Obama Lacks One Crucial Ingredient -- Intuition

· Monday, February 22, 2010

No president enters office knowing everything he needs to know. His experience is limited to some greater or lesser extent; his knowledge of the people from whom he will choose appointees is incomplete; his mastery of the substance of public policy, after years on the campaign trail, is likely to be out of date. And like all of us, he does not know what the future will bring.

So presidents must rely on something else, something intangible and unquantifiable, in determining what is within the realm of possibility and what is a bridge too far: intuition.

Great leaders have it, though it sometimes fails; failed leaders don't, though their plans sometimes succeed.

In the first category are great American presidents like Franklin Roosevelt. FDR could have nationalized the banks in 1933 and war industries in the 1940s. Instead, he prevented runs on the banks and called in captains of industry to help run the war effort.

Fluent in German, he listened to Adolf Hitler on shortwave radio and recognized by 1938 that he was a monster that must be destroyed. Alerted by Albert Einstein's letter to the possibilities of nuclear fission, he said, "We can't let Hitler get this before we do," and authorized the spending in secret of something approaching 1 percent of gross domestic product on building the atomic bomb.

His judgment in picking military leaders -- Gens. Marshall, MacArthur, Eisenhower, and Adms. King and Nimitz -- was unerringly brilliant. His decisions to invade North Africa in 1942 (against all military advice), to concentrate on the European theater and not the Pacific in 1943 (against the Navy's urging), to stage the cross-channel invasion in 1944 rather than 1943 (despite British and Russian pressure) all look very good in retrospect. It wasn't so easy to make them at the time.

Barack Obama, so far, seems to belong in the second category. Like everyone who gets elected president, he entered office brimming with confidence, convinced he could end the hostility of the Iranian mullahs, Islamist terrorists, the leaders of China and Russia, and the likes of Hugo Chavez.

At least so far, that confidence has proved to be dreamy. Obama now knows their hostility was rooted not just in distaste for George W. Bush's Texas twang but to the fundamental character of the American people. A Muslim middle name hasn't made much difference.

At home, Obama -- like many others and not just in his own party -- believed that economic distress would move Americans to favor government direction of the health care and energy sectors and to support sharply increased federal spending.

That intuition now seems unfounded. As does the intuition that the Senate would pass hugely important legislation on a party-line vote with not one vote to spare. That left Obama and his party hostage to the Cornhusker Hustle and the Louisiana Purchase, and the chance that a special election would transform the 60-vote supermajority to a less-than-super 59. The bridge turned out to be too far.

Obama has picked some good people for important positions and has had some significant policy successes. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, after one misstep, came up with a stress test that has stabilized the big banks. Education Secretary Arne Duncan's competition program promises to spur useful innovation in schools around the country.

Our military forces seem to be on the verge of victory (though Obama doesn't like to use the word) in Iraq and seem to be making clear progress in Afghanistan. The president decided, thankfully, to dissatisfy those Democrats who would acquiesce in an American defeat.

But on what he identified as the biggest foreign and domestic issues, Obama's intuition has proved to be faulty. Things have not worked out as he hoped. And, while a president cannot micromanage everything, his deference to congressional Democratic leaders in determining the details of the stimulus, health care and cap-and-trade bills has proven politically disastrous.

Obama's two predecessors also suffered from failures of intuition. Bill Clinton recovered and got deserved credit for the 1996 welfare reform and the 1997 balanced-budget deal. George W. Bush recovered and deserves credit (though Joe Biden is claiming it now) for the success of the Iraq surge strategy.

Obama, too, may develop better intuition than he has shown so far. But first he has to acknowledge that a successful presidency requires more than the confidence conferred by a high IQ and fancy degrees.

COPYRIGHT 2010 THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM


Third-party content does not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Patriot Post.


Comments

g.wegmann

You paint a picture of FDR that is all roses. I guess you learned what you write about FDR's greatness at Yale. Roosevelt was sympathetic to the Russsians in the late 30's and up until the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. That is why many hundres of merchant seamen died on the trip to Murmansk in Russia taking weapons of war to help the Soviets. And everyone talks about the New Deal. There were two "New Deals",the Second New Deal challenged the business community.( not unlike Obama)that resulted in Conservative Democrats, led by Al Smith, fighting back with the American Liberty League, savagely attacking Roosevelt and equating him with Marx and Lenin. I know because I was a young boy and saw the animus my parents had for what FDR was trying to do to the business community. WWII saved him and he knew it!

Posted February 22, 2010 at 9:07:06 AM


Ruth Ann Wilson

Hussein's RELIGION is wrong.

The word intuition has strong "roots" in religion.

George Washington said, "It is impossible to RIGHTLY govern a Nation without God and the Bible"

I don't think we'd better argue with the Great George Washington called "The Temporal Savior of His Nation." General Washington LOVED his people.

Secularism won't work this time, WE must have God and the Bible.

For God & Country

Ruth Ann Wilson

Posted February 22, 2010 at 9:10:41 AM


Ruth Ann Wilson

PS

Thanks, Mr. Wegmann, for the "History Lesson". You tell like it was and you are correct.

For God & Country

Ruth Ann Wilson

Posted February 22, 2010 at 9:14:39 AM


MelP

Intuition, Understanding, Courage, Knowledge and Community. All species of animals have some measured amount. A wolf is intuitive, understanding when threatened, the courage to fight, the knowledge of how to fight or flee, and the community or wolf pack support to do the greatest harm or benefit for his specific agenda or family. Humankind has two strengths the wolf lacks. Man can worship and man can attain wisdom. Man can attain "flow" ...."that place or moment in time where I am at maximum peace and maximum performance with a minimum of effort". It comes with the fear/respect of humankind and God! I believe the current political administration has motivated the masses to form a powerful community, the "Teabaggers", and this force will be felt in November 2010 and 2012?

Posted February 22, 2010 at 1:43:02 PM


KN

Obama lacks more than intuition he is clueless.

"But first he has to acknowledge that a successful presidency requires more than the confidence conferred by a high IQ and fancy degrees."

Have you, Mr. Barone, any documentation to back up that statement? I thought all his records are sealed.

Posted February 22, 2010 at 8:25:29 PM


Post a Comment

Please keep comments civil and brief. Obscene, profane, abusive and off-topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked.

(required, displayed)
(required, not displayed)
Facebook Twitter YouTube RSS Connect with The Patriot Post






Our Mission

To Support and Defend -- Read The Patriot Post -- It's Right. It's Free. -- www.patriotpost.us

"The Patriot's mission is to advocate for Essential Liberty, the restoration of constitutional limits on government and the judiciary, and to promote free enterprise, national defense and traditional American values. Our objective is to provide Patriots across our nation with a touchstone of First Principles through brief, informative and entertaining analyses of relevant news, policy and opinion from reputable research, advocacy and media organizations, so they may better support and defend those Principles, and enlist others to join our ranks." —Mark Alexander, Publisher


The Patriot Post is not sustained by any political, special interest or parent organization, and we accept no advertising. Our mission and operations are funded entirely by the voluntary financial support of Patriots like you!

Support The 2012 Patriot Fund