Friday, March 20, 2009

Did Obama Take the Short Bus Home from Leno?

Last night on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno, President Obama made the first appearance by a sitting president.

Despite a decent and reasonable sounding interview throughout much of the set, Obama shoved his foot deep in his mouth near the end.

Commenting on his bowling in the White House bowling alley, he criticized himself using and tired and insulting cliche:
It's "like the Special Olympics or something," the president said.
Charming. Classy. Funny.

I know the arguments in his defense; it was just a joke, one of those throw-away lines that everybody uses, etc. That's just the point.

Jokes like this may be just a slang phrase, a meaningless vernacular to some, but to many others (including your correspondent), it is real life. Using phrases like this show a certain level of insensitivity towards people with special needs.

He didn't mean to be insulting, but the fact that he doesn't find using these terms derogatory indicates that not offending developmentally delayed kids as sacrosanct as protecting other groups of people.

Using phrases like this should be as unacceptable as telling a Jewish joke or dropping the "N-word." That's the problem; for Obama, risking insult to special needs kids is not as important to him as it should be.

He's supposed to be the President of the United States. Can't we expect better than Special Olympics jokes?

1 comment:

Burro Hall said...

Not the guy's finest oratorical moment, for sure. Still, this was pretty funny:

1) Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska, the Republican candidate for vice president in 2008 and the mother of an infant with Down syndrome, said in a statement on Friday, “This was a degrading remark about our world’s most precious and unique people, coming from the most powerful position in the world.”

2) The biggest single chunk of money that Palin is turning down is about $170 million for education, including money that would go for programs to help economically disadvantaged and special needs students. Anchorage School Superintendent Carol Comeau said she is "shocked and very disappointed" that Palin would reject the schools money.

Word...actions...I guess they both matter.