Great writing distills the essence of a situation, pulling together references and experiences from all points of the compass. This article, by Dorothy Rabinowitz of the Wall Street Journal, is great writing.
OS is simultaneously grateful for her work, and profoundly envious. He's never come close to this level of craft. Still, he proudly share this essay with you, because she puts her finger on the pulse of the Obama administration, and unblinkingly relates what she concludes:
In the 1967 film "A Guide for the Married Man," a husband, played by a
peerless Walter Matthau, is given lessons in ways to cheat on his wife
safely. The most essential rule: "Deny! Deny! Deny!"—no matter what. In
an instructive scene, he's shown a wife undone by shock, and screaming,
with reason: She has just walked in on her husband making love to a
glamorous stranger.
"What are you doing," she wails, "who is that woman?"
"What woman, where?" the husband serenely counters, as he and the tart in question get out of bed and calmly dress.
So the scene proceeds, with the
distraught wife pointing to the woman she clearly sees before her, while
her husband, unruffled, continues to look blankly at her, asking, "What
woman?" Confused by her spouse's unblinking assurance, she gives up.
Two minutes later she's asking him what he'd like for dinner.
For much of the past four years, the
Obama administration's propensity for asserting views of reality wildly
at odds with those evident to most rational citizens has looked
increasingly like a page from that film script.
Ms. Rabinowitz has nailed it. On. The. Head.
Bulls-eye. Full marks. 10 for 10.
God bless her.