With Obama, the Personal is Presidential
Saturday, July 16, 2016
Plaza de Mayo -1955 - Buenos Aires - the fall of Perón |
Fortunately my Rosemary and I (48 years together) see eye to eye politically. We are definitely left-wingers. We adore MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow and we both think that President Barak Obama is a peach.
I have some experience in the mechanics of politics as I
participated actively (under orders) as an Argentine Navy Conscript on a
military coup d’etat on a cold but indifferent (particularly the inhabitants of
my Buenos Aires who didn't seem to care) winter morning of June 28 1966. Members of the armed forces
(the navy, I was in the ranks with my circa 1911 Mauser, the army and the air force) surrounded the Casa Rosada (the
government palace from which Peron and Evita would talk to the Peronists masses
years back) and gave the freely elected country doctor, Arturo Illía an hour to
leave the premises. This he did in a cab.
I experienced a wonderful education in history and civics in
my four years at the Roman Catholic school St. Edward’s in Austin Texas in the
late 50s. In fact that education at my young age has made me (my personal
belief) into an honorary American citizen.
Rosemary and I read daily our delivered NY Times so we
are up and up on American politics. I am able to explain to Rosemary the
machinations of the American political system thanks to Brother Francis
Barrett, C.S.C. who taught me American History and to Mr. Marshall who taught
me civics.
But neither man taught me how to cope with the fact that
many of my Texan fellow students became gunslingers with right wing red neck
politics.
Last year I wrote a blog which landed me with protests
and hysterical emails from some of these former classmates of mine.
Today (I am writing this on Saturday July 16, 2016) I
read a column by Timothy Egan called With Obama, the Personal is Presidential.
It is nicely written and he pretty well elaborates on the fact that Obama is
cool.
I don’t buy magazines much anymore. But I recall the
Esquires of the 50s, 60s and 70s and I see President Obama as an Esquire kind
of a guy. He is elegant, polite, well spoken, well read and the kind of guy I
would enjoy being in a desert island with.
Just like I do not understand how my former classmates
became what they are now I cannot understand Americans who have fallen under
the spell of Donald Trump.