An Internet hub for moderates, centrists, and independents, with domestic and international news, analysis, original reporting, and popular features from the left, center, and right

A Look Into Obama’s Mind

In unearthing the syllabus and assignments for his seminar in “Current Issues in Racism and the Law” during 12 years of teaching at the University of Chicago, the New York Times offers a preview of how Barack Obama’s mind might work in the Oval Office.

For that complex and controversial subject, Obama improvised his own textbook, with key cases like Brown v. Board of Education, and essays by Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. Dubois and Malcolm X as well as conservative thinkers like Robert H. Bork.

Amid the historical horrors of slavery and lynchings, students recall, Obama made room for discussing the values and culture that Americans of all races grow up sharing, citing his wife, Michelle, a black woman, who loved “The Brady Bunch” so much that she could identify every episode by its opening scenes.

But perhaps most to the point of how a President Obama would conduct his administration’s approach to problem solving may be found in his instructions to students for preparing their term papers.

Read the rest of this entry.

  • runasim
    "Sounds like a good professor. I don't know that that says much about his mind, per se."

    How many people in public life today can follow and understand both sides of an argument?
  • elrod
    Sounds like a good professor. I don't know that that says much about his mind, per se.
  • DLS
    "Sounds like you have been reading too much Soren Kierkegaard. Not enough 'Leap of Faith:' from the non believers."

    To this day so many of them behave as if they've never read material we've read such as that well-done New Yorker article about Obama's past. They're too busy still throwing strange tantrums (for any outraged reaction is strange) and making silly criticism about the cover illustration. (Is the solution Obama comic books?)
  • JSpencer
    Runasim - You're right. Too many folks are focused on pigeonholing the guy when they should be learning what he might actually be about. Such is the nature of politics in the 21st century I'm afraid.
  • Neocon
    Runasim

    You should run for office.

    That may be Obama's dilemma. People want to whittle him down to their wanting intellectual level. He can understnd them, but are they up to understanding him?

    Sounds like you have been reading too much Soren Kierkegaard. Not enough "Leap of Faith:" from the non believers.
  • DLS
    "DLS, your comment to runasim suggests that a little self-examination is overdue."

    Tsk, tsk. Incorrect and illogical again.

    Unlike you, I can seize the moment.
  • runasim
    JSpencer,

    There are certain (most) pundits and commenters who rush in with judgmental answers without the capacity to comprehend the questions.
    Therein lie the dangers of democracy and grass roots politics. So much depends on the quality of leaders,and their intellectual abilities, at every level from Washington to the tiniest municipality.

    They are in short supply these days. Whatever inellectual abilities exist are usually used to market pre-dermined personal preferences rather than seek conclusions from empirical evidence.

    I was thrilled to read about Obama's teaching experience. You can't defend any solution without understanding all the counterarguments.
    What we have instead is an attitude of operating with horse blinders on. The prospect of taking blinders off is scary to the intellectually meek and exhilerating to those open to intellectual inquiry.

    That may be Obama's dilemma. People want to whittle him down to their wanting intellectual level. He can understnd them, but are they up to understanding him?
  • JSpencer
    A little more "analytic rigor" would indeed be a welcome change. The description of Obama's expectations for his students suggests a mind that discourages mediocrity... which would be another welcome change.

    Btw DLS, your comment to runasim suggests that a little self-examination is overdue. Consider that a friendly tip if you like.
  • DLS
    "I fall in love wtih intelligent minds that can follow the development of ideas in all their complexity."

    You sure disguise that on this site! Or you just let your politics override that.

    * * *

    "I wouldn't read too much into this stuff from Obama's past."

    I don't see him as a Sixties radical McGovernite invader of academia and legal education (which is notoriously riven with such politics in place of education).

    Even his wife's "woman-and-family-centered" laundry list of typical eye-rolling Democratic agenda items from the past (which the nation cannot afford to see implemented) isn't radical.

    When Obama advocates nationalization of the oil companies, then I'll worry.
  • I wouldn't read too much into this stuff from Obama's past. As I noted in my post today, he has given us plenty of recent information to judge him by.
  • runasim
    I fall in love wtih intelligent minds that can follow the development of ideas in all their complexity.
    I found it interesting that neither the conservative nor the progressive students felt Obama was on their side. It was his job to teach students to understand law and the progression of legal arguments, and he did it. He could have been a great teacher, had he chosen that profession.
  • Neocon
    This is getting obsessive/compulsive.
blog comments powered by Disqus
© 2005-2009 The Moderate Voice | Site design by Elegant Themes | Site customization, hosting, and security by Enxit Group, LLC