Saturday, July 25, 2009

"didn't mean to slight?" Are you serious?

I haven't been tracking the Gates-Cambridge Police issue too closely, recently, but I haven't been completely out of the loop. I saw yesterday on CNN.com that President Obama "didn't mean to slight" when he said that the police acted stupidly.

Thus far, I have generally been impressed with President Obama's public interactions. He's polished, personable, and generally reassuring, which are skills that President H.W. Bush was perhaps missing.

I cannot, however, figure out how a man as publicly well-appointed as President Obama can stand at the lectern, and on one day say that the police acted stupidly, and on the next say he didn't mean to slight them. The facts of the of the event are irrelevant to the statement.

"I think you are not professional, and do your job poorly, but I hope you don't take any offense."

Beyond that, the offending statement uses harsher language than the President will use with human rights violating nations! You don't hear the President saying that North Korea "acted stupidly" by continuing missile tests, or that Iran "acted stupidly" by claiming there are no homosexuals in Iran. The President, however , feels compelled to pick out a law officer and fellow American to put down in public.

I'm not, strictly speaking, down on the President. President Obama, however, needs to recognize that he is no longer "just" a member of the legislative branch, but is the leader of the free world, the long-awaited, compassionate Ambassador, and that his words resound internationally far beyond the White House lectern from where they are uttered.