l****z 发帖数: 29846 | 1 Being president of the U.S., the most powerful man in the world, is often
most about perception. The man (or, one day, woman) in the job takes actions
large and small every day, but it is the perception of the man that seeps
into the everyday lives of working Americans.
That's why presidential candidates always hit Philadelphia for a cheesesteak
during campaigns (Democrats to Pat's, Republicans to Geno's). Sure, they're
running billion-dollar operations trying to win the White House, but one
picture of them wolfing down a Cheez Whiz-covered glob of meat on a Philly
street hits home with millions of voters: "Hey, that guy's just like me! He
loves him a Pat's [or Geno's] cheesesteak, too!" (Unless you're John F.
Kerry and order Swiss cheese — then everyone hates you.)
Sometimes, that perception cuts to the core. Like when President George W.
Bush stopped playing golf in 2003, at the height of the Iraq War.
"I think playing golf during a war just sends the wrong signal," he said
years later. "I don't want some mom whose son may have recently died to see
the commander in chief playing golf. I feel I owe it to the families to be
in solidarity as best as I can with them."
That's also why Mr. Bush did two other things, without fanfare or praise.
First, he never headed home to his Texas ranch until after Christmas,
instead going to Camp David for a few days. That way, the hundreds of people
revolving around him at all times — White House staff, Secret Service
agents, reporters, photographers, all the others — could spend the holiday
with their families in and around Washington, D.C. No one ever reported that
— until this column.
Second, he rarely attended sporting events, although he once owned a
baseball team and was a self-confessed stats junkie. His thinking there was
the same: If he went to a baseball game (right down the street from the
White House), his mere presence would mean hours and hours of extra security
for fans. He once stopped off at the Daytona 500 and the metal detectors
through which every fan had to pass left thousands outside in line when the
green flag fell; he didn't attend many sporting events after that.
But something remarkable has happened with these occupants of the White
House: Neither President Obama nor first lady Michelle appear to give a damn
about perception. They won the White House and, by God, they're going to
enjoy their time there, no matter the cost. And who cares what you think,
anyway?
How else to explain the nonstop vacations the pair keep taking during what
Mr. Obama calls the "worst financial crisis since the Great Depression"? In
2013, the First Family has already enjoyed three vacations — that's one a
month. (Sorry, Joe America, you might have to forget your week at the beach
again this year, but make sure you get those taxes in on time!)
The Obamas ended 2012 and kicked off 2013 in an $8 million, 6,000-square-
foot house in Hawaii (they left well before Dec. 25, by the way). There, the
president played five rounds of golf (breaking the 100-rounds-as-president
threshold). Scarcely a month into Term 2, Mrs. Obama headed off for Aspen,
taking along the couple's daughters. Vice President Joseph R. Biden also hit
the Colorado slopes. While the girls (and Joe) were gone, Mr. Obama nipped
down to Florida for a four-day boys weekend of golf, teeing it up with his
buddies — and Tiger Woods. He hit the links again this weekend, then
dropped in for an NCAA tournament game in Washington.
Jumpin' Joe, for his part, spent New Year's in the Virgin Islands and popped
off over the Easter weekend for a golf outing at the glorious Kiawah Island
, S.C. (where rounds of golf on the spectacular Ocean Course run $353 —
nearly $20 a hole). His third vacation of the year came the same week as
reports that he and his entourage spent $460,000 for a single night in
London and $585,000 for a night at a five-star hotel in Paris.
Then, last week, reports emerged that the Obama girls were kicking it in the
Bahamas for spring break. Days later, a Colorado news station, KMTV,
reported that the girls were now skiing in Sun Valley, Idaho. The White
House flacks didn't like that one bit.
"From the beginning of the administration, the White House has asked news
outlets not to report on or photograph the Obama children when they are not
with their parents and there is no vital news interest," said Kristina
Schake, communications director to the first lady. "We have reminded outlets
of this request in order to protect the privacy and security of these girls
."
At their demand, the station scrubbed the report without explanation. What
losers.
To be clear, this has nothing to do with the daughters. Never has. They are
wonderful girls. The issue is use of taxpayer money, especially since Mr.
Obama has shut down the White House to visitors, citing the cost of security
. All these trips cost millions for Secret Service protection; couldn't they
just skip a few vacations so taxpayers could visit "America's House"?
But no, the Obamas don't care a whit about that, or the perception of them
living high on the hog while many hardworking Americans are struggling to
get by — and hoping to save enough for just one vacation this year.
And that perception, juxtaposed with reality, more than nearly anything else
, tells you an awful lot about this president.
• Joseph Curl covered the White House and politics for a decade for
The Washington Times and is now editor of the Drudge Report. He can be
reached at j********[email protected] and @josephcurl. |
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