Saturday, March 13, 2010

Advice to Obama: "Change your Personality!"

In Jennifer Rubin's post on March 12th, entitled "Trying to Reinvent Obama," she speaks on Dee Dee Myer's advice directed to Obama: "change your personality." Myer's argument is that President Obama's "calm," "cool," and "self-possessed," attitude is resulting in a feeling among American citizens that he is "detached," "snippy," and "attacking his opponents." In other words, he makes us feel as if we mere citizens are not on his superior level. As the White House Press Secretary for the Clinton Administration from Januray 1993 to December 1994, Myers' opinion is credible when it comes to public relations, particularly the President's relationship with his citizens. Her claim that Obama is not relating well with the people of America by pushing unwelcome ideas (i.e. health care reformation) is logical and probably true, and I agree with her on a personal level, but it is not backed up by factual information. In this argument, neither Myers nor Rubin present any evidence that American citizens feel that Obama is "lacking warmth and empathy." I guess we'll have to wait and see what evidence the polls provide in 2012, assuming Obama still likes us enough to want to run again.

Immigration Situation: No love lost between Obama and Latinos

Joshua Hoyt wrote a commentary entitled, "Hoyt: Obama's immigration failure," to the Washington Post on March 10, 2010. Having been a community organizer since 1977 and currently being the exexutive director of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Hoyt is more than qualified as a credible source. Hoyt's argument is that Obama has made a promise that he has not kept to the Latinos of America: that he would make "comprehensive immigration reform" a priority in his Presidency. His claim is reinforced with numbers and facts. Hoyt sites that in Obama's first year in office, his administration was on track to deport 400,000 immigrants. Hoyt also says that Obama is in favor of constructing a fence along the U.S.-Mexican border to help keep immigrants out and that this is an insult to Latinos. To add insult to injury, in President Obama's first State of the Union, the immigration topic only received a slight mention at the end of the speech. I feel that Joshua Hoyt's argument is logical as he makes a claim and presents vaild evidence to support said claim. On a personal level, I feel it is a very important topic that deserves more of the President's attention than it has received. As a Texan, I see and feel the effects of immigration every day, whereas President Obama, sitting comfortably in his Oval Office, seems to subscribe to the childlike idea of, "If I can't see it, it doesn't exist." I agree with Hoyt and feel Obama should spend more time coming to a positive and permanent regulation on immigration.