Newsweek editor Evan Thomas brought adulation over President Obama’s
Cairo speech to a whole new level on Friday, declaring on MSNBC:
"I mean in a way Obama’s standing above the country, above – above the world, he’s sort of God."Thomas,
appearing on
Hardball with Chris Matthews, was reacting to a preceding
monologue in which Matthews praised Obama’s speech: "I think the
President's speech yesterday was the reason we Americans elected him.
It
was grand. It was positive. Hopeful...But what I liked about the
President's speech in Cairo was that it showed a complete humility...The
question now is whether the President we elected and spoke for us so
grandly yesterday can carry out the great vision he gave us and to the
world."
Matthews discussed Obama’s upcoming speech marking the 65
th
anniversary of D-Day and compared it to that of Ronald Reagan. He then
turned to Thomas and asked: "Reagan and World War II and the sense of
us as the good guys in the world, how are we doing?" Thomas replied:
"Well, we were the good guys in 1984, it felt that way. It hasn't felt
that way in recent years. So Obama’s had, really, a different task
We're seen too often as the bad guys. And he – he has a very different job from –
Reagan was all about America, and you talked about it.
Obama is ‘we are above that now.’ We're not just parochial, we're not just chauvinistic, we're not just provincial."Thomas elaborated on Obama as God, patronizingly explaining: "He's
going to bring all different sides together...Obama is trying to sort
of tamper everything down. He doesn't even use the word terror. He uses
extremism. He's all about let us reason together...He's the teacher. He
is going to say, ‘now, children, stop fighting and quarreling with each
other.’ And he has a kind of a moral authority that he – he can – he
can do that." In response, Matthews wondered: "If there's a world
election between him and Osama Bin Laden, he's running a good
campaign." Thomas agreed: "Yes, he is."
Here is a transcript of the relevant portion of the exchange:
5:15PM SEGMENT:
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Tomorrow on the 65th anniversary of D-day, President Obama
has a tough pair of acts to follow. His own speech yesterday and one
given a quarter century ago. I remember getting up that morning in 1984
to catch President Reagan at Normandy. It was a real ‘Morning in
America’ speech. I believe that Reagan’s ability to connect to World
War II was a reason for his enormous popularity in this country. Here
he was on the bluffs of France saying something very good about
America, how we liberated Europe. That's the heart of it, really. The
reason Reagan was popular, Roosevelt was popular, Jack Kennedy was
popular, and Barack Obama is popular. Don't tear us down. Don't make us
feel like victims or the angry guys or the worried guys. Make us feel
American. I think the President's speech yesterday was the reason we
Americans elected him. It was grand. It was positive. Hopeful. It said
to the world, if you're a good guy, you've got nothing to fear from us.
If you’ve got national aspirations, if you want to be respected as a
people, if you want to be treated as an equal people in the world,
we're on your side. If you're an aggressor, if you want to hold down
other people, if you're driven by a predatory ideology, if you're out
to hurt this country, look out. We Americans are that rattlesnake on
that first flag, ‘Don't tread on me.’ But what I liked about the
President's speech in Cairo was that it showed a complete humility.
What he did was rob from the enemy, those who want to destroy us, their
main case, the belief that only by extremism can the East reach
equality of dignity with the West. The question now is whether the
President we elected and spoke for us so grandly yesterday can carry
out the great vision he gave us and to the world. If he can, he'll be
honoring what happened on D-day 65 years ago tomorrow. He will be
delivering the world once again from evil. Evan Thomas is editor at
large for Newsweek magazine. Evan, you remember '84. It wasn't 100
years ago. Reagan and World War II and the sense of us as the good guys
in the world, how are we doing?
EVAN THOMAS: Well, we were the
good guys in 1984, it felt that way. It hasn't felt that way in recent
years. So Obama’s had, really, a different task We're seen too often as
the bad guys. And he – he has a very different job from – Reagan was
all about America, and you talked about it. Obama is ‘we are above that
now.’ We're not just parochial, we're not just chauvinistic, we're not
just provincial. We stand for something – I mean in a way Obama’s
standing above the country, above – above the world, he’s sort of God.
He’s-
MATTHEWS: Yeah.
THOMAS: He's going to bring all different sides together. It's a very different-
MATTHEWS:
Can he – well, here’s Ronald Reagan. Let's take a look, a little Friday
night nostalgia. Here he is speaking about peace and reconciliation at
Normandy back 25 years ago. Let's listen.
RONALD REAGAN: But we
try always to be prepared for peace, prepared to deter aggression,
prepared to negotiate the reduction of arms, and, yes, prepared to
reach out again in the spirit of reconciliation. In truth, there is no
reconciliation we would welcome more than a reconciliation with the
Soviet Union so together we can lessen the risks of war now and forever.
MATTHEWS:
Let's talk about the difference. He was talking about the evil empire,
trying to reconcile with the people of Russia and the Soviet Union, but
not the country. Barack Obama the other day was saying, yesterday, that
we don't have an enemy out there per se. We have people who choose
extremism, but Islam’s not our enemy. That's not the evil empire.
THOMAS:
But Reagan did it with a very – for the first term it was a clenched
fist. I mean, we ramped up the cold war before we ramped it down. We
built up our military. We – all of this D-day stuff was about war. That
was about fighting.
MATTHEWS: Right.
THOMAS: Reconciliation
only after the fighting. That's not – Obama’s not doing that. Obama –
we've had our fighting. Obama is trying to sort of tamper everything
down. He doesn't even use the word terror. He uses extremism. He's all
about let us reason together. I think he has a much tougher job,
frankly, because-
MATTHEWS: What's his shtick? Reagan had the
United States arms race, winning the arms race. And we had the threat
of high frontier, we were going to beat the Soviets at technology.
THOMAS:
I don't think he has – his shtick is he's the teacher. He's the
teacher. He is going to say, ‘now, children, stop fighting and
quarreling with each other.’ And he has a kind of a moral authority
that he – he can – he can do that-
MATTHEWS: If there's a world election between him and Osama Bin Laden, he's running a good campaign.
THOMAS: Yes, he is.
—Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center.