The spell that Mr. Obama once cast—a spell so powerful that instead of  ridiculing him when he boasted that he would cause "the oceans to stop rising  and the planet to heal," all of liberaldom fell into a delirious swoon—has now  been broken by its traumatic realization that he is neither the "god" Newsweek  in all seriousness declared him to be nor even a messianic deliverer.  
Hence the question on every lip is—as the title of a much quoted article in  the New York Times by Drew Westen of Emory University puts it— "What Happened to  Obama?" Attacking from the left, Mr. Westin charges that President Obama has  been conciliatory when he should have been aggressively pounding away at all the  evildoers on the right.
 
Of course, unlike Mr. Westen, we villainous conservatives do not see Mr.  Obama as conciliatory or as "a president who either does not know what he  believes or is willing to take whatever position he thinks will lead to his  re-election." On the contrary, we see him as a president who knows all too well  what he believes. Furthermore, what Mr. Westen regards as an opportunistic  appeal to the center we interpret as a tactic calculated to obfuscate his  unshakable strategic objective, which is to turn this country into a  European-style social democracy while diminishing the leading role it has played  in the world since the end of World War II. The Democrats have persistently  denied that these are Mr. Obama's goals, but they have only been able to do so  by ignoring or dismissing what Mr. Obama himself, in a rare moment of candor,  promised at the tail end of his run for the presidency: "We are five days away  from fundamentally transforming the United States of America."
 
This statement, coming on top of his association with radicals like Bill  Ayers, Jeremiah Wright and Rashid Khalidi, definitively revealed to all who were  not wilfully blinding themselves that Mr. Obama was a genuine product of the  political culture that had its birth among a marginal group of leftists in the  early 1960s and that by the end of the decade had spread metastatically to the  universities, the mainstream media, the mainline churches, and the entertainment  industry. Like their communist ancestors of the 1930s, the leftist radicals of  the '60s were convinced that the United States was so rotten that only a  revolution could save it.
 
But whereas the communists had in their delusional vision of the Soviet Union  a model of the kind of society that would replace the one they were bent on  destroying, the new leftists only knew what they were against: America, or  Amerika as they spelled it to suggest its kinship to Nazi Germany. Thanks,  however, to the unmasking of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian nightmare, they  did not know what they were for. Yet once they had pulled off the incredible  feat of taking over the Democratic Party behind the presidential candidacy of  George McGovern in 1972, they dropped the vain hope of a revolution, and in the  social-democratic system most fully developed in Sweden they found an  alternative to American capitalism that had a realistic possibility of being  achieved through gradual political reform. 
 
Despite Mr. McGovern's defeat by Richard Nixon in a landslide, the leftists  remained a powerful force within the Democratic Party, but for the next three  decades the electoral exigencies within which they had chosen to operate  prevented them from getting their own man nominated. Thus, not one of the six  Democratic presidential candidates who followed Mr. McGovern came out of the  party's left wing, and when Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton (the only two of the  six who won) tried each in his own way to govern in its spirit, their policies  were rejected by the American immune system. It was only with the advent of  Barack Obama that the leftists at long last succeeded in nominating one of their  own. 
 
To be sure, no white candidate who had close associations with an outspoken  hater of America like Jeremiah Wright and an unrepentant terrorist like Bill  Ayers would have lasted a single day. But because Mr. Obama was black, and  therefore entitled in the eyes of liberaldom to have hung out with protesters  against various American injustices, even if they were a bit extreme, he was  given a pass. And in any case, what did such ancient history matter when he was  also articulate and elegant and (as he himself had said) "non-threatening," all  of which gave him a fighting chance to become the first black president and  thereby to lay the curse of racism to rest?
 
And so it came about that a faithful scion of the political culture of the  '60s left is now sitting in the White House and doing everything in his power to  effect the fundamental transformation of America to which that culture was  dedicated and to which he has pledged his own personal allegiance. 
 
My own answer to the question, "What Happened to  Obama?" is that nothing happened to him. He is still the same anti-American  leftist he was before becoming our president, and it is this rather than  inexperience or incompetence or weakness or stupidity that accounts for the  richly deserved failure both at home and abroad of the policies stemming from  that reprehensible cast of mind.
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