Vanity Fair: Obama’s Way
Long but insightful read...
Obamas Way
To understand how air-force navigator Tyler Stark ended up in a thornbush in the Libyan desert in March 2011, one must understand what its like to be president of the United Statesand this president in particular. Hanging around Barack Obama for six months, in the White House, aboard Air Force One, and on the basketball court, Michael Lewis learns the reality of the Nobel Peace Prize winner who sent Stark into combat.
By Michael Lewis
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There are several aspects of his job that seem obvious to him but strike me as so deeply weird that I cant help but bring them up. For example, he has the oddest relationship to the news of any human being on the planet. Wherever it starts out, it quickly finds him and forces him to make some decision about it: whether to respond to it, and shape it, or to leave it be. As the news speeds up, so must our presidents response to it, and then, on top of it all, the news to which he must respond is often about him.
On the leather sofa beside me were the five newspapers that are laid out for him every time he travels. In every one of those someone is saying something nasty about you, I said to him. You turn on the television and you could find people being even nastier. If Im president, Im thinking, Ill just walk around pissed off all the time, looking for someone to punch.
He shook his head. He doesnt watch cable news, which he thinks is genuinely toxic. One of his aides told me that once, thinking the president otherwise occupied, hed made the mistake of switching the Air Force One television from ESPN, which Obama prefers, to a cable news show. The president walked into the room and watched a talking head explain knowingly to his audience why he, Obama, had taken some action. Oh, so thats why I did it, said Obama, and walked out. Now he said, One of the things you realize fairly quickly in this job is that there is a character people see out there called Barack Obama. Thats not you. Whether it is good or bad, it is not you. I learned that on the campaign. Then he added, You have to filter stuff, but you cant filter it so much you live in this fantasyland.
The other aspect of his job I have trouble getting comfortable with is its bizarre emotional demands. In the span of a few hours, a president will go from celebrating the Super Bowl champions to running meetings on how to fix the financial system, to watching people on TV make up stuff about him, to listening to members of Congress explain why they cant support a reasonable idea simply because he, the president, is for it, to sitting down with the parents of a young soldier recently killed in action. He spends his day leaping over ravines between vastly different feelings. How does anyone become used to this?
lots more...
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/2012/10/michael-lewis-profile-barack-obama
JNelson6563
(28,151 posts)Thank you for posting this.
Julie
LittleGirl
(8,292 posts)Voice for Peace
(13,141 posts)proud to call him prez
mikki35
(111 posts)I was amazed - quality of the writing was excellent. Lots of good info here.