All of life is rife with paradoxes. Few as striking, profound and poignant as the contrast between Steve Jobs and Barack Obama.
It is more than likely that Obama’s childhood home will someday become a national monument. I have no objection to that. He was smart and skillful enough to charm his way into the seat of power and though he has used it to destroy so much of what is exceptional in America, the feat of a successful rise to power is undeniable. So let there be an Obama homestead monument erected smack dab on the beaches of Hawaii.
But another childhood home, specifically its garage, will never be a national monument: that of Steve Jobs. More than Obama (and, of course, most presidents of either party) Steve Jobs did so much to sustain America’s leadership as the land of innovation and entrepreneurial genius.
The profound difference between Jobs and Obama is that the former used his origins to inspire while the latter has used his to insult, denigrate and diminish the nation that gave both the pass to achieve to their highest level.
For Jobs, the garage was a springboard to magical life of imagination and commercial execution. For Obama it was a score to settle, a gripe to avenge, a disdain for the red, white and blue that is the oldest enduring republic in the world and that deserves a salute from all who have been blessed enough to live within its shores. And to thrive here.
Obama ran as a unifying force who would bring all people together under a common umbrella of decency, hope and boundless optimism. Instead, he has divided, pitted classes against each other and– in a relentless drive to protect his power and imperial lifestyle– has proven to be a Chicago pol of the worst order.
Ironically, Jobs — who never ran for office and hardly had the temperament for the falsity of the campaign trail– has been the very unifying figure the President promised to be. Generations of people, especially the young, will want to be like Steve: dreaming, risking, building, making as Jobs himself liked to say, “a ding in the universe.” And all without a single handout from Mother Government.
As America looks into the future, it faces a titanic struggle between the operatives who sell utopian dreams for votes and those at the diametrically opposite end of the spectrum, who walk the high wire without a net, asking for nothing but the liberty to do so.
The battle between the garbage and the garage is hardly new. It simply seems to be reaching a breaking point.