Rabbi Shmuley Unleashed

Rabbi Shmuley Unleashed

Why Barack is Becoming Boring

posted by Rabbi Shmuley Boteach | 10:56am Monday November 23, 2009

For
the first time in his presidency Barack Obama has, according to a
Gallup poll, fallen below a fifty percent approval rating. It’s not
hard to see why. No, it’s not because he’s spending too much money.
There seem to be many Americans who want him to boost social programs.
Less so is it because people perceive him as accomplishing little
because if he pulls off health care reform that is a big thing indeed.
No, the principal reason Obama, who became President by electrifying
the electorate, has fallen to earth is that he has become boring.
Humdrum. Can anyone recall any important line the President has uttered
since assuming office or a single dazzling speech?

And lest we
make the mistake of believing the President has become boring because
his speeches are not up to par, let me be clear that I think the
boredom is only partially related to failure to excite with inspired
oratory.

Rather, the twin factors behind the President’s monotony are these: ubiquitousness and perfection.

This president does not seem to understand the power of mystery. At
any given time, he is in China, Japan, Egypt, in the Rose Garden, at
the UN, on your television screen, and on your radio. He does not
believe in holding back. The net result has been to make him all-too
available and utterly ordinary. The same is true of his propensity to
prostrate himself – quite literally – in front of world leaders like
the Saudi King and the Japanese Emperor. The issue is not that he
belittles his office but that he comes across as a supplicant. What is
about our president that propels him to seek others’ approval at every
turn? And why can he not pace himself so that something of himself is
left in reserve so that the people later want more?

Much more importantly, however, the President has become boring because he is way too perfect.

Last week I convened the first International Conference on Jewish
Values. It featured most of Judaism’s foremost living personalities,
including Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, Michael Steinhardt, Joseph Telushkin,
Richard Joel, Alan Dershowitz, and Dennis Prager (full video of the
entire conference is available at Shmuley.com). The last, and most
important, of the seven universal Jewish values we focused on was
struggle.

Where most of the world believes in perfection, Jews believe in
struggle. Jesus was perfect, as was Muhammad. Any insinuation as to
Jesus even getting lonely and requiring the love of a woman, as Dan
Brown suggested in The Da Vinci Code, would greatly offend the
sensibilities of Christian brothers and sisters. And an insinuation
that Muhamad had any faults – even if the suggestion is made in a
humorous cartoon – can and has let to riots in cities around the world.

But it’s not just religions that make the mistake of promoting
perfection. I remember as a young American boy being taught that George
Washington never told a lie and that Abraham Lincoln walked miles to
return a single penny.

But the Jewish Bible has not a single perfect person. All are
flawed. Abraham demonstrates a lack of faith, Jacob favors a child, and
Moses often complains and then refuses to perfectly carry out G-d’s
instructions for which he is denied entry into the promised land.
David, the father of the Messiah, is so riddled with flaws that he must
live through the open rebellion of his beloved Absalom. So if these
people were so imperfect, why do we look up to them as heroes?

The answer, of course, is that Judaism has no time for perfection.
Perfect people are monolithic, predictable, often judgmental, and,
worst of all, boring. That’s the main reason why Americans did not
develop a populist passion for books about the founding fathers until
about twenty years ago when authors finally starting writing the truth
about how complex and flawed these men who had been sold to us as
statues actually were. Joseph Ellis wrote American Sphinx and shared
with us, in vivid detail, the fact of Jefferson’s slaveholding and his
sexual relationship with Sally Hemmings. In His Excellency Ellis
reveals George Washington’s uncompromising ambition for wealth and
social status. And in Lincoln’s Melancholy Joshua Wolf Shenk reveals
the great president as a man so suicidal that his friends often feared
leaving him unattended.

So why do we revere these men if they were less than perfect?
Because the truly righteous man is not he who never sins but rather he
who, amid a predilection to narcissism and selfishness, battles his
nature to live a virtuous life. The truly great man is not he who slays
dragons but he who battles his inner demons, he who struggles with
himself to improve and ennoble his character

Israel means ‘he who wrestles with G-d.’ It was the name of Jacob
who wrestled with a brother who sought to kill him and a father-in-law
who sought to enslave him. Most of all, he wrestled with an angel, a
symbol of his earthly and G-dly nature locked in battle for ascendancy.

I would personally choose the man who has wrestled and struggled any
day over the trust-fund baby who has never struggled. Those whom have
been given gifts often lack empathy and risk becoming conventional and
uni-dimensional.

Which brings us back to Barack Obama, a man was raised without a
father who had to wrestle with major challenges in order to succeed. So
why does he insist on coming across as perfect? Why will he not leave
the teleprompter and give an off-the-cuff speech where he can showcase
his humanity? Why does he take such long pauses in responding to all
questions to ensure that only perfection stems from his lips? And why
is everything in this White House a perfectly calibrated photo-op?

Sure, during the campaign America may have wanted a Messiah figure.
They saw messy wars and a collapsing economy and wanted a savior. But
as President they want someone real, someone who struggles like them.

Even in the worst moments of the Monica Lewinsky scandal President
Clinton’s poll numbers never dipped below fifty percent. Most Americans
saw a flawed man and identified with his lack of perfection.

Barack Obama is far more disciplined for such unfortunate choices
and I respect him for it. But don’t be afraid to show us Mr. President
that, as in the title of George Stephanopoulos’ book about President
Clinton, that you also are All Too Human.

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, founder of This World: The Values Network,
is author most recently of ‘The Blessing of Enough’ and ‘The Michael
Jackson Tapes.’ http://www.shmuley.com.



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Comments read comments(8)
post a comment
Mere_Me

posted November 23, 2009 at 4:50 pm


I miss George W. Bush too.



report abuse
 

Henrietta22

posted November 23, 2009 at 10:30 pm


He’s anything but boring. He is so on and doing what needs to be done I think average men are perhaps a little jealous of his energy.



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Eytan from living-inspired.com

posted November 24, 2009 at 12:12 am


Dear Rabbi I really enjoyed reading your post.
To the question “What is about our president that propels him to seek others’ approval at every turn?” I would answer: He knows that he should not be POTUS (he has no experience and now more than half of the Americans are finally seeing him for what he really is) and sometimes he just behaves like any regular citizen would do when meeting these people.
Finally I would say that although people seemed to have forgotten during the campaign, (the African-Americans for an obvious reason and my fellow Jews for an unexplained passion for abortion), there is only one G-d and his name his Hashem.
Eytan from http://www.living-inspired.com
Your daily spiritual click



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Moreleigh

posted November 24, 2009 at 2:45 am


Hi, and Gooday,
My peace and love BE unto you
Wow, are we going to have another Jewish crucifixion, the perfect man is to BE condemned again.
As Jesus was perfect the Jews at His time didn’t think so. Now another who tries to emulate the greatest man who ever lived is being condemned again because of his perfection.
If a man went around today as Jesus went around in his day saying that He was the Son of God the promised Messiah saying the Father and I are one, the Father is in me and I am in the Father, etc.
What would happen to him? He would be again condemned just as this Rabbi is condemning the perfection of another great man who has the attention of the world.
By the looks of things that you have written about him, what I see you saying that there is no such thing as perfection.
Who is the author of Intelligence?
Who, has established himself to BE the design of Humanity and It’s plan of life?
Is it a Jew? a Rabbi? Why are the Jews unable to except that it was a Jew who was the most perfect man and that He was the Creator of Intelligence and Life and Love of God and the prince of Peace?
May by the Grace of God His peace preside In you and may His Love prosper you.
BE well, STAY chilled, KEEP cool, DON’T be fooled,
MORE than ME
moreleigh



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Mere_Me

posted November 24, 2009 at 7:14 am


It sounds like, from reading Rabbi Schmuley’s excellent piece here, that Sarah Palin should be the next President of the United States.
Or Prophet (ess) or Judge of Israel?
I mean she is flawed big time and in prime time.
Obama is going the way of all pompous kings. Let him dine on the finest cuisine as he rapidly forgets those in his community he once broke bread with while struggling to get by.
Yes, all of those students in elite private schools are easy to forget once a person has made it to the top.
Via, of course, an elite private education.
But when one considers justice, Mrs Clinton should be our President right now.



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Amy

posted November 24, 2009 at 12:08 pm


You write:
>>The same is true of his propensity to prostrate himself – quite literally – in front of world leaders like the Saudi King and the Japanese Emperor.



report abuse
 

Robert

posted November 25, 2009 at 5:06 am


Uh, “rabbi,” the President is the only person here who is not humble? So you run a country, do you?



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Mike Carroll

posted November 25, 2009 at 2:25 pm


I think Barack is boring because he is not in charge. Axelrod is in charge. Axelrod thinks that continuing with the teleprompter and style-over-substance, glitzy emptiness, he can continue with the charade he pulled off during the campaign. It is all about giving the American people the impression that Obama has greatness when in fact he has never really accomplished anything in his life other than fool people into thinking that he could accomplish great things. Like the words if Harald Arlen’s “It’s Only a Paper Moon”, the Axelrod refrain for Barack to keep singing is “but it wouldn’t be make believe, if you’d believe in me.”



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