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A quarterly magazine of urban affairs, published by the Manhattan Institute, edited by Brian C. Anderson.
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Selected Responses: Sent by Ciprian Ivanof on 07-14-2008: A reasonable article in the conclusion, but it makes two mistakes. Sent by jeanrenoir on 07-14-2008: This is hilarious, and predictable. A desperate attempt to critique Obama's potential to be the most popular American president at home and abroad since FDR. Many groups, especially AIPAC, are terrified of Obama's potential popularity and eloquence as a leader, because they are terrified of a truly independent president whose mass appeal completely trumps the ability of special interests like AIPAC to smear him. Sent by Greg Webb on 07-14-2008: Obama could be the nation's first woman president, just like Clinton was the first black president. Obama won over Hillary because he was the more feminine of the two. Alice in Wonderland would feel at home. Sent by Bud Brooks on 07-14-2008: Powerful essay--insightful, pertinent, and it accurately defines Obama as the biggest swindler in American history. References from literature and history serve to identify Obama exactly: a false prophet, a travesty, a Trojan Horse. Sent by Jennifer on 07-14-2008: This is simply a fascinating, engrossing, thoughtful, and stupendous piece. Sent by Kelley Dupuis on 07-14-2008: Great article (I'm gonna have to look up "apotropaic," though.) Noteworthy: even the New York Times's ultra left-wing pundit Paul Krugman admitted a few months back that Obama's campaign was coming close to a "cult of personality." Something about Obama makes me queasy; when I read something he has said, I get the feeling I used to get in high school when a girl had a crush on me and I didn't feel anything back. That kind of queasy. Sent by Jason Z. on 07-14-2008: Whether you agree with Beran's analysis or not, this was an incredibly refreshing piece. Few writers can navigate the Western canon as well as Beran has in this essay and still come up with an original idea. It's good to know the classical education is still alive. Sent by Diane on 07-14-2008: I *think* your article reflects my concerns about Obama. In a nutshell, I simply do not believe that "we can transcend those limitations in human nature that the Founders acknowledged when they drafted the Constitution," as you wrote. Sent by James McCown on 07-14-2008: Superb, insightful; this article should absolutely be required reading at high schools and colleges around the United States. Sent by Jim Rockford on 07-14-2008: Obama's very post-masculine, Oprah-type, shamanistic positioning turns off men. Even black men don't like him, though of course they'll vote for him out of racial solidarity. But outside painfully and terminally hip yuppies, Emo college kids, and women, Obama faces tough sledding. Men won't like him. It won't be for anything as mundane as his politics, either, but rather his effeminate nature, his post-masculine posturing, his shamanistic posing. Sent by Dan Friedman on 07-13-2008: Obviously this piece was a long time in the making because, gladly, it is also obsolete. As I write, the race is a dead heat in spite of Obama's mojo, a fawning press, and McCain's stillborn campaign. Imagine, it's only July and the American people are already coming to their senses. |
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