Fernando Mexia, the pen.
Obama is everywhere, omnipresent like a god. Maybe that's why 10 percent of Americans believe that the current White House occupant is the antichrist , only 8
percent think the same of George W. Bush. The truth is that Barack, almost a year after the election that gave the presidency, still undo the backpack and multiplies the apparitions campaign to defend public causes in person.
In March, toured the U.S. national television to explain over and over billionaire bailout plan against the crisis, the first Obamathon (telethon Obama, Time magazine), followed by another massive assault on the small screen in September , this time to try to win support in order to push forward its reform of the health system.
A few appearances he combines with his forced visits to national and international forums that are based on the confidence of the president in his speech, the same power he clinched wrapped by a clever use of multimedia and in 2008 unleashed the Obamania or unconditional redneck in favor of Democrats.
Far from overexposure to the cameras, surveys show that the U.S. leader has yet to credit to continue using his image, his sense of humor and smile to convince her of what it takes. The 54 percent of Americans say they receive the required dose of Obama, according to a survey published in September by NBC and Wall Street Journal, while 34 percent said being sick and tired of seeing him everywhere and a 9 percent insists that he wants Obama more on the menu.
The question is whether the repeated U.S. president's speech in the media is loaded with pragmatism or if his words were blown away.
It seems that Obama is trying to win in the "street" is losing the battle in Congress, where even some Democrats have begun to question their actions, in particular on health care reform.
The Obamania, still in force, it loses steam. Increasingly frequent outbreaks Obamanitis, or overdose that embodies the will to change that Barack, who now looks less interesting it in the eyes of the international community (as Los Angeles Times, The End of Obamania ).
A "syndrome" that affects, in addition to the political class citizens who were not absorbed by the oil last year, Obama even voted for him.
In early September, a survey from Opinion Research Corporation for CNN said that for the first time since his arrival in the White House, listed as independent voters of Obama suspended.
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