One of the standing lines from the Right since Obama's rise has been that he is Carter in blackface. Instapundit, and myself, have long been of the opinion that Carter II is about the best we could expect from Obama. But he might mean something different from what I mean.
Carter's great virtue from a conservative point of view was his complete impotence, an almost adorable inability to come to terms with the challenges of his time. This had nothing whatever to do with his intellect. James Earl Carter, Jr. graduated from Annapolis and studied nuclear physics; such men are not without grey matter. Rather, he persistently misconcieved what the country the times needed and wanted.
And why was this good? Because by 1978 it was arguable, and by 1980, obvious. A sea change could and did occur in the American political landscape because the country had percieved that the New Class had failed to provide what it had promised. Conservative success in 2012 depends in no small part on a similar perception.
As P.J. O'Rourke once put it, after we get Carter, we get Reagan.
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