Shooting blanks at the pigeons
By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
President Obama has probably put the Secret Service
on this one, and the FBI, the CIA and the D.C. cops,
too. Who came up with that really dumb idea of
putting out an official White House photograph of
the president stalking clay pigeons with his
shotgun?
Maybe
it was the campaign consultant who gave Michael
Dukakis a ride in an Abrams tank. (Maggie Thatcher
had taken a similar ride two years earlier and
looked like George S. Patton.) Or the wizard who
decked out John Kerry in a lab suit that gave him
the appearance of a giant sperm. The dodo who did
that could have been the campaign consultant who
advised Jimmy Carter to tell the famous story of how
he was attacked by a killer rabbit.
Whoever it was, he or she made it worse by
accompanying the photograph with the stern warning
that “this [photograph] may not be manipulated in
any way.” This was similar to telling a
four-year-old that he should “never try to put a pea
up your nose.”
Some
of the manipulated, or “Photoshopped” images on the
Internet are hilariously telling. In one of them,
the president fires his gun and a bouquet of
petunias emerges from both barrels; in another, the
president fires at the house where a celebrated
terrorist was captured, over the caption: “the truth
about how we got bin Laden.” In still another, he
draws a bead on Bambi. Even Michelle and the girls
may be laughing, but not as hard as the gun owners
and Second Amendment fans to whom this moment in the
president’s grand gun-rights offensive was aimed. If
the idea was meant to show that the president is
just one of the good ol’ boys, as comfortable with
shotguns and clay pigeons as he practicing his
three-point shot, the early and unanimous word is
that the scheme went poof! Or maybe plouffe!
Indeed, the early speculation in the flackery shops
in Washington was that David Plouffe, the political
adviser who modestly identifies himself as the
genius of the last two presidential elections,
thought up the scheme and sold it to the president.
Mr. Plouffe, not heretofore recognized as a
wordsmith or coiner of memorable phrases, is leading
the defense of the worst marketing idea since
Coca-Cola came up with New Coke nearly two decades
ago, only to concede three months later that New
Coke was a colossal boo-boo. Mr. Obama has been
called a lot of names – secret Muslim, native
Kenyan, socialist-in-waiting – but none can sting
like being likened to Elmer Fudd, the great white
hunter in the world of Bugs Bunny.
Hunters and shooters cherish the photograph of the
president staring down the barrel of a Browning
12-gauge shotgun, aiming it not at the sky where
clay pigeons fly but straight ahead, as if aiming at
a beer can atop a hickory stump.
“That
looks pretty pathetic,” Rick Davenport of the Erie
County (New York) Sportsmen’s Federation told the
New York Post. “That’s not skeet shooting. This is
nothing but pandering to the sportsmen and hunters.”
Presidents have played good ol’ boy at their peril.
Calvin Coolidge, who didn’t suffer fools gladly or
otherwise, nevertheless made himself look foolish
when he cheerfully posed for a photograph in the
full feathers of an Indian chief. However, he
actually was a chief of the Sioux, if only by
adoption, and he liked as well to be photographed in
a Boy Scout uniform, short pants and all. Teddy
Roosevelt was photographed with his guns, and no one
doubted that he knew which was the business end of
an elephant gun. But when John Kerry, as a candidate
for president, called in the photographers he had to
borrow a gun for a portrait of himself in a hunter’s
camouflage suit. He had the look of a man who would
rather be wind-surfing in France.
The
president put the arts of persuasion behind him with
the beginning of a new week, and flew off to
Minnesota to sit down with a group of cops and
sheriffs to talk about guns, children, and how awful
guns are. The president spent his hour in
Minneapolis in a neighborhood described as
“traumatized by abundant illegal guns.” But he was
safely lodged deep in the bowels of the police
department's Special Operations Center. Everything
was closed to the public, so it was not clear who he
was trying to influence, since all the “attendees”
were safely in agreement with him.
President Calvin Coolidge (left)
Just
to take no chances, though, no shotguns and no
cameras. There would be no manipulation.
Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington
Times.