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The Obamas failed to offer real hope

Former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson once said that “those who travel the high road of humility will not be troubled by heavy traffic.”

That descriptive and funny line came to mind after I heard what first lady Michelle Obama told Oprah Winfrey last week in a TV interview. Because of Donald Trump’s election, Obama said, “We are feeling what not having hope feels like.”

She couldn’t prove that by the polls. A recent Quinnipiac University poll found that 59 percent of voters are “optimistic about the next four years with Donald Trump as president.” Sixty-six percent of respondents said they believed he would create jobs; 52 percent said they believe Trump’s policies will help the economy; 53 percent expressed confidence he will take the country in the right direction; and 49 percent think Trump will be either a “great” president or a “good” president.

Obama’s hubris that only her husband could provide hope, despite the unpopularity of his policies (his personal popularity remains high), may be why St. Paul cautioned: “Do not think more highly of yourself than you ought” (Romans 12:3).

Anyone who puts faith in a politician to make his or her life better is worshiping a false god. Politicians can make your life worse by overtaxing your income, over-regulating your business and conducting foreign policy in ways that put America’s security at risk. But the qualities that improve any life – a good education, strong work ethic, self-control, taking personal responsibility for one’s actions, obeying the law, developing good character – are virtues over which government has little influence.

People hope for many things. Some people hope to win the lottery; others choose to hope in someone, or something, that can actually deliver. Hoping to win the lottery, or hoping a politician can improve your life, is a vain hope that can lead to disappointment, even cynicism.

A friend of mine once observed that humility is so light a grace that once you think you have attained it, you’ve lost it. Humility is the polar opposite of what Obama displayed to Oprah and what the president has mirrored during his eight years in office. Throughout his presidency, you might have thought the pronoun “I” was his first initial for all the times he referred to himself.

The Obamas could have offered real hope, especially in the hearts of African-American children, by leading the poor among them out of failing inner-city schools and giving their parents a choice of where to send them for a better education, which would have led to a better life. They rightly sent their daughters to elite private schools, rather than bad D.C. public schools, but denied that choice to those less affluent, thus perpetuating a spirit of hopelessness in those voters who had hoped for something beyond a “let’s move” exercise program and a vegetable garden on the White House lawn.

Cal Thomas, a columnist with Tribune Content Agency, appears in Opinion on Wednesdays.

This story was originally published December 21, 2016 at 5:03 AM with the headline "The Obamas failed to offer real hope."

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