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Controversial
New Yorker
Cover
Shows Muslim, Flag-Burning, Osama-Loving, Fist-Bumping Obama
Who knows if they'll get this
in Dubuque, but they sure aren't going to like it in Chicago: This
week's New Yorker cover features an image of Michelle and Barack Obama
that combines every smeary right-wing stereotype imaginable: An image
of Obama in a turban and robes fist-bumping his be-afro'd wife, dressed
in the military fatigues of a revolutionary and packing a machine gun
and some serious ammo. Oh yes, this quaint little scene takes place in
the Oval Office, under a picture of Osama bin Laden above a roaring
fireplace, in which burns an American flag. All that's missing is a
token sprig of arugula.
The illustration, by Barry Blitt,is called "The Politics of Fear" and,
according to the NYer press release, "satirizes the use of scare
tactics and misinformation in the Presidential election to derail
Barack Obama's campaign." Uh-huh. What's that they say about repeating
a rumor?
Presumably the New Yorker readership is sophisticated enough to get the
joke, but still: this is going to upset a lot of people, probably for
the same reason it's going to delight a lot of other people, namely
those on the right: Because it's got all the scare tactics and
misinformation that has so far been used to derail Barack Obama's
campaign — all in one handy illustration. Anyone who's tried
to
paint Obama as a Muslim, anyone who's tried to portray Michelle as
angry or a secret revolutionary out to get Whitey, anyone who has
questioned their patriotism— well, here's your image.
Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton called it "tasteless and
offensive" and, according to Jake Tapper at ABC, another high-profile
Obama supporter called it "as offensive a caricature as any magazine
could publish."
The companion article by Ryan Lizza, who has written extensively about
the campaign, traces Obama's early career and rise through Chicago
politics. It's very long (18 pages!) and probably won't thrill a lot of
Democratic party faithful, either, since it advances the image of Obama
as a skilled and calculating politician who rose by becoming a master
of the game:
"[P]erhaps the greatest misconception
about Barack
Obama is that he is some sort of anti-establishment revolutionary.
Rather, every stage of his political career has been marked by an
eagerness to accommodate himself to existing institutions rather than
tear them down or replace them....he has always played politics by the
rules as they exist, not as he would like them to exist. He runs as an
outsider, but he has succeeded by mastering the inside game."
Is it the New Yorker's job to write uniformly flattering profiles of
Obama? Do they have a duty to avoid controversial imagery that plays
off the most dogged and damaging campaign smears? Of course not. Still,
as Tapper says, there are probably "some angry, angry people in Chicago
right now." Not to mention Washington, New York, and maybe even Dubuque.
Update: Artist Barry Blitt defends
the cover,
saying that "It seemed to me that depicting the concept would show it
as the fear-mongering ridiculousness that it is." See his full
statement (and previous covers) here.
Update II: New Yorker editor David Remnick responds in
our exclusive interview, calling the cover "satire" targeting
not Obama, but the "absurdity" of the rumors flying about him.
See the full cover below:

Source: Huffington Post
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