Does Hillary Remember Being Normal?

This article was published in the January 14, 2008, edition of The New York Observer.

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While cam-paigning, Barack Obama is often heard to quote his wife, Michelle, saying, “We are not that far away from being normal.” He then goes on to explain that it was only five years ago that he and his wife were still struggling to pay off their student loans and were wondering how they could get together enough money to move out of their condo, which wasn’t big enough to hold them and their two little girls.

That was normal, meaning that the Obama family was experiencing what tens of millions of American families experience: Two jobs and still feeling the financial pressure of not quite bringing in enough to make it. The Obamas got out of their financial bind when, as he says, he made big money on his book and was elected to the Senate. He knows that he is no longer normal. Nevertheless, his normal days are not so long ago that he has forgotten how the end of the month can be a family money crisis.

You may be sure that not a few of his auditors sit in meeting halls and gyms listening to him in near rapture while they count on their fingers how many years it must be since Hillary was normal. It was 32 years ago that her husband was elected governor of Arkansas and the Clinton family left off being normal to begin their crawl higher up on the hog and the social scale. It’s been 20 years or so since her friends were not billionaires or movie stars.

It’s been a long time away from normal for John Edwards. He has made very many millions as a liability lawyer suing very large commercial enterprises on behalf of very small plaintiffs. In a time when there are no unions and most governmental entities are indifferent to our personal plights, Mr. Edwards and his ilk are often our only and last resort, but that does not make his occupation tasty.

Mr. Edwards says he has been battling against the T. rex corporations, but we remember that he got rich at it, and we wonder what his clients got. Then again, the candidate’s parents, South Carolina textile mill hands, appear at his rallies. They are the real McCoy, sitting there with labor-stained faces. The fact that he brings them and talks about their lives of low pay and hard work is an indicator that John Edwards has not, as they say in the South, “got above his raisin’.”

You do not get the impression that the Republican candidates, Mike Huckabee excepted, would have the wildest idea what Mr. Obama is talking about when he is discussing five years away from normal. John McCain, a fine and brave man deserving much respect, is the son of an admiral who was the son of an admiral. The McCains did good, but they are not normal and never were.

Fred Thompson comes from workaday beginnings, but he kissed normal goodbye many years ago. As for Rudy Giuliani, you have the impression that for him, those who live in Normal Land are potential marks, persons waiting to be taken by the clients he serves through the dubious medium of Giuliani Partners LLC, the enterprise through which he has pocketed millions. Mitt Romney is strictly a silver-spoon boy.

Ron Paul and Mike Huckabee would understand what Mr. Obama’s normal means. Mr. Paul grew up on the family dairy farm in Pennsylvania, the son of a man whose schooling stopped at the eighth grade. He worked to put himself through college and medical school, ultimately becoming an OB-GYN, but as a libertarian he has embraced a political philosophy that deifies government impotency, so his sympathies avail us nothing.

Mr. Huckabee’s father was a fireman and a mechanic and his mother was a clerk at the gas company, so he grew up in a two-income family, and you cannot do that without knowing exactly what normal means. If that were not enough, he graduated from Ouachita Baptist University, which fact tells you plenty about where Mr. Huckabee hails from.

But there is a difference between understanding and sympathizing with those who live normal lives, and figuring out what to do about it. Other than decrying the gradual impingement of ever harsher necessities on our families, what do we do?

The Republican answer is to cut taxes, but there comes a point when tax-cutting doesn’t cut it anymore. Next Page >

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Interesting premise... But I wonder whether it has just the ring of truth without the heft. Being President of The United States of America is not a "normal" existence and it is possible that someone who has little experience with life in a fishbowl, with the fully armed S.S. standing just outside every door and ground to air missiles on the roof..., just might have some trouble adjusting.

A quick remembrance of Presidential Families of the past would suffice to demonstrate my point... In every modern case these family members took a while to get used to having their every utterance and movement recorded and reported and this has led to some great comedy routines, some financial scandals and Billy Beer...

You pick...

The fact that the Clintons, for all their faults, are well known might just be the breather Americans and our government need to actually accomplish something in her first one hundred days... Or we could spend the Spring of '09 getting to know all of Huckabee's Arkansas clan or exploring the intricacies of Mr. Romney's no doubt intricate family tree or perhaps fall as in love with the Obamas as we did the young Kennedy's, Oprah showcases the White House, glittering and elegant State Dinners, without any country music...

Or maybe Hillary has a point, and is truly ready, by virtue of familiarity, if no other, to hit the ground running... While familiararity may breed contempt, it also is familiar...

Dallas112263

JOEL GOODMAN (not verified) says:

Hillary= normal

cobras=friendly

execution=fun

poison=delicious

All the same value if you're counting.

bob levis (not verified) says:

For Nicholas von Hoffman:

Nick,

It's the fortieth anniversary of "GOLD" and it will be featured at the New York Film & Video Festival Monday, March 3rd at the ImaginAsian Theatre, 239 E. 59th St., Manhattan. Hope you can make it. Info at: nyfilmvideo.com

Bob Levis

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