Geez! I don’t blog for a day or so and all hell breaks loose out on the old campaign tail.
Many commentators have weighed in on Barack Obama’s “bitter” remarks, and as someone who has worked in, traveled through and is blogging this week from one of the most depressed areas of small town Pennsylvania with among the nation’s highest foreclosure, bankruptcy and unemployment rates, all I can say is:
Right on, brother.
Hillary Clinton, of course, takes voters for fools who will be so superficial as to relate to the hurt in what Obama said but ignore the larger truth. I happen to think that these folks are well outnumbered by voters who understand what Obama meant and that once again his candor and Clinton’s superciliousness will work for him and against her.
Look, I have a cool job, a wonderful woman, the love of my family, excellent health care benefits, a 30-speed trail bike with a titanium frame, a rich cultural existence that includes the latest books and best in music, ballet, opera and theater, and I yelled “Free Tibet!” when the local Chinese cultural association trooped by the other day in a parade celebrating the 250th anniversary of my own small town. (One guy gave me the finger in return.) I suppose all that makes me “elitist” as Clinton accuses Obama of being — and I too can’t bowl a lick.
But even I’m bitter.
I’m among the 80-plus percent of Americans who tell pollsters that the U.S. is going to hell in a hand basket, the majority who long ago broke faith with The Decider over the Mess in Mesopotamia (didja known that another 19 of our brothers were killed last week?) and one of the Haves who look at middle-class acquaintances with deep concern who are quickly becoming Have Nots as they fall further into debt and wonder how the hell they’re going to be able to keep their Uncle Leo in a managed care facility let alone send their kids to college.
Just as Bush-Rove have, Hillary and Bill Clinton want to drive us apart; as tone-deaf as the clingy aspects of Obama’s remarks were, he wants to bring us together.
Not a tough choice for many people and I believe many Pennsylvanians. That is why the results of my own informal poll show that there continues to be movement away from Clinton and toward Obama with eight days to go before the primary hereabouts and that the “bitter” flap has been less a bump in the road for Obama that a defining moment of a Clinton campaign in its own bitter final throes.