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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRachel Maddow Highlights How President Obama’s Sharp Wit Hurt Putin’s Fragile Ego
http://www.politicususa.com/2014/03/27/rachel-maddow-highlights-obama-sharp-wit-hurt-putins-fragile-ego.htmlRachel Maddow Highlights How President Obamas Sharp Wit Hurt Putins Fragile Ego
By: Justin Baragona
Thursday, March, 27th, 2014, 10:07 am
On Wednesday nights episode of The Rachel Maddow Show, host Rachel Maddow saved the last segment to highlight some of the Presidents greatest comic insult moments. Among those moments, she showed President Obamas recent interview on Between Two Ferns, the President tearing into Donald Trump at the White House Correspondents Dinner in 2011, POTUS tossing a nice little barb at Mitch McConnell at the 2013 dinner and President Obama making himself laugh when discussing Mitt Romney in 2012.
Maddow pointed out these moments as a way to setup what the President did in Europe this week. During a news conference at The Hague on Tuesday, ABCs Jonathan Karl attempted to corner Obama, as well as make Romney look good in hindsight, by asking the President if Mitt Romney was right in 2012 when he said that Russia was Americas greatest political foe. As Maddow helpfully underscored, the President used that opportunity to use his extremely sharp insult skills to take Vladimir Putin down a notch or three.
The way Maddow stated it, the President threw some serious Presidential shade at Putin by declaring that Russia is a regional power. Obama also pointed out that Russia is only threatening its neighbors out of a position of weakness rather than strength, as they are concerned about their waning influence in the region and the world. POTUS accurately stated that the US is not looking to invade any of its immediate neighbors to maintain its influence on them or force a cooperative relationship.
President Obama reasserted this point the next day during an address in Brussels. The President stated that this is not the beginning of another Cold War. Russia is essentially not a superpower anymore, as they do not lead a bloc of nations and do not have a global ideology that a large number of other countries wish to follow or emulate. Once again, the President was pointing his insult gun directly at Putin and blasting away, essentially calling him weak and ineffectual.
While President Obamas biggest critics back at home have taken aim at him regarding this crisis in Ukraine, stating that he is weak and timid and that his foreign policy is the cause of Russia invading and taking over Crimea, the President showed the world that it is really Putin that is in the position of weakness. Knowing that Vladimir Putin is a vain man of the highest degree, Obama attacked him where it would hurt the most Putins ego. Essentially, President Obama brushed off his shoulder and said that Putin is a nobody.
Once again, the President is two steps ahead of everybody here. While conservatives in his home country are criticizing him for not considering military action against Russia, and referring to Putin as a true leader and figure of strength, Obama goes in front of the international community and calmly dismisses Russia as a regional power of no real consequence. In one fell swoop, he hurts Putin to the core while making his critics look like idiots for admiring a small, vain little man like Putin.
The Magistrate
(95,237 posts)Russia is a regional power, not a world power, today. If it were not for its nuclear armament and legacy seat on the Security Council, very little attention would be paid to it, no more than to any other country with a mid-sized population which based its economy on supplying raw materials and energy to stronger countries.
djean111
(14,255 posts)But hey, bring it on........
polichick
(37,152 posts)Supersedeas
(20,630 posts)To me, Rachael was raving like a lunatic about how funny and macho it is to suggest that the leader of a country with a substantial arsenal of intercontinental nuclear weapons, who has just invaded another country, might be fazed by off-the-cuff quips about being merely a "regional" power. To me, her display was not only short-sighted...but also a mischaracterization of the President's statements. Given the typical high quality of her usual reporting, this attempt at humor was a complete fail.
I think the President has orchestrated some substantial economic and diplomatic measures in response to Putin incursion into Crimea. It is much more likely that Putin is more concerned about these economic and diplomatic measures than the quips about being a regional power. Attempting to insult the ego of a world leader with control on intercontinental nuclear weapons is a play that is far below the dignity of this President--and Rachael knows this.
But not only that, I think Rachael was taking the President out of context. In response to the jerk at the presser from ABC, the President was emphasizing that the threats to our immediate security are not coming from Russia, but instead are still better focused on the international terrorist threats--as we have experienced in NY, London, Spain, and elsewhere globally. By contrast, the conflict in Crimea is a regional dispute. I do not think that the President was trying to hurt Putin's ego--that sort of mischaracterization of his speech belongs more to the sensational tabloid journalism of other programs (usually radio) and is really beneath the standard that Rachael Maddow has set for substantive reporting. So, to me, that particular segment was a disappointment for all the reasons recited above.
Response to Supersedeas (Reply #4)
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Katashi_itto
(10,175 posts)Response to Katashi_itto (Reply #6)
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