Obama = Gorbachev

eagleseven

Quod Erat Demonstrandum
Jul 8, 2009
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Newsweek: Thanks for Not Being Bush

But as popular as Obama remains abroad, his career trajectory is starting to remind me more and more of another Nobel Peace Prize winner who was a major world leader. Today's Obamamania is not unlike Gorbymania. You may not remember Gorbymania—it marked a brief period of giddy enthusiasm for the last leader of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, and ran from the late 1980s up until the dismantling of his country in late December 1991. For Westerners, the genial Gorbachev was such a stunning departure from the Soviet leaders of yore and seemed so enlightened in his attitudes—seeking to dramatically reform the Soviet Union with perestroika (restructuring) and glasnost (openness)—that he became wildly popular across the Cold War divide. During his frequent visits to U.S. cities and other countries, people would line the streets on the off chance he might jump from his motorcade to press the flesh, which he often did, and TV producers panted to book him. Plump Gorby dolls even sold by the gross in U.S. department stores.

Gorbachev won the Nobel in 1990, at the height of his international celebrity. Then it all came abruptly to an end. It turned out that Gorbachev didn't understand a basic point: the communist system he was trying to reform was unreformable. His popularity disappeared with the Soviet Union. And he became a despised figure in post-Soviet Russia. His good nature no longer conveyed hope but weakness.

Here's a scary thought, a sentiment becoming more and more common overseas.

Is Obama America's Gorbachev? Why or why not?
 
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Newsweek: Thanks for Not Being Bush

But as popular as Obama remains abroad, his career trajectory is starting to remind me more and more of another Nobel Peace Prize winner who was a major world leader. Today's Obamamania is not unlike Gorbymania. You may not remember Gorbymania—it marked a brief period of giddy enthusiasm for the last leader of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, and ran from the late 1980s up until the dismantling of his country in late December 1991. For Westerners, the genial Gorbachev was such a stunning departure from the Soviet leaders of yore and seemed so enlightened in his attitudes—seeking to dramatically reform the Soviet Union with perestroika (restructuring) and glasnost (openness)—that he became wildly popular across the Cold War divide. During his frequent visits to U.S. cities and other countries, people would line the streets on the off chance he might jump from his motorcade to press the flesh, which he often did, and TV producers panted to book him. Plump Gorby dolls even sold by the gross in U.S. department stores.

Gorbachev won the Nobel in 1990, at the height of his international celebrity. Then it all came abruptly to an end. It turned out that Gorbachev didn't understand a basic point: the communist system he was trying to reform was unreformable. His popularity disappeared with the Soviet Union. And he became a despised figure in post-Soviet Russia. His good nature no longer conveyed hope but weakness.

Here's a scary thought, a sentiment becoming more and more common overseas.

Is Obama America's Gorbachev? Why or why not?

Interesting theory...

So I guess Cheney represents Putin
 
Newsweek: Thanks for Not Being Bush

But as popular as Obama remains abroad, his career trajectory is starting to remind me more and more of another Nobel Peace Prize winner who was a major world leader. Today's Obamamania is not unlike Gorbymania. You may not remember Gorbymania—it marked a brief period of giddy enthusiasm for the last leader of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, and ran from the late 1980s up until the dismantling of his country in late December 1991. For Westerners, the genial Gorbachev was such a stunning departure from the Soviet leaders of yore and seemed so enlightened in his attitudes—seeking to dramatically reform the Soviet Union with perestroika (restructuring) and glasnost (openness)—that he became wildly popular across the Cold War divide. During his frequent visits to U.S. cities and other countries, people would line the streets on the off chance he might jump from his motorcade to press the flesh, which he often did, and TV producers panted to book him. Plump Gorby dolls even sold by the gross in U.S. department stores.

Gorbachev won the Nobel in 1990, at the height of his international celebrity. Then it all came abruptly to an end. It turned out that Gorbachev didn't understand a basic point: the communist system he was trying to reform was unreformable. His popularity disappeared with the Soviet Union. And he became a despised figure in post-Soviet Russia. His good nature no longer conveyed hope but weakness.

Here's a scary thought, a sentiment becoming more and more common overseas.

Is Obama America's Gorbachev? Why or why not?

Interesting theory...

So I guess Cheney represents Putin

And Bush would be "MISHA".
 
Interesting theory...

So I guess Cheney represents Putin

No, Cheney would be Nikita Khrushchev.

nikita-kruschev-zapato-shoe-onu.jpg


The question then is; "Who will be America's Putin?" Perhaps this guy?

petraeus_1231.jpg


Since he rebuilt Iraq, he could rebuild the US.
 
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