela Davis afro with an AK-47 slung over her back and a bandoleer of ammo in the Oval Office doing a fist-bump with a Barack decked out in turban and Muslim garb. On the wall hangs a portrait of Osama bin Laden. Blazing away in the fireplace is the American flag.

"President Obama and First Lady — as Seen From the Right-Wing Point of View" might have been the caption. Phil Klein of American Spectator nailed it: "This cartoon is intended to make fun of conservatives as ignorant racists and essentially marginalize any criticism of Obama as moronic."

Unfortunately for the New Yorker, the cartoon misfired. Blow-ups are likely to be as pandemic in right-wing dorms this fall as were posters of "Che" Guevara in left-wing dorms in the 1970s.

Indeed, to a goodly slice of the media, this cartoon is no joking matter. Michelle and Barack had been dissed!

For 48 hours, editors Rick Hertzberg and David Remnick fended off attacks, assuring media interrogators the cartoon's purpose was not to satirize the Obamas but to satirize the caricature of Michelle and Barack in the mind of the paranoid right. Remnick insisted to The Huffington Post, "It's not a satire about Obama — it's a satire about the distortions and misconceptions and prejudices about Obama."

Why did progressives recoil? Because the more savvy among them sense that, like much humor, this cartoon was an exaggeration that contained no small kernel of recognizable truth.

After all, Barack did dump the flag pin. Michelle did say she had never been proud of her country before now. Barack did don that Ali Baba outfit in Somalia. His father and stepfather were Muslims. He does have a benefactor, Bill Ayers, who said after 9-11 he regrets not planting more bombs in the 1960s. He did have a pastor who lionizes Black Muslim Minister Louis Farrakhan. Put glasses on him, and Barack could play Malcolm X in the movies.

And assume the point of the cartoon had been to satirize the Obamas. Why would that have been so outrageous?

Journalists, after all, still celebrate Herblock, the cartoonist who portrayed Richard Nixon with the body of a rat climbing out of a sewer.

Bill Clinton is still denounced as a racist for saying Barack's claim to have been consistent on Iraq was a "fairy tale" and for comparing his South Carolina primary victory to Jesse Jackson's.

Hillary Clinton has been compared to the sex-starved Glenn Close character in "Fatal Attraction." George Bush's verbal gaffes are endlessly panned by late-night comics and Comedy Central.

But Barack gets the special-ed treatment. Our first affirmative action candidate.

The New Yorker made a "damn-fool decision," said George Lockwood, a lecturer on journalistic ethics.

David West of Brookings wailed to USA Today of the cartoon: "It's the mass media at its worst. It perpetuates false information, and it's highly inflammatory. ... It gives credibility to what's been circulating for months, and that's what makes it dangerous."

But dangerous to whom? Again, it is only a cartoon.

Barack called the cartoon "an insult against Muslim Americans." His campaign called it "tasteless and offensive." That they are miffed is understandable. After all, 12 percent of Americans think Barack took his oath on the Koran, 26 percent think he was raised a Muslim, and 39 percent think he went to a madrassa.

Yet, the reaction of our cultural elites is the more interesting and instructive.

For it suggests that Obama is an untouchable to be protected. As an African-American, he is not to be treated the same as other politicians. Remnick and Hertzberg obviously felt intense moral pressure to remove any suspicion that they had satirized the Obamas. No problem, however, if they were mocking the American right.

Bottom line: If you wish to stay in the good graces of the cultural elite, don't mess with Michelle and Barack.

On display here is not only the sensitivity of the Obama folks to portrayals of him as a radical, but the sensitivity — the naked fear — of an elite magazine that it might be perceived as lending aid and comfort to any who would dare question the nobility and patriotic ardor of the Obamas.

If conservatives allow such a media to determine the weapons they may use and to limit the terrain upon which they are to be permitted to fight, they will lose this election. They have to peel the bark off Barack.

As for the New Yorker, it emerges from the episode as not just unheroic, but just another magazine desperate not to offend its readership or the people whose approbation it seeks as the measure of its moral worth.

To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
Sir; you know that you can tell one hellova big lie with a lttle twist of the truth, and there has not been much little twisting of the truth among republican shysters in recent decades. They tell the big lie and they tell it often, and even if the democrats haven't lost their idealism and their hope; I think most of them are losing their sense of humor, and their patience. If enough of the people can be manipulated by their fears there will never be enough motivated by their commitment to justice. People surrender justice to have security, but it a bad bargain. From my perspective we are not of the land of the brave, able to dare and do great things. We are the same people who filled this place: The huddled masses. We counted on this place. We counted on the promises government made to us. We counted on the government to serve America, and not give away the store. We've been burned by our leaders, by the system, and by the economy; and it is going to take some getting used to. Until then, you should expect that people are going to get a little sensitive when the lies start to unfold. Some people never get tired of being lied to. Reality is something they want protection from. Some people will welcome a lie into their homes and into their hearts and offer it pie and coffee. And many of us in this country are getting GD sick of being maniplated by shot in the dark intelligence, obreption, propaganda, and think tanks, spinners, prevaricators, and damned liars. But I wouldn't worry. We are all still very polite. Best.... Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Fri Jul 18, 2008 6:12 AM
Pat, you are exactly right. Such a pleasure to read your fearless articles. (If only you had been elected when you ran!)
Comment: #2
Posted by: Mildred Eselin
Fri Jul 18, 2008 10:08 AM
I cannot believe this man wants to be POTUS. He is a professional victim . Everytime someone says something or writes something he crys foul. He does this on purpose to bring attention to himself and to invoke sympathy like boo-hoo they're picking on me and wife again. If he is going to get to the highest office in the land what is he going to do when he really is critized? Is this what his presidency is going to be like? Everyone walking on eggs with no one expressing free speech. Also, it's a fact tha the black community can use the N-word without any problem;hence Jesse Jackson. As Whoopie Goldberg said its our word it belongs to us alone and we can use it anyway WE want to. She also said her mother couldn't vote. Well a lot of women couldn't vote. The problem with Goldbergs thoughts are they have not moved on and still expect everyone to pay or be punished for the past treatment of the black community. Look what happened to Imus when he used the term (in bad judgement) NHhos. BUT nothing was said when Spike Lee used that phrase in a movie.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Marian
Fri Jul 18, 2008 4:04 PM
Re: Marian; Sir, What Mr. Obama needs to do is go through two terms harassed from one end to the other by special prosecuters, libel, slander, and insinuation. No one considers when they lay that crap on a public servant that they are attacking a servant of all the people no matter how small the majority that elects them. What comes after character assasination? How much more uncivil can it get? If your guy gets elected, you want him given respect, and a chance; do you not? For example, I was on a job once where the whole raising gang wanted the moon the Governor, Governor Engler, for whom I had little love or respect. But these boys and young men who wanted to show their hairy butts to the governor would have insulted all who voted for him, and all the people of Michigan. And I took abuse for it, and I would do it again, but reason prevailed. We have let ourselves get so deeply divided that we see the other side as the enemy. I do think party is the enemy, this one and that one. But the people are not the enemy, and I will not insult them by insulting their man or woman. The goal for each of us is what it has always been: a more perfect union. The parties have led us into disunion. They have encouraged this partisan hatred. They are not the cause of our division, but they, and the parasitic press pour salt and dirt into our open wounds and blame each other for the fester. It will always be divide and conquer for some. Forget that. Let's be friends. I think we can learn how to find agreement. And I think we have reached the point where we must.
Comment: #4
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Fri Jul 18, 2008 8:27 PM
This has been a long campaign made longer by excessive, public displays of wound licking on all sides. Remember all the hand wringing over Wesley Clarke's statements--which in context weren't at all insulting.
I'm an Obama supporter, and for the record, I wasn't offended by the New Yorker cartoon, and even if I was . . . well, if you're doing political satire and nobody's offended, then you're really not doing it right.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Thomas Prais
Mon Jul 21, 2008 8:59 AM
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