May 06, 2008
Barack Obama's Bitter Half
By
Michelle Malkin
Are you ready for hope and change? Barack Obama
better hope his bitter half has a change of attitude if
she expects to assume the title of first lady in
November. She's been likened to
John F. Kennedy's wife, what with her chic suits and
pearls and perfectly coiffed helmet hair. But when she
opens her mouth, Michelle O is less Jackie O and more
Wendy W—as in
Wendy Whiner, the constantly kvetching "Saturday
Night Live" character from the early 1980s.
When last our worldviews collided, back in February,
the other Michelle was expounding on her
lack of pride in America. I gave
her myriad reasons to cheer up—from America's role
in the
fall of communism to our
unparalleled generosity to our nation's
superior economic system, cultural resilience,
entrepreneurial spirit and ingenuity. But since then,
Mrs. Obama has dug in her $500 Jimmy Choo heels and
solidified her role in the 2008 presidential campaign as
Queen of the Grievance-Mongers.
In one of her few
(unintentionally) funny moments during a recent
sit-down with comedian Stephen Colbert, Mrs. Obama
claimed, "Barack and I tend to look at the
positives." That's a side-splitter. As National
Review's Yuval Levin
put it, Michelle Obama is
"America's unhappiest millionaire." And she
has the audacity to extrapolate her misery and her
husband's alleged victimization to the "vast majority
of Americans."
In South Carolina, she called America "just
downright mean" and bemoaned
"a nation of struggling folks who are barely making it
every day."
And in case you hadn't heard enough of her carping
about how hard it is for a seven-figure-earning family
to pay for ballet lessons and piano lessons and pay off
college loans, Mrs. Oh-Woe-Is-Me was at it again on the
campaign trail in Indiana and North Carolina before
Tuesday's primary.
On the stump, she warmed up (or rather, berated)
supporters by complaining about how her husband is an
underdog even after he keeps winning primary and caucus
after primary and caucus. With a scowl etched on her
face, she bellyached that "the bar is constantly
changing for this man." Call the
waambulance, stat.
Barack Obama, the missus explains, is Everyman who
has ever been put down by The Man. And "understand
this" (a condescending verbal tic shared by both
Obamas): Mrs. Obama is here to make sure you feel their
pain. Which is really your pain. Because the hardships
of a privileged Ivy League couple are "exactly"
the same as the travails of miners or service workers or
small-business owners: "So the bar has been shifting
and moving in this race," she grumbles, "but the
irony is, the sad irony is, that's exactly what is
happening to most Americans in this country."
Don't tell Miss Michelle about the
Great Depression or the Carter Malaise. "Folks
are struggling like never before," she seethes.
Well, yes, gas prices are up. Some food prices are
rising. And borrowers who bought more housing than they
could afford are underwater. But "struggling like
never before"? Didn't they teach her about
Hoovervilles and
stagflation?
In Mrs. Obama, the fear-mongering pot meets the
angst-stirring kettle: "Fear," she froths,
"creates
this veil of impossibility and it is hanging over
all of our heads."
But what Mrs. Obama lacks in pride for her country
and its promise she more than makes up for with
bottomless pride for her husband. Her standard campaign
speeches include at least a dozen references to how
"proud" she is of him. And of herself. And of
everyone who has overcome The Man and pierced the
"veil of impossibility" to get to the polls and vote
Obama. An online MSNBC report on a joint appearance by
the Obamas on the "Today" show in the wake of the
Jeremiah Wright debacle
included this tellingly narcissistic passage:
[Mrs. Obama]: "'I'm so
proud of how he has maintained his
dignity, his cool, his
honor.'
"Obama gently tried to
interrupt, admitting to being embarrassed by the praise.
"'But I am proud of you,'
she said.
"'I know,' he replied."
We all know. So get over yourself already, haughty
spirit. Pride doesn't photograph well. And bitterness
leaves frown lines. Which means Botox bills. Which
"struggling folks" like you and your husband simply
cannot afford.
Try smiling for once. It's cheaper.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."