Pity the poor news media. Their hysteria over the Swine Flu
has disrupted all their elaborate plans for overcovering
Barack Obama's first hundred days.
How confusing it is for us when a contrivance gets
interrupted, particularly when it doesn't mean a whole hell
of a lot. It's mainly another drum that cable news can beat
relentlessly. Now we have two we can overdo.
Don't worry, there will be plenty of 100-day analysis, more
than enough. After all, it's the opportunity for all media,
credible and wildly incredible, to tell us what it all
means, even when it doesn't mean a whole hell of a lot.
So on this hundredth day for the new president, in 2009
A.D., which, in the new calendar is the year 1, A.B., we
will all go bonkers dissecting an administration that hasn't
really had a chance to do much more than talk the talk.
We'll have a much clearer idea how things have gone on Day
641 in 2 A.B., when we come up to that other planned media
event – the off-year election. And, of course, Day 1,376,
when President Obama presumably runs for a second term.
By that time, we will probably look back at what the pundits
said at the 100-day mark and laugh. Actually, we won't do
that because a big advantage of being a pundit is that no
one remembers for even a 100 seconds what we said.
We will recall everything that President Obama said, if, for
no other reason, than we will be reminded of it ad nauseum
in all the campaign adds.
On the 641st day and the 1,376th, we voters get to weigh in
on the Obama Administration's performance, or least how the
two sides spin it.
Will he have been able to lead the steep climb out of our
economic Hell and gain enough enforcement power to pry the
stranglehold that the rich and powerful few have over the
rest of us?
Will he have disentangled us from the foreign policy and
national security disasters that are not only a result of a
bungling previous administration, but misguided jingoism of
many decades? Will his early moves end being all talk and no
action?
For that matter, will he be able to build on a good start
and have any luck rebuilding the burnt bridges with the
Muslim world, actually with most of the world?
Will he have presided over desperately needed change in our
medical delivery system, or will the nation's health still
be in the hands of uncaring profiteers?
Speaking of profiteers, will all the polluters finally stop
co-opting the word "green" and pretending that their
corporation opposed global warming before opposing global
warming was cool? Will they now join the administration in
ambitious efforts to rescue the environment, and will
President Obama have the skill needed to convince Americans
we can't continue destroying the world?
Speaking of a toxic atmosphere, will we have had a chance to
force the White House people to release the memos that
describe the internal debate over the release of the torture
memos?
What about the opposition? Will the Republicans still be
screaming "SOCIALISM" and running against the French? Will
anybody remember Sarah Palin besides Tina Fey? Will the
party have come up with a candidate who doesn't carry more
baggage than a bellman?
What kind of surprises lie ahead? Which is a really dopey
question that we can't really answer because they wouldn't
be surprises, now would they?
Actually, surprises can dominate a presidency, sometimes
distort it. 9/11 is the obvious example. And already we've
seen the piracy mini-crisis, and now Swine Flu, as
indicators of how an administration reacts when it's
blindsided.
Elections are the ultimate tests of a politician's success,
of course, but not necessarily the best way to ultimately
gauge a president's government.
As for the huge attention paid to the 100-day marker, that's
just fluff. Still, it's too long before days 641 and 1376.
And already we have had plenty to talk about.
In fact, we've been inundated with "All Obama all the Time"
coverage. Is the real importance of the 100-day milestone
that it signals an end to such a single focus. I wouldn't
bet on that, but as the days accumulate, the results of this
presidency will too, and at some point, we need to spend
more time on accountability than personality. Am I right or
wrong?
It occurs to me that quite a few are puzzling over what "A.B."
is supposed to mean. It can be whatever you'd like. It can
stand for "After Barack", of course. Or "After Bush", which
is what the Obama people have made the hundred days all
about.
As for the Swine Flu, we can only hope we're not still
covering that after 100 days. Given the singular focus on
Barack Obama, we should know by then whether he personally
ended that crisis so can return to his more mundane problems
like the world economic collapse. And we can do our 200-Day
stories.
Maybe the White House can mark that occasion by arranging a
special photo op flight of Air Force One. What d'ya think?
Click here to talk to our writers and
editors about this column and others in our discussion forum.
To e-mail feedback
about this column,
click here. If you enjoy this writer's
work, please contact your local newspapers editors and ask them to carry
it.