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Jonathan Wolfman

Jonathan Wolfman
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Maryland, Northwest of The District,
Birthday
January 26
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Visit, too, please: www.talkingwriting.com www.reortergary.com (pal talk news network) www.thejewishreporter.com

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JULY 28, 2012 7:03AM

Mr. Romney, Gatsby's Daisy: a Consuming, Careless Arrogance

Rate: 28 Flag

 

 

 

        

                The best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool.

                         --  Daisy Buchanan, The Great Gatsby (p. 20)

 

                                             Mitt Romney will have to work

                                                             It's Our Turn.

 

       It may be, as the Common Media Voice now has it, that Mr. Romney's London stumble is about a man who just doesn't like politics enough to be nimble enough not to trip continually over his tongue. 

     I don't see that. 

     This candidate's taking his Brit hosts to task in the run-up to The Games is not about a lack of agility.

     It's about a consuming arrogance.

     It's about his assumption that because he has it, he has a clear call to tell others how short of the mark they fall and about what's owed him, and in every area, those of great consequence and those less so.

    Of our closest ally's efforts, the man says

          London's difficulties with security guards and threats of border staff strikes [are] obviously... not something which is encouraging. It's hard to know just how well it will turn out.

     On 17 April in western Pennsylvania at a campaign-created backyard-ordinary-couple-picnic, all Mr. Romney had to do is say that the food was fine and that he appreciated his host's efforts. In fact, mistaking a family-owned bakery's cookies for chain-brand, mass produced ones, he scolded the couple: 

          I’m not sure about these cookies. Did you make those cookies? You didn’t, did you? No. No. They came from the local 7-Eleven, or wherever.

     He refused to sample one. 

     His arrogance outed itself, too, in his contented smile when Mrs. Romney, at his side, said -- and she will say it again -- 

                                       It's our turn.

    This is not about his wealth or about the wealthy. The man's father was a wealthy man of no apparent arrogance. 

    Nothing about these statements are out-of-character or merely flat-footed --

          I like being able to fire people who provide services to me.

          I'm not concerned about the very poor.

         I'll take a lot of credit for the fact that this industry's come back. [...on the American auto industry, despite having written a 'New York Times' op-ed in 2008 titled "Let Detroit Go Bankrupt," in which he said if GM, Ford and Chrysler got a government bailout "you can kiss the American automotive industry goodbye".]

           I'll tell you what, ten-thousand bucks? $10,000 bet?  [attempting to make a wager with Rick Perry during a Republican presidential debate to settle a disagreement about health care]

           I should tell my story. I'm also unemployed.  [speaking to unemployed people in Florida.]

 

... and while not necessarily arrogant in themselves, these statements could be made only by a man who does not care if he appears as arrogant-of-character as these statements' sloppiness and Daisy/Gatsby-Carelessness make him seem to be:

 

          I'm not familiar precisely with what I said, but I'll stand by what I said, whatever it was.

           I believe in an America where millions of Americans believe in an America that's the America millions of Americans believe in. That's the America I love.

 

     The arrogance will no doubt roll out in dozens of additional, unforced and unexpected contexts, great and small. It's who the man is.

       Let's not allow Daisy Buchanan, her arrogance, to occupy the Oval Office. 

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The man's been running for many years; I have yet to understand what he cares about, where his genuine commitments beyond himself (if any) lie, It's hardly close to acceptable.
Mormon men have an odd robotic way of
never being understood by full blooded suffering old jews
like you or even the best of our anglosaxon idiot jawbone writers,
like the dead dearly missed chris hitchens...
lunatic white rebel german idealist zen-dabbling drug gobbling
god knows what else
writers like me know that they BELIEVE they had a preexistence,
and will have an afterexistence on another planet,
so this existence is just one of three, and the other two are way better, see?
that is my theory...
best scene in mr. fitzgerald's little book
""Can’t repeat the past?" he cried incredulously. "Why of course you can!"
He looked around him wildly, as if the past were lurking here in the shadow of his house, just out of reach of his hand.
"I’m going to fix everything just the way it was before," he said, nodding determinedly. "She’ll see."
James go with that theory, man!
Another explanation, tho unlikely I guess, is that he's just shy and self-conscious and tied-up-in-knots adolescent. I can imagine myself in my tortured youth, suffering from social anxiety, blurting out things like that. "Trees are the right height" - that kind of inanity.

HOWEVER, this is a middle-aged man with years of experience in dealing with people (not all of them of the corporate persuasion) and who has been running for prez for a long time and was a gov. So the late-adolescent explanation doesn't seem to fit...

What I'd be curious to know, and never will, is whether he feels embarrassment during or after these incidents, or whether staff can get thru to him that he needs some practice sessions at *relating* (or appearing to relate).
Myriad I think he is awkward and his arrogance overwhelms even that.
Isn't all politics about the beautiful little fool?
Linn that well may be right!! :)
Mitt and Daisy are each little fools as you suggest quoting from Fitgerald's The Great Gatsby. I couldn't help but add these passages from the book and the statements are made by Daisy's husband Tom Buchanan who is every bit like Mitt--privileged and arrogant.

"The idea is that if we don't look out the white race will be--will be utterly submerged. It's all scientific stuff; it's been proved."

"This fellow [Spengler in Decline of the West] has worked out the whole thing. It's up to us, who are the dominant race, to watch out or these other races will have control of things."

"The idea is that we're Nordics . . . and we've produced all the things that go into making civilization--oh science, art, and all that stuff."

Enjoyed this political/literary post very much.
Miguela thanks for adding to it! :)
Jonathan, you seem to be well-read on politics

so here's a question: has the Republican Party

accepted Mr. Romney? and, what is with the

Republicans always branding Democrats as

foreign and un-American?

note: nice tie-in with Fitzgerald's Daisy
ume ty

his party has not fully embraced him; that may happen
maybe he should take speaking lessons from Biden......bunch of morons,the whole lot of 'em....
R..
Steel I'll take Joe any day.
Salon has an article today on this subject - attributing R's awkwardness to deep-seated anxiety. A letter-writer suggested bi-polar, mania division. Bi-polars in full flight can do and say WTF things.

Maybe it's just a want-want-WANT to be prez thing so strong that he can't relax, which goes along with his never saying anything substantive about his platform in case someone should take issue with it...and he's said, right out loud, that he doesn't want to release further tax records because the Dems would make all sorts of publicity out of the contents no matter how *legal* those returns are.

Also the odd way he's distancing himself from his wife's dressage horse thing - he doesn't know when that event takes place, he won't be attending, it's HER thing... Christ, my spouse had some event in the Olympics, no matter how personally uninteresting, I'd be there, wouldn't you?
Jon:

So pleased to see that you picked up on the the Gatsby parallels. I was put in mind of them when I saw a trailer for what looks like a typically overwrought Baz Luhrman version of the novel.

What came to mind was what I believed to be the famous quote from the book about the rich being different from you & me. I went to The Google to confirm and found the entire quote (which, it turns out, was written in a short story called The Rich Boy, not Gatsby.).

Does this ring a bell with what we've seen of Romney?

"Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and me. They possess and enjoy early, and it does something to them, makes them soft where we are hard, and cynical where we are trustful, in a way that, unless you were born rich, it is very difficult to understand. They think, deep in their hearts, that they are better than we are because we had to discover the compensations and refuges of life for ourselves. Even when they enter deep into our world or sink below us, they still think that they are better than we are. They are different."
Jeremiah YES. And thank you.
I'm waiting for him to make a comment about the Olympic opening ceremonies. His take on their salute to their NHS. Romneys worst nightmare.
Well, she *was* pretty... ~r
Too bad he wasn't running the the UK. The Brits have seen through him. Check out these bits that I've posted as comments in otehr blogs:

There's been plenty more. One headline of "Mitt the Twit".
Another, "Mitt Hits the Fan".
"Who Invited Party-Pooper Romney?"
"Nowhere man Romney" from The Times.
London's very popular mayor, Boris Johnson, mocked Romney while addressing a crowd of 60,000. Later he led the crowd in chanting Yes We Can.

Someone has set up a dedicated twitter account #romneyshambles. Here are some of the tweets:

Mitt Romney retroactively cancels visit to London.
MI6 refuses to confirm #Romney meeting, fueling speculation he may have been fooled by an Austin Powers impersonator
Mitt Romney loves to say that Obama goes around apologizing for America. The irony is that America is now apologizing for Mitt Romney.
Mitt Romney isn't even qualified to represent the U.S. as a tourist.
You had me at the title, Jonathan.

"Sophisticated--- God, I'm sophisticated." ~ Daisy
Abra all of them spot-on, yes.
Great piece. Of all the deadly sins, arrogance is the one that bugs me the most. RRRRRRR
Amy particularly when he has so little to be arrogant abt.
I get the impression he just wants to add the presidency to his résumé. Rated because you always contribute to the conversation in thought-provoking ways, Jon. Always.
I'm not familiar precisely with what I said, but I'll stand by what I said, whatever it was. This I've heard ad nauseum but

I believe in an America where millions of Americans believe in an America that's the America millions of Americans believe in. That's the America I love. OMGhedidnot I cannot believe any adult human would say such a thing. It's beneath even Palin.

All the analysis, all the understanding, it's all meaningless, wasted effort. It's about a consuming arrogance and he's screwing up and uncomfortable because he's trying so hard to hide it. He believes he deserves to be the most powerful person in the world, he believes it's his turn. The most costly entitlement ever.

There's no question in my mind that the president is perfectly capable of forcing this clown's hand in a debate so that he exposes himself, and his vaunted "Chicago machine" able to out negotiate the Mayberry management crowd in setting a debate format that will allow it. If only they will.
Cred that 'America' quote makes Dan Quayle sound like a guru.
Arrogant and just plain dumb. - as in dumb ass. He might be better off with the other "dumb" as he wouldn't say anything at all.
the past is sacred.
it must never be defiled.
the past tells us clues/
we draw the linein the sand when the past comes back tohaun t us/


i do . i say the past is prelude to a smiley simpler world.


they had it right when they said love is all there is.
the past is sacred.
it must never be defiled.
the past tells us clues/
we draw the linein the sand when the past comes back tohaun t us/


i do . i say the past is prelude to a smiley simpler world.


they had it right when they said love is all there is.
the past is sacred.
it must never be defiled.
the past tells us clues/
we draw the linein the sand when the past comes back tohaun t us/


i do . i say the past is prelude to a smiley simpler world.


they had it right when they said love is all there is.
Jon and Myriad,
I might be tempted to think it was mere awkwardness if he didn't have the bullying history, which he apparently continued about the cookies.
I will never understand people like Daisy B. They have so much; yet they have nothing. The saddest combination to walk on Earth.

R♥
I don't know, Jon. Last night, Mr. and Mrs. Romney were interviewed for an hour by Pierce Morgan on CNN, and they came off as anything but arrogant. They were sincere, intelligent, sympathetic to what ails this country and didn't say a negative thing about the current administration. Mitt Romney was particularly gracious, when asked to weigh in on Obama's foreign policy, politely backing the president without jumping at an opportunity to oppose with relish. I was not only impressed by both of their sincerity, but emboldened by their authenticity and caring demeanor. The focus of their interview, was how much they want to help in turning around the ills of our economy, bolster jobs and support the needs of the majority of Americans who are suffering as a result of the current status quo. Every politician blunders...dare I say "all." Both sides. It is the nature of the beast. It will be an interesting race come November. But by no means, is the incumbent race horse in any measurable lead. Not by a long shot.
Cathy I agree it'll be close and I am glad yours is a vote in California. ;)
:) and a foot note to all of this...I have been very surprised by many of my close liberal dem friends/relatives, who are taking a 360 turn over recent events and major blunders by our president. I never thought I'd see the day that they would change their stance or point out his deficiencies. Cold day in hell, I thought. I was, gladly, wrong!
Cathy I never thought him infallible; he's made blunders as well as some excellent decisions.proposals (imo).

In any case, he will win CA and, I believe, be re-elected.

And, as you know, I respect your opinions even when I don't hold them.
Love you dearly, Jon. This one is a stalemate. I will welcome the change. Then, I will hope.
Now it makes sense that I receive crazy PMs on Facebook from crazier in-laws that Romney must be in Obama's pocket to bring the Anti-Christ to the helm....confused...me too, but now I see the crazy are becoming scared by just how oblivious Romney really is.
Hold the phone.
Obama returns the Churchill bust.
He sends videos that are not compatible with the U.K. format.
His wife breaches hundreds of years of tradition by pawing the Queen.
His Brightness signs the wrong date in a welcome register.

And you're talking about Romney's "gaffe," wherein he merely repeated items already in the British press?

Might we have a bit of perspective here?

Our greatest presidents have been from the upper reaches of society, most recently Kennedy and FDR. Peanut farmers and community organizers have not fared as well.
Jon,

I brilliant piece you are just writing for the wrong side. This could just of easily been an Al Gore piece. Men who want be or are told they should be President from an early age (Clinton,Gore,Romney) tend to make the oppositions skin crawl as they constantly try to say the perfect thing to the most attentive audience -at the moment. Trying to say or do the most effective comment not the most sincere belief leads to a violent disconnect from those that disagree.
We have become a country that resembles my son's (RS fan) T-shirt "I root for Boston and anyone playing the Yankees" -It is sad we are divided so much we turn of the TV if our team is eliminated.
Gordon -that was spot on.
Gordon -that was spot on.
Gordon -that was spot on.
Gordon Well, La--Di--Dah.
It is funny. I had thought of a comparison that they seem to be from bygone era, when I saw Midnight in Paris, the Gatsby couple seemed frivolous, etc. It is almost a shame to compare them, maybe an insult to the Gatsby's? Just sayin'.

Anyway, this has a great thread Jon. I enjoyed the comments.