by Caroline Glick
"Your first time shouldn't be with just anybody. You want to do it with a great guy."
So
 begins the now famous official Barack Obama for President campaign ad 
that was released last week. The ad depicts a young woman named Lena 
Dunham, who is apparently a celebrity among Americans in their teens and
 20s.
After that opening line, Ms. Dunham 
continues on for another minute and a half discussing how having sex for
 the first time and voting for Barack Obama for president are really the
 same thing, and how young women don't want to be accused of either 
being virgins or of having passed up on their chance to cast their votes
 for Obama next Tuesday.
I've never been 
particularly interested in so-called "women's issues." It never seemed 
to me that any party or politician was particularly good or bad for me 
due to the way they thought of women. That all changed with the Dunham 
ad for Obama.
With this ad, Obama convinced me he is a misogynist.
The
 Obama campaign's use of a double entendre to compare sex - the most 
personal, intimate act we engage in as human beings, with voting - the 
most public act we engage in as human beings - is a scandal.
It
 is demeaning and contemptuous of women. It reduces us to sexual 
objects. When called on to vote, as far as Obama is concerned, as slaves
 to our passions, we make our decisions not based on our capacity for 
rational choice. Rather we choose our leaders solely on the basis of our
 sexual desires.
Beyond the ad's bald attempt 
to impersonalize, generalize and cheapen the most personal act human 
beings engage in, the ad is repulsive because it takes for granted that 
what happens in our private lives is the government's business.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but this is a totalitarian position.
THE
 WHOLE point of liberal democracy is to put a barrier between a person's
 personal life and his or her government. A liberal democracy is founded
 on the notion of limited government. It assumes there are a lot of 
places where government has no role to play. And first and foremost 
among those places is the bedroom.
The theory 
behind limited government is that if the government is permitted in our 
private space then we are no longer free. When - as in the case of the 
Dunham ad - a political campaign conveys the message that there is 
something personally wrong with not actively supporting its candidate, 
it communicates the message that it sees no distinction between personal
 and public life, and therefore rejects the basic notion of freedom from
 government. And this is repugnant, not just for women, but for everyone
 who values freedom.
One of the oddest aspects 
of the Obama sex ad is that to believe that this sort of message can be 
effective, the campaign had to ignore mountains of data about the 
demographic group the ad targets - young college-educated women.
According
 to just about every piece of survey data collected over the past 20 
years, young women in America today are more accomplished, more 
professionally driven, and more intellectually successful than their 
male counterparts. That the Obama campaign believes the votes of this 
successful, smart group of women can be won by appealing to their basest
 urges rather than their capacity to reason is demeaning and perverse 
and, one would think, counterproductive.
But it isn't surprising.
The
 fact is that the Obama campaign - and indeed, the Obama presidency - 
has treated the American people with unprecedented arrogance and 
contempt. On issue after issue, Obama and his minions have eschewed 
intellectual argumentation.
On issue after issue they have preferred instead to attack Obama's detractors as stupid, backwards, bigoted, bellicose and evil.
For
 instance, however one feels about current events in the Middle East, 
there is a legitimate - indeed critical - argument to be had about the 
nature of the Islamist forces the Obama administration is supporting 
from Cairo, Egypt, to Alexandria, Virginia.
The
 Muslim Brotherhood is the most popular movement in the Islamic world. 
It is also a totalitarian, misogynist, anti-Jewish, anti-Christian and 
anti-American movement. It seeks Islamic global supremacy, the genocide 
of Jewry, the subjugation of Christianity and the destruction of the 
United States.
There is an intellectual case to be made for appeasing these popular, popularly elected forces.
There
 is a (stronger) intellectual case to be made for opposing them. But 
rather than make any of the hard arguments for appeasing the Muslim 
Brotherhood, the Obama administration has deflected the issue by 
castigating everyone who opposes its appeasement policies as racist, 
McCarthyite warmongers.
If women who don't support Obama are prudish geeks, Americans who oppose his appeasement policies are bloodthirsty bigots.
Then
 there was the attack in Benghazi on September 11 and the general 
Islamic assaults on US embassies throughout the Muslim world that day.
The
 acts of aggression that Muslims carried out against several US 
embassies on September 11 and since have all been acts of war against 
America.
The rioters who stormed the US 
embassies in Egypt, Tunis and Yemen and replaced the American flag with 
the flag of al-Qaida all violated sovereign US territory and carried out
 acts of war. The US had the right, under international law, to repel 
and respond with military force against the rioters as well as against 
their governments. Instead the White House blamed the acts of war on a 
US citizen who posted a video on YouTube.
Then 
there was Benghazi. In Benghazi, jihadists took this collective 
aggression a step further. They attacked the US Consulate and a US 
government safe house with mortars and rocket-propelled grenades. Their 
goal was to murder all the US citizens inside the compounds. In the 
event, they successfully murdered four Americans, including the US 
ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens.
In the six 
weeks that have passed since the attack in Benghazi, despite 
administration attempts to stonewall, and despite the US's media's 
inexcusable lack of interest in the story, information has continuously 
dribbled out indicating that Obama and his senior advisers knew in real 
time what was happening on the ground. It has also come out that they 
rejected multiple requests from multiple sources to employ military 
power readily available to save the lives of the Americans on the 
ground.
There may be good reasons that Obama 
and his top aides denied those repeated requests for assistance and 
allowed the American citizens pinned down in Benghazi to die. But Obama 
and his aides have not provided any.
Rather 
than defend their actions, Obama and his advisers first sought to cover 
up what happened by blaming the acts of war on that YouTube video.
When that line of argument collapsed of its own absurdity, Obama shifted to blaming the messenger.
His
 campaign accused everyone asking for facts and truthful explanations 
about what happened in Benghazi of trying to politicize the attack.
Obama
 himself has twice struck the Captain Renault pose and declared himself 
"Shocked, shocked!" that anyone would dare to insinuate that he did not 
do everything in his power to save the lives of the Americans whose 
lives he failed to save.
The reason specific 
sectors of a society usually feel compelled to vote on the basis of 
their sectoral interests rather than their general interests as citizens
 of their country is that they feel that one candidate or party 
specifically endangers their sectoral interests. Hence, the Lena Dunham 
ad, which insults women specifically, compels women to vote as women 
against Obama.
In the case of Obama's 
appeasement of the Muslim world, there is no specific group that is hurt
 more than any other group by his policies.
As we saw in Libya, Egypt, Tunis, Yemen and beyond, his appeasement policies endanger all Americans equally.
This
 is not the case with Obama's treatment of Israel and Jews. Obama's 
supporters always highlight statements he has made and actions he has 
taken in relation to Israel and Jews that are relatively supportive of 
both.
To be sure, like every other US 
president, Obama has made some statements, and taken some actions, that 
have been supportive of Jews and of Israel. But unlike most other US 
presidents, he has made far more statements and taken far more actions 
that have been contemptuous and hostile to Israel and Jews. And this is 
inexcusable.
It is inexcusable that Obama uses 
coded anti- Semitic language to blame America's economic woes on "fat 
cat bankers." It is inexcusable that his secretary of state and his 
senior advisers have repeatedly made references to the so-called Israel 
Lobby to explain why America is supposedly hamstrung in its ability to 
sell Israel to the wolves.
It is inexcusable 
that Obama sends his surrogates before the cameras to refer to Israel's 
prime minister as "ungrateful," or to castigate Israel for permitting 
Jews to build homes in Jerusalem on land they own and for permitting 
Jews to exercise their legal rights to their property - simply because 
they are Jews.
Israel is the US's most 
important ally in the Middle East. As such, it deserves to be treated 
well by the US - all the time. Any move to treat Israel with contempt is
 an unprovoked hostile act and therefore inexcusable.
So,
 too, US Jews have a right to make an honest living doing anything they 
wish - including working on Wall Street or owning a casino in Las Vegas.
 Jews have a right to be treated with respect by the US government. They
 should not have to be concerned about having their reputations maligned
 by politicians who use anti-Semitic tropes to gain political advantage.
Obama's
 contemptuous vilification of Israel and successful American Jews make 
him bad for Jews specifically. Just as the Dunham ad exposes his 
underlying hostility towards women and so makes clear that women's 
interests are imperiled by his presidency, so Obama's repeated hostile 
treatment of Israel and American Jews make him a specific danger to 
Jewish interests.
MANY WOULD-BE deep thinkers 
have proclaimed that the presidential election is a choice between two 
competing narratives. But that isn't an accurate description of the 
race.
Only Republican nominee Mitt Romney is 
presenting a narrative. In his narrative, the US faces very difficult 
problems in domestic and foreign policy alike. Romney has laid out his 
priorities for which problems he wishes to contend with, and has 
presented policies he will adopt to do so if he is elected next Tuesday.
On
 the other hand, by Obama's telling, the real problems America faces are
 all the result of the empowerment of his political opponents and 
America's allies.
Benghazi wouldn't be a 
problem if his political opponents weren't talking about it. Jihadists 
aren't a problem. The problem is the people who say they are a problem. 
The national debt isn't a problem. The problem is the "fat cat bankers."
Women
 will vote for him because we are dimwitted sex objects. And Jews will 
vote for him because we are taken in by his occasional Borscht Belt 
schmaltz platitudes about Hanukka.
God help us all if his contemptuous assessment of his countrymen is borne out next Tuesday.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post. 
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2012/11/obama-and-the-politics-of-cont.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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