More on the “story” here. Lesson learned: never get between a man and his Starbucks Gold card.
All posts by Jay Pinho
Obama 2012, brought to you by the New York Times
The paper of record is really hitting its stride in its not-so-subtle Obama reelection campaigning. The latest:
“As a photographer, you know when you have a unique moment. But I didn’t realize the extent to which this one would take on a life of its own,” Mr. Souza said. “That one became an instant favorite of the staff. I think people are struck by the fact that the president of the United States was willing to bend down and let a little boy feel his head.”
David Axelrod, Mr. Obama’s longtime adviser, has a copy framed in his Chicago office. He said of Jacob, “Really, what he was saying is, ‘Gee, you’re just like me.’ And it doesn’t take a big leap to think that child could be thinking, ‘Maybe I could be here someday.’ This can be such a cynical business, and then there are moments like that that just remind you that it’s worth it.”
A copy of the photo hangs in the Philadelphia family’s living room with several others taken that day. Mr. Philadelphia, now in Afghanistan for the State Department, said: “It’s important for black children to see a black man as president. You can believe that any position is possible to achieve if you see a black person in it.”
Related articles
- David Axelrod Slams Cory Booker, Evades Questions on POTUS (nationalreview.com)
- RNC Chair Reince Priebus Blames Obama for Rev. Wright Attack Ad Story (crooksandliars.com)
- ABC’s Jake Tapper To David Axelrod: Are Voters Less Enthusiastic About Obama This Time Around? (mediaite.com)
- David Axelrod: Romney ‘Tepid’ In Condemning Rev. Wright Attacks, Should ‘Refute’ Super PAC (mediaite.com)
Disproportionate analogy of the day
On the neighborhood divisions caused by filmmaker George Lucas’ plan to sell property in ultra-wealthy Marin County to house low-income residents:
The staunchest opponents of Lucasfilm’s expansion are now being accused of driving away the filmmaker and opening the door to a low-income housing development. That has created an atmosphere that one opponent, who asked not to be identified, saying she feared for her safety, described as “sheer terror” and likened to “Syria.”
The 1%: they’re just like us, only they’re in so much more danger.
Related articles
- A Pyrrhic Victory for Foes of a New Lucasfilm Project (nytimes.com)
- George Lucas: “I’ve been surprised to see some people characterize this as vindictive.” (althouse.blogspot.com)
- Development Watch: George Lucas Wants Low-Income Housing at Grady Ranch (sf.curbed.com)
- George Lucas Has Last Word in Land Battle (abcnews.go.com)
- When the 1 Percent Have Temper-Tantrums, George Lucas Edition (nationalreview.com)
Goodbye, Paris
Leaving Monday. I will miss you.
Best sports announcer of all time
Quote of the century?
Via the New York Times:
“I’m not familiar, precisely, with exactly what I said, but I stand by what I said, whatever it was,” Mr. Romney said.
Day trip to Versailles
Also, there are other things going on elsewhere
Such as in Egypt, where a rather monumental event took place yesterday: the Arab world’s first-ever live, televised presidential debate.

Two weeks before the scheduled May 23 start of the election to choose the first president since the ouster of Hosni Mubarak, Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, a former leader of the Muslim Brotherhood campaigning as a liberal Islamist, faced Amr Moussa, a popular former diplomat campaigning as the stable alternative to an “experiment” in Islamist rule.
Mr. Moussa, 75 and a more confident debater, was far more aggressive than Mr. Aboul Fotouh, 60. But neither candidate delivered a knockout punch as the debate turned repeatedly to the polarizing question of the status of Islam in governance.
Big moment for Egypt and Egyptians, and it’s worth noting how much more seriously they probably take their debates than we do with our reality-TV-show Republican primary debates.
I also must submit the following as perhaps the least inspiring debate line of all time:
Both candidates were also asked about the “virginity tests” that soldiers forced on detained female protesters. “I call on each of our daughters who suffered such an insult or other insults, to immediately file a report about it,” Mr. Aboul Fotouh said.
In both candidates’ defense, this would still put their women’s rights stances on roughly equal footing with those of Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell.
Related articles
- First Egyptian Presidential Debate (worldviewtonight.com)
- Egypt presidential rivals pledge to review Israel peace treaty in historic TV debate (theuglytruth.wordpress.com)
- Ad Wars Ahead of Egyptian Presidential Vote (thelede.blogs.nytimes.com)
- Moussa, Abul Fotouh face-to-face in Egypt’s 1st ever presidential candidate debate (altahrir.wordpress.com)
- Egypt front-runners face their pasts on campaign trail (dailystar.com.lb)
In my next life, I will be a short-film animator
Obama pivots to newer faces in foreign policy
From Politico:
Goodbye David Brooks, hello Peter Beinart.
Shortly after announcing his newfound support for the legalization of gay marriage yesterday, President Barack Obama walked into an off-the-record foreign policy meeting with nine editors and columnists to discuss Afghanistan, Israel, NATO and the forthcoming G8 Summit at Camp David, sources present at the meeting tell me.
The nine: The New Yorker’s David Remnick and Jane Mayer, Time Magazine’s Joe Klein, Newsweek’s Peter Beinart, The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg, The New York Times’s Carla Robbins, The Wall Street Journal’s Gerald Seib, The Los Angeles Times’s Doyle McManus, and David Ignatius of the Washington Post.
While some of these writers — most notably Ignatius, one of the most respected and influential columnists in Washington’s foreign policy circles today — are familiar faces at the White House, the group as a whole marks a notable shift away from the Tom Friedmans and the David Brooks toward younger voices and fresh perspectives.
Notable here are the number of people who’ve faced pretty severe criticism of their own critical statements on Israel: Remnick, Beinart, and Klein, for example. This meeting probably doesn’t signal anything overly substantive, but the inclusion of Beinart is especially intriguing in light of the firestorm his excellent book, The Crisis of Zionism (which I just finished reading several weeks ago), spawned in the media.
Related articles
- Peter Beinart Says America Should Boycott the West Bank (nationalinterest.org)
- Obama Updates His Echo Chamber Of Anti-Israel Advisors (ifaynsh.wordpress.com)
- Philly Diarist: Beinartism writ small (cifwatch.com)
- Beinart’s boycott and boycotting Beinart (blogs.jta.org)
- Peter Beinart’s Crisis of Zionism: A Book With A Crisis Of Inaccuracy (ifaynsh.wordpress.com)
- All Beinart all the time… plus Beinart vs. Newhouse in 2012 (blogs.jta.org)
- An essential sense of urgency: On Peter Beinart’s ‘The Crisis of Zionism’ (middleeastatemporal.wordpress.com)
- Beinart to cast Obama as caped hero of two-state-solution in forthcoming book (mondoweiss.net)
- Peter Beinart warns against the over-use of ‘anti-Semitism’ (timesofisrael.com)
- Great Minds, or what? (bokertov.typepad.com)
