The Nobel gamble
At 14-to-1, President Obama and former President Clinton received equal odds by an online bookmaker to win the Nobel Peace Prize. How could a president who was nominated for the Nobel just 12 days after entering office share equal status with a two-term ex-president with a lengthy foreign policy resume? My bet: worldview.
When the International Olympic Committee rejected Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Olympics, I argued here that the IOC must have recognized that their decision would appear to some observers as a rejection, in part, of President Obama’s progressive/globalist worldview. This idea must have seemed silly to some readers. Yet, when the president won the Nobel Friday, left-leaning writers acknowledged that the prize is a means of bolstering Obama and his view of the world.
“The award is a useful affirmation to Obama’s faith in internationalism on issues like global warming and nuclear disarmament,” wrote Michael Crowley in The New Republic. The Huffington Post ran an article stating, “That’s what the Nobel Committee is trying to do for Obama now. It’s giving an award to encourage the change in world relations that Obama has promised, and to try to help shield Obama against his domestic adversaries.” The Washington Post said that President Obama’s Nobel Prize “seems so goofy,” yet their writer recognized significance in the award.
As citizens going about our daily lives, we need to understand that those who seek to shape culture are driven by their worldview. In his book, Ideas Have Consequences, Richard Weaver wrote, “Those who have not discovered that world view is the most important thing about a man, as about the men composing a culture, should consider the train of circumstances which have with perfect logic proceeded from this” (e.g., 100 million killed by atheist communists in the 20th century). Just as the Nobel committee gambled in selecting Obama based on his short résumé, we gamble when we ignore “the most important thing about a man.”
How can we begin to understand our own worldview and those of leading intellectuals? Weaver said, “The issue ultimately involved is whether there is a source of truth higher than, and independent of man.”
Are there God-shaped truths? Is man the measure of all things, perfectible or sinful? If there is a God or gods, what is man’s relationship with deity? Accordingly, how should human relationships function? What are the best forms of government, education, economics, art, and music to dignify individuals and, in turn, shape culture? Finding the answers to these challenging questions begins by asking, “Who is God and who is man?”
So, why was President Obama chosen for the Nobel Peace Prize? As the liberal writers above acknowledge, the Nobel committee sought to affirm President Obama’s worldview (secular/progressive/global).
Weaver notes ironically that the story of the West’s drift over the past 400 years from a religious worldview (he implies a Judeo-Christian worldview) to a predominantly secular worldview is told “as a story of progress.” Weaver was rightly concerned that “it is extremely difficult today to get people in any number to see contrary implications.”
For example, three days after he took office, and nine days before he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, President Obama made a significant foreign policy decision. He lifted the ban on providing funding for U.S. non-governmental organizations that provide foreign abortion services. What kind of “progress” and “peace” is this? Worldview is indeed the most important thing about a man, and we shouldn’t gamble with it.














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back to top17 Comments to “The Nobel gamble”
That’s it, Lee. While I think that worldview was less of a factor in the 2016 Olympics decision (bigger ones being the relationships of certain IOC members to certain nations, and the fact that S. America had never had the Games), it was certainly the most important factor in the Nobel decision.
Worldview is also the main reason why the USA is so polarized.
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Still at this ytopic??
I am impressed.
Well it is worht noting that his action on abortions was not one of the justifications for the award, so I suggest that htis is a red herring.
I have published in an earlier thread the:
1) Nobel statement for intent of the Peace Prize
2) the justification given for this peace prize
3) Obama’s accomplishments
No one has serioyusly addressed this in a strcutred fashion, which I suggest implies that this is stil basicaly an emotional response.
P.S. but a fifth thread??
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tychicus post,
I thnk you are doing a good job of refining the argument down nicely: amusingly there is agreement on what Obama has arguably done; there is disagreement on what it means.
And in the main liberals and the Nobel committee seem to be better aligned on this question of what it means than the conservatvies and the Nobel committee.
And in the last analysis, it is the Nobel’s committee’s award.
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Obama deserved three nobel prizes for his accomplishments.
1. By running and winning the election, Obama validated the idea of democracy in a country in which a white man was elected 54 times in a row. Obama deserves one prize for his service to democracy.
2. By achieving leadership on the world stage, Obama actualized the dream of racial equality for billions of people. Obama deserves a second prize for his service to civil rights.
3. By renouncing militant belligerence, torture, and executive detention, Obama created a climate of negotiation and mutual cooperation. Obama deserves a third prize for his service to internationalism.
Critics have erred in failing to see the magnitude of these achievements. A prophet is without honor in his own country. It’s partly Obama’s fault. Instead of calling attention to his distinctiveness, he has camouflaged the changes he is bringing by highlighting those aspects of the American cultural environment that are friendly to his project. Then the Nobel Prize comes along and delivers a stinging rebuke to the political ethos of right-wing American Evangelicalism. Ouch.
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Scroop Moth, that’s at least your second post in which you basically say, “He deserved it because he’s black.” Honestly, that’s as silly as saying he deserved the presidency because of his skin color and cultural heritage. MLK should, I think, be rolling over in his grave. What ever happened to judging people for other things than skin color?
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Cheryl – Did Helen Keller have a play written about her life and win the Presidential Medal of Freedom because she was blind? Neither was Obama elected because he’s black. We honor Helen Keller for her advocacy for the blind. But we honor her just as much for her advocacy for all of us. We remember her for her radical socialism, for founding the ACLU, for voting rights, birth control, and pacifism. We remember her friendship with Mark Twain and other great personages like Charlie Chaplin and Alexander Graham Bell.
Lots of blind people now graduate from college, and lots of blacks will be elected president. Helen Keller and Barrack Obama were the first of each. Because of them, our next president may be a blind native american woman. Sorry, I’m supposed to say sight-impaired, but I was talking about Helen Keller.
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A fifth thread?
Well, once in a while you need to have a variation from bashing liberals, stopping abortionists, and keeping homosexuals from getting married all day long. One or two or three types of fanatical close-mindedness makes Jack a dull boy.
Of course, there’s also denying evolution. Shouldn’t forget the classics while you are at it.
I told Barak that the Nobel was a trap. He should have turned it down before it was offered. Did he listen to me? No…
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There are many who voted for O because he was black. O seems like a nice guy and promises lots of stuff–so why not. Reparations.
Republicans tried to get a black nominee. Our family voted for a black Republican. (Like the Dems were the only ones to find someone black to run for Pres.?)
There are plenty of black people who would have made a more qualified president. So I don’t know why the Dems think that we just don’t like O because he is black. There are plenty of black folks who did NOT vote for O (abortion is a major reason).
Re the PEACE? prize. It’s just a worldly prize. At this point, and seeing who has received the prize, I would not want to be in that company of so called “winners.”
I hope someone with integrity in the near future turns it down, but I doubt they will vote for anyone with integrity.
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Re the PEACE? prize. It’s just a worldly prize.
They are all worldly prizes. The prizes that many people think come in Heaven are probably IMAGINARY prizes.
Some of us can tell the difference.
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Next, 0bama will probably get an Oscar for the autobiographical film he’s going to make, unlike Gore who got it for science fiction.
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I think a better wording would be:
“…the West’s drift over the past 400 years from a religious worldview … to a predominantly secular worldview is sold ‘as a story of progress.’”
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Breaking News:
I just saw in CNN (Lou Dobbs) that Obama watched a football game yesterday and was awarded a Heisman Trophy.
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CHAS: tsk, tsk
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#10 and #12
I admit my jokes are pretty dumb, but at least I write them myself. Well, come right down to it, Joseph Smith and L.Ron Hubbard wrote their own religions, your guys are still repeating the same life after death cliches about a man born from a virgin and rising from the death thousands of years later. Difference between a myth with legs and myths still crawling on their hands and knees.
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12 — that is funny.
Interesting side note, some commentators note that the Peace Prize puts the kabosh on any US support for an Israeli strike against Iran. Hadn’t heard that before.
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Scroop,
if thats the case, the Nobel should be given to the 50% plus of Americans who voted for him, considering it is THEY that did something about it, rather than really anything Obama did. America has validated the idea of democracy…
And if democracy is so validated, then why the need for any fundamental change?
Your comparison of hellen keller would work if Obama had done anything other than organize a community. As you even admit he hasnt championed his racial incentives.
By the way, I’m not sure how sending another 15,000 troops is “peaceful”…
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