Saturday, February 16, 2008

A Pattern: Obama Knocks Them Off Their Feet


It was October 15, 2007.

Barack Obama held a rally in Madison, Wisconsin.

THREE people fainted. THREE times Obama interrupted his speech to acknowledge women overcome in the crowd.

I thought it must have been very warm in the room to cause them to drop like flies.

Until today, I had no idea that fainting is so common at Obama events.

An excerpt from my post, "Obama Knocks Them Off Their Feet in Madison," October 15, 2007:
With an enormous American flag as a backdrop, Obama addressed his 4,000 fans. He wore a white shirt, no tie, rolled up sleeves -- no lapel for a flag pin.

He began with a joke: "Never before have this many Packers fans cheered for a Bears fan. Never before in the history of Wisconsin has this ever happened."

Obama said, "We've gotta shout out loud and clear that we expect a new kind of politics."

He said that people in Washington roll their eyes when he talks about hope. They say, "He's a hope-peddler. He's a hope-monger."

Obama said that he was guilty as charged.

Obama interrupted his speech.

"Did somebody drop?"

He called for paramedics.

"We got paramedics on the scene. She looks good."

Obama continued.

He asked, "Where was I?"

"Change."

He addressed the charges of his lack of experience.

He said that a lengthy resume doesn't necessarily guarantee wise decisions.

"[Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld] led us into one of the biggest foreign policy disasters in a generation."

OK. Interesting that he didn't include Bush.

Then another interruption.

"We got another person?"

"I'm just knocking 'em off their feet."

"Paramedics are on their way."

"Everybody stay hydrated."

Back to the speech--

Obama talked about Iraq. He told of how he spoke out against the war during his Illinois Senate campaign in 2002.

"This is a dumb war, ...and we shouldn't fight it."

"Dumb war?"

That's not Obama at his most eloquent.

Obama said that as a candidate and as a president, "You gotta have some impatience. You gotta have some anger."

On the subject of health care, he said his passion on the issue comes from watching his mother worry about insurance when she was dying.

Obama talked about the energy crisis and the environmental crisis.

He ran through a litany of things, shouting "I don't accept (fill in the blank)."

He mentioned JFK and his call to send an American to the moon. Obama equated his own vision for America's future with JFK's vision.

He said that Kennedy didn't know how Americans were going to meet the challenge but that didn't keep him from calling for it.

Then Obama turned back to Iraq.

Obama said, "We've got to start bringing [the troops] home now."

He said that we can't have them in a "civil war."

"We're spending $10 billion a month that could be spent right here in Wisconsin."

Ten billion dollars in Wisconsin?

That would solve our budget issues.

Obama channeled JFK again when he mentioned Hillary Clinton's criticism of his foreign policy naivete. He quoted Kennedy as saying that we should never negotiate out of fear, but we should never fear to negotiate.

At this point, "Kumbaya" almost broke out.

"We're gonna close Guantanamo and restore habeas corpus."

When talking about the American justice system, Obama made reference to different standards being applied to the Jena Six and Scooter Libby.

The crowd was in a frenzy.

Obama said that as president, "I will be honest with you about the challenges that we face. I won't snow job you."

"I will open up the doors of government and ask you to participate."

"I'm asking you to trust in yourselves."

"I need all of you to get involved."

Hallelujah!

Obama's appearance seemed to be more of a revival meeting than a political rally.

He was concluding his speech, when he was interrupted again.

"Oh, oh. We need one more. Paramedic... "

"We should have had this outside."

"We weren't expecting this much heat."

"She's the third."

"She has a really nice smile, so she's OK."

The question: Are these plants?

I doubt it.

So often in large crowds people do pass out. It happens.

But for the most part, when a person keels over, the speaker doesn't call so much attention to the incident.

My take on this fainting thing: The Obama campaign realized how positively the crowd responsed when Obama interrupted his speech by calling attention to someone's fainting episode.

Advisors probably urged Obama to react in that same manner whenever someone attending one of his speeches succumbed.

I don't think they're plants. However, I do think that Obama knows how to make the most of a fainter. That's clear by the way he recycles the same lines each time it happens.

I'm not saying that Obama's not concerned for the people's well-being. I'm just saying he knows how to handle the situations in a fashion that is rather self-serving.

It's also possible that women are now feigning fainting to get a moment of attention from Obama. If that's the case, Obama's happy. They're happy. Everybody's happy.

10 comments:

M said...

LOL...I've seen all the candidates go through this fainting stuff. Must be the standing in line for hours, then waiting for tardy candidates for hours.

Do the candidates work it? Maybe...I think it's more a product of stupid people who don't eat or drink before going to an hours long event and the candidate worrying about bad PR if they DON'T pay attention to the fainters.

All in all I sure wish we could compare issues rather than all the PR stuff everywhere.

Mary said...

You wish you could compare issues?

But I thought you supported Obama, Murphy. :)

M said...

Supported? I like what he's done to my child and her friends...gotten them off the couch and engaged, something all my urging over the years failed to do.

I like that he talks about a new (old) way of speaking to each other with at least a modicum of respect and interest.

I like that he recognizes the need to change the partisanship in DC so maybe we can get to solving some of the really serious things we are facing, together, as a nation and world.

All that said, I do wish more of the observation time on both sides were focused on issues. I don't like the supporters of either side and their disingenuous snipes at some flighty issue. I don't like folks talking about Hillary crying or Obama being an empty suit. It's insulting to both of them and to all of us.

I don't mind asides...they lend to the character of elections. But good grief, the total focus on all the extraneous rather than the real issues all the time leaves me cold.

I'd love to talk issues...where shall we start? You name it, we'll talk... ;0

Anonymous said...

This is the song that Obama reminds me of.

http://www.hamienet.com/midi7595_Superstar.html

Barack Obama, Superstar.

Who are you, what kind of change are you are talking about?

Barack Obama, Superstar,

Who are you, what kind of change are you are talking about?

Barack Obama, Superstar

Who are you, what kind of change are you talking about?

Adoph Hitler could really rally those masses, and Olde Joe Stalin could make them walk barefoot through broken glasses, And Ho Chin Minn, he could bring the crowd in, and that Po Pot he know how his words could make them hot...

Now do you believe?

Now Marshall Applewhite made them think that they were going to go to Heaven on a comet, and David Koresh he sent his faithful on a path to Armageddon. And of course we all know about olde Jim Jones. His people did what he told em and that Kool-aid got overflowin...

Now do you believe? (the mesmerized crowd shouts back Yes we Believe) Now do you believe?(louder) Yes, we believe! Hallelujah now get that sister some water (the front row of women then faints).


Barack Obama, Superstar,

Who are you, what kind of change are you are talking about?

Barack Obama, Superstar

Who are you, what kind of change are you talking about?

Now do you see yourself as as Che's Second comin... Or maybe you set yourself up on a path even higher. Perhaps you do see yourself as the new Messiah, start a new religion with your as its idol.

Do you believe?

Cults of personalities well they very rarely end well and with yours it could set the earth a trembling... For when you come unglued as all cult leaders in the end do, you could push that nuclear button and set the earth afire..

Barack Obama, Superstar,

Who are you, what kind of change are you are talking about?

Barack Obama, Superstar

Who are you, what kind of change are you talking about?

M said...

Hmmm...making up crazy songs about a candidate shows the strength of the candidate you support how again?

Is this what we've been reduced to...slinging insults at each other?

Anonymous said...

Hey Murphy,

Personally I don't have a candidate left to support.

But to have on the American Political scene a Jim Jones Cult Figure who cause people to faint scares me no end.

That's how Nazi Germany Happened!


http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/1472/Cult_o1.mid


You gave me fortune

You gave me fame

You me power in your god’s name

I’m every person you need to be

I’m the cult of personality

Look into my eyes, what do you see?

Cult of personality

I know your anger, I know your dreams

I’ve been everything you want to be

I’m the cult of personality

M said...

I get a chuckle out of who's threatened by this so called *wave* or *cult*.

I guess it's been so long since we've seen the public get engaged it's intimidating.

See I lived through JFK, RFK, Bobby, Vietnam, etc. The social upheaval then was intimidating to all of us no matter our age I think. I remember my folks looking at me as though I were possessed just as I see folks looking at our youth today.

It's not the same as back then, as the issues were more direct back then...we were being drafted to die at a horrific rate, minorities were blatantly separated as less than the majority, etc.

But it's the same that the general public reached a sort of tipping point when they just collectively stood up and said no more...all ages, all vocations, all of us.

Today it's jobs to overseas, our healthcare system, another bad war but no direct threat of draft, corporate manipulation, the divisive way we talk to each other and view each other, etc.

Folks are just sick and tired of it.

I can certainly see the draw of a young charismatic obviously organized leader.

I can also see how it's threatening. I would hope, though, you're just being theatric with your Jones reference cause I've seen none of the Obama campaign asking what cults like that ask.

To end, I will say I'm thrilled to see my young twenties daughter becoming completely engaged. I think it's very good for this ocuntry to cultivate civil thought in our youth.

Mary said...

The way you talked about the movement, Murphy, gave me the impression that you were definitely on board with Obama.

Yeah, what's with the songs???

When I use the term "cult" to refer to Obama's campaign and his followers, I'm not putting them in the same league as Jim Jones.

Fainting happens. Assuming the women aren't plants, I don't think Obama is causing anyone to faint.

I also don't find Obama to be scary. Although he's an excellent speaker, I strongly disagree with where he stands on the issues.

I don't want bigger government or higher taxes. In the long run, I don't think people benefit in the culture of entitlement that he considers hope.

The American Dream is opportunity, not a hand-out.

M said...

It's fine Mary. I took far more offense at the silly songs as that sort of condescension shouldn't have a place in good conversation.

But what should I expect from Anonymous? ;0

What I want is my daughter's future. I want the debt down, I want a trade balance, I want fair taxation for essential services.

It's like asking for the moon though... ;0

I also absolutely detest the slam and slime politics. It's really wrecking our discourse and we have some really serious problems we're going to have to talk about as a nation.

Good talking with you.

Mary said...

There's such a lack of civility in political debate today.

I do think the supposed anonymity of the Internet fosters that sort of behavior on blogs.

It's unfortunate.

I think it's great that your daughter has become interested in the political process.

We're very blessed to be Americans. I think that's something too many of us take for granted.