Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Lions' Dens Are Not Comfortable Places for Humans: A Post-Trial Report on Psychopaths and Those Who Prop Them Up


I'm back from the trial in which I testified. Back, and thinking about psychopaths . . . . As my friend Wendell Griffen says in a posting he made at his Justice is a verb! blog a day ago, "Reasonable people do not wittingly employ a psychopath for morally and socially responsible work."

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Father Tom Doyle on Catholic Bishops' "Imagined Leadership" and the Real Leaders in the Abuse Crisis



Longtime advocate for abuse survivors and whistleblower re: the Catholic abuse crisis Father Tom Doyle, writing in today's (emailed) edition of NSAC [National Survivor Advocates Coalition] News, in an essay entitled "Sexual and Spiritual Abuse by the Clergy: The Wound That Will Not Heal":

Friday, July 13, 2012

Joan Chittister on Leadership: Three Foundational Stories



Maybe by posting a tidbit, a mere crumb, from Joan Chittister's May 2012 baccalaureate address to Standford graduates, which Michael Bayly has helpfully made available at his Progressive Catholic Voice blog, I can whet your appetite to read the entire statement:

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Bethune-Cookman University under Leadership of Trudie Kibbe Reed: The Role of the Southern Association of Colleges



To add to what I wrote yesterday about Bethune-Cookman University and the recent resignation/retirement of its president Trudie Kibbe Reed: as the university's accrediting body the Southern Association of Colleges prepared to review the school for reaccreditation in 2010, it invited third-party comments from members of the public.  I submitted a third-party comment to SACS as someone who had served as the school's highest academic officer, its vice-president for academic affairs.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Stephen Kaus on the Democrats' Independents-Wooing Strategy: Pre-Settling and Standing for Nothing

Leadership


San Francisco attorney Stephen Kaus on why he may well sit out the 2012 federal election: the "political Einsteins" surrounding Mr. Obama, as well as the president himself, appear to think that pre-settling for compromise will woo the all-important independents.  And the base can be taken for granted.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Andrew Sullivan on Obama's Budget: Too Weak, Cautious, Beholden to Politics to Lead


I'm interested in Andrew Sullivan's response to Mr. Obama's budget, which Sullivan entitles "Obama to the Next Generation: Screw You, Suckers," for two reasons:

Monday, February 14, 2011

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach on President Obama's Response to Egypt: Failure to Lead

A brief postscript to my two previous postings about the Egyptian revolution--the first reflecting on the inconsistent way in which the American government approaches the aspirations of people to democratic self-governance in different parts of the globe, the second on Nicholas Kristof's appeal to President Obama to speak out forcefully to condemn the violence in Egypt:

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Newsweek on Obama's Moral Cowardice: Find Principles!

 
 
Jacob Weisberg’s latest op-ed piece in Newsweek is rightly gaining attention around the internet.  Weisberg decries the moral cowardice of President Obama, and encourages him to find moral principles around which to build his presidency.  Weisberg adopts as his frame of analysis the new carpet the president has recently installed in the Oval Office, which is ringed with inspiring quotations from Presidents Lincoln, Kennedy, and the two Roosevelts, along with Martin Luther King, Jr.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Top Democratic Consultant Excoriates Obama Administration's Cowardice re: Gay Rights



As more Republicans (Ted Olson, Ken Mehlman, John McCain's former campaign manager Steve Schmidt) argue that support for gay rights and same-sex marriage is consistent with conservative principles, a top Democratic consultant has contacted Huffington Post to say that the Obama administration is in danger of losing gay support.  And should be made uncomfortable that some Republicans are now moving ahead of this administration on this human rights issue.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Glenn Greenwald on Faux Rage of Tea Party: A Script Written by the Rich, Promoted by Republicans, Enabled by Spineless Democrats



And, as a postscript to what I just posted about who is pulling the strings of tea partiers (and their Catholic hierarchical fellow-travelers), and why those strings are being pulled, I'd like to post an excerpt from Glenn Greenwald's commentary on the tea party movement at Salon yesterday (with a hat tip to Pam Spaulding, who posted a link on her Facebook site today).

Monday, August 23, 2010

In the News: Mr. Obama Needs to Take a Stand



A persistent theme in the news today: Mr. Obama needs to take a stand, articulate his philosophy of leadership and identify his core principles, and emulate the Grand Communicator, Reagan, in providing a narrative about his leadership that clarifies why he is a symbol of hope and change we can believe in.

John Harris and James Hohmann have a piece at Politico in that vein, as does Dan Conley at Salon.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Ted Olson Defends "Ground-Zero Mosque"



For readers who haven't yet read this news: Ted Olson, the former Solicitor General under George W. Bush and one of the two brilliant advocates who successfully challenged California's prop 8 law, has issued a statement defending the rights of those who want to construct an Islamic community center near the ground-zero site.

Olson states,

I do believe that people of all religions have a right to build edifices, or structures, or places of religious worship or study where the community allows them to do it under zoning laws and that sort of thing, and that we don't want to turn an act of hate against us by extremists into an act of intolerance for people of religious faith. And I don't think it should be a political issue. It shouldn't be a Republican or Democratic issue, either. I believe Gov. Christie from New Jersey said it well, that this should not be in that political, partisan marketplace.


Olson's wife Barbara died in the ground-zero attacks.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

MoDo on Obama's Walk-Back of Mosque Comments: The President Fumbles Again

Meanwhile (linking to what I have just posted about U.S. churches and the bogus "ground-zero mosque" controversy: Maureen Dowd at the New York Times gets it just about right, as she looks at how President Obama walked back his sane, principled defense of the right of a religious group to build a community center on one day, with a comment the following day parsing the meaning of "is."

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Glenn Greenwald on President Obama's Defense of Ground-Zero Mosque: Pure Praise



Glenn Greenwald on Mr. Obama's principled leadership in defending the ground-zero mosque:

It was Michael Bloomberg who first stood up and eloquently condemned this anti-mosque campaign for what it is, but Obama's choice to lend his voice to a vital and noble cause is a rare demonstration of principled, politically risky leadership.  It's not merely a symbolic gesture, but also an important substantive stand against something quite ugly and wrong.  This is an act that deserves pure praise.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Aaron Belkin on Pentagon DADT Survey: Everything Turns on Leadership

Aaron Belkin at Huffington Post, offering a sane assessment of the Pentagon survey asking troops how they'd feel about showering with a gay soldier (well, the survey leads off all its questions about gays by using the word "homosexual," a word known to bias surveys about gay rights and gay people):

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Michael Signorile on Gays as the Canaries in the Coal Mine of Obama Administration


Michael Signorile at Salon, noting how the erosion of Mr. Obama's base, which has resulted in the loss of Ted Kennedy's Massachusetts Senate seat, began with his cold shoulder to his LGBT supporters--from the outset of his administration:

Obama's coldness toward gays, lesbians, bisexual and transgender people upon taking office could have predicted that he wouldn't get tough on the banks or show any passion for a public option. Gays were the canaries in the coal mine back on Day One of this administration. That was the day when Rick Warren gave the invocation at the inauguration. It signaled how easily this president would insult and sideline a loyal constituency in return for the false promise of bringing in people who will never support him.

And in my view, not merely coldness, but calculating coldness, coldness designed to demonstrate to Republicans who never intended to do anything but oppose the new president that he was willing to bend over backwards to listen to and include them in policy-making decisions.

You can tell a great deal about a person's character by observing how he or she treats his/her friends. 

William Greider on Obama's Wake-Up Call: Monumental Miscalculations Led to Massachusetts Debacle


More good commentary about what the Massachusetts senatorial defeat portends for the Obama administration. I’m particularly impressed today with William Greider’s “Obama’s Big Wake-Up Call” at Alternet.

In Greider’s view, the Massachusetts special election reveals “monumental miscalculations by which Obama has governed, both in priorities and political-legislative strategies.” And I agree.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Democratic Stronghold Goes Republican, After Huge Mandate for Change: A Personal Response

The Massachusetts special election has, as expected, given the Senate seat held for almost half a century by longtime health-care reform advocate Ted Kennedy to a Republican. In the Democratic stronghold of Massachusetts, which gave President Obama 62% of its vote in 2008. The special election gave this longstanding Democratic seat in a strongly Democratic state to a Republican whose primary claim to fame is that he owns a truck. And once posed for Cosmopolitan.

And I wish I could say I’m surprised. But as anyone reading this blog on a regular basis knows, from early in the new administration, I became convinced that the refusal to act decisively to fulfill its progressive promises and to adhere to the moral core of those promises was going radically to undermine the new administration. Click on the tag “Barack Obama” at the bottom of this posting, follow the thread back, and you’ll find posting after posting on this blog making those predictions.

I began predicting the turn to the right that we’re now seeing (turn to the right: Brown was endorsed by the savagely anti-gay National Organization for Marriage) from early in the new administration when I saw its cynical, calculating willingness to play games with the hopes and lives of gay citizens who had worked hard to elect the new president believing that he was sincere when he told us he would end DADT and work to abolish DOMA. When I saw the willingness of the new administration to waffle immediately on its moral commitment in that area, I saw the handwriting on the wall.

And I wrote on this blog that, though I had strongly supported Mr. Obama and had written over and over to praise him during the election, my energy in support of the new administration was rapidly vanishing. As I’ve stated here, I have never been so disappointed about any vote I’ve cast in any federal election during my adult life.

The pundits will pick through these election results now, and parse them every way possible. Already, centrist commentators are encouraging Mr. Obama to take the same lesson Mr. Clinton is said to have taken from the turn to the right that followed his initial period in office, and to become even more bipartisan and even more centrist than he’s already been. As if that’s even possible . . . .

There will be—there already are—claims that the progressive wing of the Democratic party in Massachusetts voted heavily for Ms. Coakley, while blue-collar Democrats turned against the new administration, due to its movement away from the center.

And these are, of course, precisely the wrong lessons to take from what has just happened in Massachusetts. As Peter Daou notes today in a HuffPo article entitled “Liberal Bloggers to Obama and Dems: We Told You So,”

I've written a number of posts arguing that it's all a matter of values and ethics. In essence: when you fail to govern based on a morally sound, well-articulated, solidly-grounded set of ideals, you look weak. All the legislative wins in the world won't change that. People gravitate to people who exude moral authority. The vast majority of voters lack the detailed policy knowledge that would enable them to make an accurate assessment of policy differences, but they do have a visceral sense of when a candidate or an elected official believes in something and fights for it. It's why campaigns are laden with moral arguments; politicians ask to be elected because they'll "do the right thing."

“Morally sound, well-articulated, solidly-grounded set of ideals”
; “moral authority” as the foundation of compelling leadership: as Daou also suggests, when, on the inauguration day itself, this administration invited Rev. Rick Warren to take center stage and give the inaugural invocation while Bishop Gene Robinson’s prayer off in the wings of the stage was not even broadcast to the public, anyone watching for the moral foundations of the new administration had a strong clue as to what was about to happen to every aspect of the progressive agenda of the new administration. To every aspect demanding moral fortitude . . . .

In one year’s time, we have seen the new administration—and a Democratic-controlled Senate and House—squander the mandate provided to it by a strong majority of the American public in the last election, as the right-wing noise machine has been given every opportunity possible to crank itself up again while Democrats waste valuable time and energy catering to banks, Wall Street, and the health and pharmaceutical industries.

While Democrats diddle, the right-wing noise machine has free rein to re-animate deep racial bias, fears of necessary progressive change, sound and fury about nothing. And now we see a man with a truck and a Cosmopolitan past walking into the highest legislative body in the land as a result of the new administration’s refusal to put core values front and center as it governs.

Daou’s conclusion:

Progressive bloggers have been jumping up and down, yelling at their Democratic leaders that the path of compromise and pragmatism only goes so far. The limit is when you start compromising away your core values.

Will the new administration hear that lesson now? I very much doubt it. In my view—and I’ve stated this here repeatedly as the morally vacuous course the new administration intended to take became glaringly apparent—we are now in for a period of right-wing dominance in American politics the likes of which we haven’t seen since the McCarthy period. Nasty, gay-bashing, free-wheeling free-market dominance that will make what took place in the Bush era look like a church picnic by contrast.

Meanwhile, we who continue living in this nation have to find some way to make do—I have to find some way to make do, as one of millions of Americans without a job, with no health insurance, with monthly mortgage payments I cannot meet without dipping into my rapidly vanishing savings. As I enter my 60th year.

As I’ve shared on this blog (and I bring this up for two reasons: it’s politically pertinent, and it illustrates some of the serious day-to-day struggles that lack of equality continues to create for gay citizens of this nation), I find myself the owner of a second house in Florida that I can’t sell, and which I bought on the basis of promises made to me by a former employer who has created tremendous hardship for my partner Steve and me by breaking those promises. I’ve noted our inability to refinance the loan for this house, even after banks were given funds by the new administration precisely to enable citizens in financial distress with mortgage payments to do just that.

Recently, we’ve gone through yet another round of negotiations with our bank, Bank of America, which is the lender for this mortgage, in the hope that some way could be found to refinance the loan and reduce our prohibitive monthly payment on the note. Once again, we’ve been told at the end of that time-consuming process that the house’s precipitous drop in value from our purchase date in March 2006—it is now appraised at some $88,000 less than the purchase price—prevents the bank from assisting us.

We’ve gone through tortured negotiations with the bank that revolve around the fact that, though we’re a couple who have lived together and pooled our resources for nearly 40 years now, we’re not a legally recognized couple. We have no legal existence at all under the law of our state, or under federal law, for that matter.

This lack of any legal recognition of our shared life and shared resources results in ludicrous problems such as the following: because I have no full-time employment, and because my income in the past year has been minuscule, I automatically don’t qualify, on the face of it, for a renegotiated loan. Steve, on the other hand, has a full-time job and a decent salary.

But the house is in my name. In Florida. In a state that, like our home state, has no laws at all recognizing our existence as a couple. And so, when we bought the house, we put the house in my name, rather than attempting to deal with the legal nightmare of trying to negotiate a loan as a non-existent couple—as a couple that doesn’t exist in the state of Florida, in the eyes of the law. We put the house in my name, as well, to protect Steve’s assets in our house in Arkansas, which is in his name—for precisely the same reason: we are not legally recognized as a couple in Arkansas.

And so, the upshot is, I can't claim Steve’s salary and income as my income when I apply for a new loan. Because I have no legal connection to Steve, in the eyes of the bank. Though I live, largely, from his income. Because we are a couple.

This situation—the situation of existing in fact as a married couple, but not being legally recognized as such—does work to our advantage now, ironically. It does so in this respect: if I walk away from the mortgage in Florida, as we have told the bank we may well decide to do now that it has once again refused to renegotiate the mortgage loan, only my credit is affected.

As I stated here when I wrote about our mortgage nightmare back in December, everything in me revolts against the thought of walking away from a financial commitment. I was raised to pay my debts—all my debts. Because I have consistently done so throughout my life, I have a stellar credit rating. It galls me deeply to have been placed in this situation of unemployment and financial helplessness by the president of a United Methodist university who claims to support the rights of gay citizens, but who, after inducing Steve and me to take jobs at the institution she leads, revoked her promises to us because of her homophobia, when the United Methodist bishop who sits on her university’s governing board told us we ought not to have been hired, as a gay couple.

But we’re very seriously considering walking now. As we’ve come to see it, the banks were given money to assist people in our circumstances, and they’ve refused to do so. They’ve benefited themselves—largely so—from the government’s beneficence while refusing to do with the money they’ve received what the government instructed them to do.

And since the government’s not holding the banks’ feet to the fire, many of us caught in impossible mortgage situations with upside-down mortgages are walking. And more of us are going to walk.

And to pull our money out of the huge banks that have treated us like non-persons when we approached them to do what the government told them to do.

And to withdraw our energies from a “progressive” administration that has done nothing at all to assist us in this crisis, except to throw money at the banks who have created and are benefiting from the crisis.

Are people angry that the new administration has done virtually nothing to create new jobs, to help Americans in financial crisis, to hold Wall Street and the banks accountable for their role in creating this crisis? I think so. And a lot of that anger is coming from those who, during the campaign, were the new president’s strongest supporters.

More as this saga unfolds . . . .

Monday, October 12, 2009

When Things Fall Apart: Blogging Through Crisis (Even in Pajamas)

I’ve fallen behind with notices about the many welcome comments that have appeared on this blog in the past two days—most of them in response to my musings on the weekend about the abortion issue and how it’s interplaying now with the health care debate. I’m behind for a number of reasons, including work on a lecture that I’ll be giving tomorrow evening.

The more important reason I’m behind, though, is a personal crisis that has made me slow to blog recently—a soul crisis. It’s, in a sense, a theodicy crisis, a question about where God is in a world in which evil sometimes seems to be definitively unmasked, and then forces that collude with evil step in and put the mask back on. And we’re all supposed to act as if we haven’t seen what’s underneath the mask and go about our business.

I may well blog more directly about this crisis at some point down the road. I almost have to do so, because it presents me with an existential crisis as I blog. I struggle to know what I can say to others that in any way makes sense of the raw data of turbulent experience, when I can’t even make sense of some of my own experiences.

How to talk about hope, faith, solidarity, God, in a world in which evil just keeps on triumphing, or seeming to triumph? What makes the crisis more acute for me is that those colluding to put the mask back on the authority figure that was briefly unmasked are church people, people who wear the cloth, some of them. They include a Methodist bishop and a passel of Methodist pastors, who ought to have sense enough to recognize that the person they keep propping up has done serious damage to a whole string of people, and should be stopped.

Recent events have made it clear that, wherever this person goes, she ends up causing grievous harm to a far from insignificant number of people under her authority, and to the institutions she leads. When I first encountered her and began to work with her, she did not yet have a track record, and so it was difficult to see clearly what was going on with her.

I confess that I supported the person in question for longer than I should have. I gave her the benefit of the doubt even when I found some of her tactics and claims incomprehensible, because she is doubly a minority, and I wanted to assist her as someone who appeared to need the assistance of those who care about prejudice and marginalization. And I assumed that my inability to comprehend had everything to do with my lack of knowledge about what it was like to walk in her shoes, as someone doubly stigmatized.

But now that she has replicated the pattern of abusive leadership at a second institution, and has become even more grossly abusive and destructive in her second position of leadership, I see what I could not see previously. She now has a proven track record. She now has a legacy as a leader, and it’s a horrendous one.

For whatever reasons—perhaps because she simply cannot help herself, as she externalizes some twisted drama in the depths of her own soul—she creates chaos and instability all around her. She leads by dividing, by attacking, by setting one person under her authority against another. Rather than attempting to assure that those she chooses for leadership positions work together and excel at what they do, she undermines them and uses one member of her leadership team as an attack dog to savage others.

She deliberately pits the worst people on her leadership teams against the best, as she singles out those with promise and hounds them out of their positions. She is not above using lies, slander, any tactics of abuse that work, no matter how immoral, to disempower her perceived detractors and to empower incompetent and morally compromised cronies.

And she gets away with this behavior, over and over. She does so, in part, because she’s adroit about playing the race and gender cards when she’s exposed. She tries to turn the tables and make it appear that those who have the goods on her lack credibility, because they are out to get her due to her double minority status.

She also knows how to work power circuits. In her current battles, I happen to know that she has contacted at least two officials at the highest levels of the current federal administration. I would not put it past this person—and I’m not exaggerating as I say this—to contact the president himself and try to secure his assistance in her current battles.

One of the most bizarre claims I have heard her make—and others have heard this as well; it’s talked about fairly widely in the circle of the many folks she has damaged—is that a former U.S. president has targeted her and is responsible for everything that goes wrong with her leadership.

Well, enough of that story. I wanted to sketch its bare bones simply to provide some suggestion of what I’m struggling with these days, as the person in question has appeared to be decisively exposed as not only an incompetent but a corrupt leader, and then has quickly received statements of support from her supervisors, including people in positions of authority in the United Methodist church that sponsors the institution she is leading.

It’s hard to watch something like this. And even harder to understand where God is in a world in which this and many other seemingly evil events transpire. I know full well that my own little struggle and this series of events are far from the worst thing going on in the word. But it happens to be my own little drama right now, the struggle for understanding that most directly engages me right now.

And I have to try to find my way through it, in order to know how to keep on blogging with any sincerity or conviction here.

I've chosen a painting of Teresa of Avila to illustrate this posting because her feast day comes up this week, in the Catholic liturgical calendar. And because Teresa, who apparently had Jewish blood as did her fellow mystic and friend John of the Cross, was comfortable, as the Jewish tradition is, with asking God questions and complaining about God's way of doing things. According to one story, when she was traveling in her busy life of founding Carmels and a donkey dumped her into a river she was crossing, she said to God, "If this is how you treat your friends, it's no wonder you have so few."

I like Teresa, too, because she danced with her sisters. And because she held onto her frying pan and tried to keep on cooking for her sisters when she went into ecstasy. And because she would get up in the night and sit on the stairs and hold a lighted lantern to help her sisters find their way to the chapel for prayers. And because she prayed in exasperation that God send her fewer mystics and more people interested in scrubbing floors. And because she maintained that the Lord walks among the pots and pans in the kitchen every bit as much as in holy places.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Putting the Genie Back Into the Bottle: Mr. Obama Speaks of Health Care as Moral Imperative

And speaking of the health care situation, I highly recommend Glenn Greenwald’s incisive analysis at Salon earlier this week. It’s the best comprehensive overview I’ve yet seen, exposing precisely how powerful economic interest groups that have gained considerable control of the American political process in several decades of neoconservative dominance will not relinquish that control. And how and why the Democratic party continues to cave in to those groups.

Greenwald notes that the Democratic party’s excuses for its collective failures continue unabated. Now that the Democrats have the White House, a filibuster-proof majority, a huge margin in the House, and a broad popular voters’ mandate for progressive reform, we’re being told that the president is at the mercy of forces he can’t control even in his own party, when it comes to progressive reform. Greenwald’s respose:

I'm really surprised that there's anyone, especially Matt [Yglesias at Think Progress], who actually believes this -- that the Obama White House is merely an impotent, passive observer of what the Democrats in Congress do and can't be expected to do anything to secure votes for approval of the health care bill it favors. As the leader of his party, the President commands a vast infrastructure on which incumbent members of Congress rely for re-election. His popularity among Democrats vests him numerous options to punish non-compliant Democrats. And Rahm Emanuel built his career on controlling the machinations within Congress. The very idea that Obama, Emanuel and company are just sitting back, helplessly watching as Max Baucus, Kent Conrad and the Blue Dogs (Rahm's creation) destroy their health care legislation, is absurd on its face.

Greenwald notes that the White House’s ability to control is very much in evidence in its response to the progressive wing of the Democratic party. If progressives buck the party line dictated by the White House, they are quickly threatened. But blue dog Democrats and “centrists” who refuse to adhere to mandates from party leaders are protected.

In Greenwald’s view, in the back-and-forth of “bipartisan” deliberation over health care reform—deliberation engineered in many ways by Democratic party strategists, right from the top—we see a cynical game being played out. We’re led to think that the Democrats are forced to compromise because the Republicans just won’t come on board to support health care reform.

This is a pretext for watering the final bill down. And it has been the game plan of party strategists all along. Greenwald’s conclusion:

This is how things always work. The industry interests which own and control our government always get their way. When is the last time they didn't? The "public option" was something that was designed to excite and placate progressives (who gave up from the start on a single-payer approach) -- and the vast, vast majority of progressives (all but the most loyal Obama supporters) who are invested in this issue have been emphatic about how central a public option is to their support for health care reform. But it seems clear that the White House and key Democrats were always planning on negotiating it away in exchange for industry support. Isn't that how it always works in Washington? No matter how many Democrats are elected, no matter which party controls the levers of government, the same set of narrow monied interests and right-wing values dictate outcomes, even if it means running roughshod over the interests of ordinary citizens (securing lower costs and expanding coverage) and/or what large majorities want.

Meanwhile, Mr. Obama has finally been willing to talk—faintly and unconvincingly, particularly after the secret deal the White House has cut with the pharmaceutical industries—about health care as a “moral obligation” .*

And this necessary turn—a turn that has been necessary for the administration’s success from the outset—may well be too late. As Paul Krugman notes in today’s New York Times, Mr. Obama has now created a very serious trust problem for himself as a leader, and his progressive base is in strong reaction to his failure of leadership:

On the issue of health care itself, the inspiring figure progressives thought they had elected comes across, far too often, as a dry technocrat who talks of “bending the curve” but has only recently begun to make the moral case for reform. Mr. Obama’s explanations of his plan have gotten clearer, but he still seems unable to settle on a simple, pithy formula; his speeches and op-eds still read as if they were written by a committee.

And I’m not sure that trust can be rebuilt, frankly. There has been an awful lot of water under the bridge, with the reneging on the promise to end DADT, the atrocious DOMA brief (though I applaud the recent clearer statements that the White House regards the Defense of Marriage Act as discriminatory), the back-stepping on truth commissions to deal with our legacy of torture in the last administration, the movement away from transparency in this administration, and, last but not least, the health care debacle.

This administration is not what many of us voted for. It is, above all, not what we hoped desperately to see, after the Bush administration. How do you re-enchant folks who are thoroughly disenchanted, I wonder, now that the scales have fallen from our eyes?

* For more on health care for all as a moral imperative, and on the failure of this administration to build its platform for change on such moral imperatives, click the label “moral imperative” at the link to which I have just pointed.