THE NEWS:
President Obama spends his first day in office sitting on his arse, watching a parade! "And on the seventh day..."
Karl Rove has some
timely advice for the new President. Never mind the
suspicious confluence of [url=
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123197784199983615.html[/url] on the fifteenth; some of it was fair and some of it was the to-be-expected pantsshitting anxiety from people losing their appointed champion (an example I would really criticize being a recent article from the Jerusalem Post thanking Bush for his service to Israel over the years, which was both angry and rather humorously ill-applied).
Of course, to balance out the first words I've written about the guy on his first day in office - somebody I definitely wanted in office - I should note that it was apparently damn cold and anybody who can sit out there for however many hours watching a parade has nether regions of titanium. Not what I'd consider to be an easy day, really.
But back on the anti-hype wagon: We heard some good things in that speech, which I watched along with literally hundreds of other students in the campus auditorium.
Miller Auditorium here at WMU seats 3,497, and there's three levels - a balcony (closed off, less than 1/3 the seats), another level about the same size (the Grand Tier), and an orchestra level. The Grand Tier and the Orchestra seemed pretty close to full, and most rows seemed well over half full.
There was some laughter as Obama raced over the Chief Justice in order to get sworn in, and some laughter whenever Bush's rather stoic face appeared on the screen (for whatever reason).
The poet they had on immediately after was pretty dire, I thought, so I left.
My final observation: Bill Clinton was a good guy and a decent President, but one thing I find rather interesting is that Barack Obama's personality type seems more like Bush. Clinton was not quite a prima donna (that term is forevermore reserved for Battle Creek's favorite, Donald Rumsfeld, I'm told), but he certainly fits closer to the stereotype of the daredevil politician that loves to live life on the edge. Bush is actually a pretty quiet guy, and although I think he didn't really have much of a plan for foreign policy at the start, his natural inclination was for a "humble" policy with regards to other nations. Obama seems more likely to live closer to that promise. Both Administrations like, or liked, to keep drama to a minimum - Bush's eventually cracking and fracturing under the strain on credibility this caused for many within his Administration.
Obama's Administration certainly will learn from Bush's mistakes, and it helps that he's not listening to escaped End Times types and certain other types of domestic terrorist. Just as importantly, he should not ignore the lessons other administrations have learned at cost to themselves, from Wilson and FDR to Kennedy and Clinton.