In commentary on President Obama's
speeches, conservative media have apparently concluded that references to Jimmy
Carter's "malaise" speech are a handy tool to use, no matter
the topic at hand. For instance:
Obama's August 31 address on Iraq
- On the August 31 edition of Fox
News' The O'Reilly Factor,
Fox News contributor Ralph Peters said that when he "listened
to" Obama's speech on the end of combat operations in Iraq,
"two ghosts appeared. One was the Jimmy Carter malaise speech. The
other - the other ghost was Richard Nixon's Vietnamization
speeches." (Accessed via Nexis)
Obama's June 15 Oval Office speech on
the BP oil spill
- On the June 16, 2010 edition of
his Fox News show, Sean Hannity said of Obama's first Oval Office
address: "You know -- but what I got out of last night besides I
think probably the worst Oval Office address in history or at least in
close competition to Carter's malaise speech, it seems to me the Obama
so-called magic is gone, the rhetoric is old and stale. The rhetorical
tricks are somewhat old and boring and tiresome. You know people aren't
fainting any more, Michelle." (Accessed via Nexis)
- During the June 16 edition of his radio
show, Rush Limbaugh stated that Carter's speech "is almost
verbatim what Obama said last night, almost the exact same speech."
Limbaugh added, "I tell you, it's second term of
Jimmy Carter! And it's liberalism 100% through and through."
- In a June 15 RedState post titled
"Barack Obama Embraces His Inner Jimmy Carter," Erick Erickson
wrote, "Whatever the reason, Barack Obama gave the most depressing
Oval Office speech since Jimmy Carter's malaise speech. He
didn't just embrace defeat, he wore it on his suit as a substitute
for an argyle sweater."
Obama's June 2 speech on the economy
at Carnegie Mellon
- In a June 4 article on American Thinker, Ed Lasky wrote that
"President Obama's speech at
Carnegie Mellon University is rightfully being compared to Jimmy Carter's
notorious 'malaise' speech," adding, "All that was
missing was the cardigan sweater."
- In a June 13 editorial
headlined "Malaise at Mellon," IBD wrote, "It might
as well have been President Carter addressing the audience of students and
faculty at Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon
University. Instead
it was President Obama who spoke of our dependence on fossil fuels and
blamed everybody and everything, except for a lack of presidential
leadership, for our current situation." The editorial concluded by
stating, "If the students at Mellon were anxious, they had reason to
be. We have labeled Jimmy Carter our worst ex-president. He may soon have
a rival for that title."
- A June 8 FoxNews.com column stated:
"The apt comparison between Obama's speech on the economy and
Carter's is that "a crisis of confidence" persists
today. There is the same anxiety that in Barack Obama we have another
Jimmy Carter--a self-righteous ideologue who is in over his head,
championing policies that are not only unpopular but also
destructive."
Obama's January 20 Inaugural Address
- In a January 23, 2009 Human
Events piece,
conservative activist Michael Reagan claimed that "You can hear
echoes of that malaise speech in Obama's inaugural address when he
said, 'These are the indicators of crisis, subject to data and
statistics. Less measurable but no less profound is a sapping of
confidence across our land -- a nagging fear that America's
decline is inevitable, and that the next generation must lower its
sights.'"
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