Why we must consider a man's mentor
by
justoffal
05/01/2008, 11:17 AM #
A man's religious conviction is a very large and a very telling part of his character. This particular effect is magnified when that embrace comes after the age of reason indicating a conscious choice based on the particulars rather than a family inheritance which could be attributed more to habit or tradition. I also think that Obama is dead wrong about the Public curiosity level concerning his former Pastor.
Mentors, like anyone else are people and they can change. Their message can change, their personalities can change, their focus can change. Change is what we are asked to consider in the case of Jeremiah Wright and his philosophical ward Barak Obama. ( Let me pause here to say that I am not retracting this )
We witnessed a painful and public separation of man and mentor several days ago in front of a national audience. The words were words of disappointment and of disillusionment. Barak Obama is going to a place where his mentor's teachings are not welcomed. The question here is whether or not these things are actually news to Obama or if they were details that he simply hoped would never come to light.
It seems highly unlikely, since we do not hear any corroborating voices, that Jeremiah Wright has made any substantive changes to his ministerial message over the years that Obama has known him and listened to him although it certainly is not impossible. It leaves Obama with the unfortunate dilemma of saying either that he was clueless for twenty years or that he never thought of Wright's message as harmful until he realized what it might cost him.
Somewhere in a back room of the Obama camp surrounded by Lattes and political pamphlets during desperate strategy session his advisers no doubt came up with the plan that ""Jeremiah Wright is a changed man that I no longer recognize.""
Some people can spill wine on the king's white robes and come out of it with a Knighthood. Obama seems to be one of these although it must be said that he has currently been placed in a position that will cause him some kind of loss. His only choices here are between loss and loss..there simply is no gain to be had for him in the short run from these things and this situation. This is no doubt what prompted ( what must have been a tortured decision ) him to reinforce his message of separation from Wright publicly and in no uncertain terms. With a view to the end game here however he may have hit another home run with a larger audience even as he alienates a lesser one, all of that remains yet to be seen.
Despite the public outcry of foul...it simply is not either wrong or unfounded to examine a man's character based on a longtime association with someone who he as held in high esteem. To say this or even to suggest it is less than honest. That is not to say that it is the only thing considered and indeed Obama may be showing signs of being able to successfully separate himself from these things with a measure of impunity. What will it cost him? I don't think anyone knows that right now.