c*****r 发帖数: 8227 | 1 一切喧嚣、骚攘、叫骂和诅咒,都会随风而去。
我的心境,就如Peggy这篇文章所描述的,
平和,如风和日丽天道下的一潭安详秋水。。。
Monday Morning
By Peggy Noonan
We begin with the three words everyone writing about the election must say:
Nobody knows anything. Everyone’s guessing. I spent Sunday morning in
Washington with journalists and political hands, one of whom said she feels
it’s Obama, the rest of whom said they don’t know. I think it’s Romney. I
think he’s stealing in “like a thief with good tools,” in Walker Percy’
s old words. While everyone is looking at the polls and the storm, Romney’s
slipping into the presidency. He’s quietly rising, and he’s been rising
for a while.
Obama and the storm, it was like a wave that lifted him and then moved on,
leaving him where he’d been. Parts of Jersey and New York are a cold
Katrina. The exact dimensions of the disaster will become clearer when the
election is over. One word: infrastructure. Officials knew the storm was
coming and everyone knew it would be bad, but the people of the tristate
area were not aware, until now, just how vulnerable to deep damage their
physical system was. The people in charge of that system are the politicians
. Mayor Bloomberg wanted to have the Marathon, to show New York’s spirit.
In Staten Island last week they were bitterly calling it “the race through
the ruins.” There is a disconnect.
But to the election. Who knows what to make of the weighting of the polls
and the assumptions as to who will vote? Who knows the depth and breadth of
each party’s turnout efforts? Among the wisest words spoken this cycle were
by John Dickerson of CBS News and Slate, who said, in a conversation the
night before the last presidential debate, that he thought maybe the
American people were quietly cooking something up, something we don’t know
about.
I think they are and I think it’s this: a Romney win.
Romney’s crowds are building—28,000 in Morrisville, Pa., last night; 30,
000 in West Chester, Ohio, Friday It isn’t only a triumph of advance
planning: People came, they got through security and waited for hours in the
cold. His rallies look like rallies now, not enactments. In some new way he
’s caught his stride. He looks happy and grateful. His closing speech has
been positive, future-looking, sweetly patriotic. His closing ads are sharp
—the one about what’s going on at the rallies is moving.
All the vibrations are right. A person who is helping him who is not a
longtime Romneyite told me, yesterday: “I joined because I was anti Obama—
I’m a patriot, I’ll join up But now I am pro-Romney.” Why? “I’ve spent
time with him and I care about him and admire him. He’s a genuinely good
man.” Looking at the crowds on TV, hearing them chant “Three more days”
and “Two more days”—it feels like a lot of Republicans have gone from
anti-Obama to pro-Romney.
Something old is roaring back. One of the Romney campaign’s surrogates, who
appeared at a rally with him the other night, spoke of the intensity and
joy of the crowd “I worked the rope line, people wouldn’t let go of my
hand.” It startled him. A former political figure who’s been in Ohio told
me this morning something is moving with evangelicals, other church-going
Protestants and religious Catholics. He said what’s happening with them is
quiet, unreported and spreading: They really want Romney now, they’ll go
out and vote, the election has taken on a new importance to them.
There is no denying the Republicans have the passion now, the enthusiasm.
The Democrats do not. Independents are breaking for Romney. And there’s the
thing about the yard signs. In Florida a few weeks ago I saw Romney signs,
not Obama ones. From Ohio I hear the same. From tony Northwest Washington, D
.C., I hear the same.
Is it possible this whole thing is playing out before our eyes and we’re
not really noticing because we’re too busy looking at data on paper instead
of what’s in front of us? Maybe that’s the real distortion of the polls
this year: They left us discounting the world around us.
And there is Obama, out there seeming tired and wan, showing up through
sheer self discipline. A few weeks ago I saw the president and the governor
at the Al Smith dinner, and both were beautiful specimens in their white
ties and tails, and both worked the dais. But sitting there listening to the
jokes and speeches, the archbishop of New York sitting between them, Obama
looked like a young challenger—flinty, not so comfortable. He was
distracted, and his smiles seemed forced. He looked like a man who’d just
seen some bad internal polling. Romney? Expansive, hilarious, self-spoofing,
with a few jokes of finely calibrated meanness that were just perfect for
the crowd. He looked like a president. He looked like someone who’d just
seen good internals.
Of all people, Obama would know if he is in trouble. When it comes to
national presidential races, he is a finely tuned political instrument: He
read the field perfectly in 2008. He would know if he’s losing now, and it
would explain his joylessness on the stump. He is out there doing what he
has to to fight the fight. But he’s still trying to fire up the base when
he ought to be wooing the center and speaking their calm centrist talk. His
crowds haven’t been big. His people have struggled to fill various venues.
This must hurt the president after the trememdous, stupendous crowds of ’08
. “Voting’s the best revenge”—revenge against who, and for what? This is
not a man who feels himself on the verge of a grand victory. His campaign
doesn’t seem president-sized. It is small and sad and lost, driven by
formidable will and zero joy.
I suspect both Romney and Obama have a sense of what’s coming, and it’s
part of why Romney looks so peaceful and Obama so roiled.
Romney ends most rallies with his story of the Colorado scout troop that in
1986 had an American flag put in the space shuttle Challenger, saw the
Challenger blow up as they watched on TV, and then found, through the
persistence of their scoutmaster, that the flag had survived the explosion.
It was returned to them by NASA officials. When Romney, afterward, was shown
the flag, he touched it, and an electric jolt went up his arm. It’s a nice
story. He doesn’t make its meaning fully clear. But maybe he means it as a
metaphor for America: It can go through a terrible time, a catastrophe, as
it has economically the past five years, and still emerge whole, intact,
enduring.
Maybe that’s what the coming Romney moment is about: independents,
conservatives, Republicans, even some Democrats, thinking: We can turn it
around, we can work together, we can right this thing, and he can help. |
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