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If the President's BlackBerry Goes Missing
Jae C. Hong/AP
As we plunge into the fiscal abyss, we must focus on the important things—like Oval Office product placement.
Somewhere—heaven, surely—Charlton Heston, former spokesman for the National Rifle Association, is doing 360s.
“I’m still clinging to my BlackBerry,” President-elect Obama has announced. “They’re going to have to pry it out of my hands.”
I wish he’d given it the full NRA mojo and added, “out of my cold, dead fingers,” but that’s his style. Our new president is a calmer, not an exciter. But this business of not letting our leaders go on communicating with the world beyond the Oval Office is problematic. Terrible, in fact.
You’ll recall that our outgoing president—whose name shall not be mentioned—was compelled to give up private email shortly after he took office, on various grounds: his emails might be intercepted, or used against him in a court of law, etc.
The only thing standing between us and Armageddon is—a red BlackBerry.
Doubtless, those gas-pipeline-cutting dastards, the Russians, have an entire division of the FSB (trans: KGB) devoted to compromising the personal communications of U.S. presidents. Doubtless, too, there are entire buildings in Nigeria staffed with people sending messages to our presidents informing them that they have just inherited $62 MILLION DOLLARS U.S. from their great-great-second-uncle Mr. Umbaku Kakabele.
If you thought that the BlackBerry story might prompt serious reflection on the merits of allowing a president to keep an open line to outside people on whom he relies, fuggedit, and file it away under Is This A Great Country Or What?
No, the follow-up story in The Times was on another theme: how much Mr. Obama’s implicit endorsement of his BlackBerry would be worth.
“More than $25 million, marketing experts say, and maybe as much as $50 million.”
It’s good that, as we plunge into the fiscal abyss—I refer to the impending $1.2 trillion deficit—that we’re focused on the important things, like Oval Office product placement. The Times story concludes with a wet dream BlackBerry ad campaign, as visualized by a modern-day Mad Man:
“In the foreground, you have the [Oval Office] desk, but instead of having the proverbial red phone, you have a red BlackBerry.” With the tagline: “Shot Caller.”







citivas
Funny. I think its great that he's being so public about his crackberry addition. I hope he wins, at least a comprmise, and keeps the thing for non national security communications. On a related note, has anyone noticed that Blackberry seems to be on the verge of becoming what Xerox is to copy machines or Kleenex is to tissues? I see people refer to all kinds of PDA phones as Blackberries even when they aren't Not sure if that's good news or bad for the Canadians...
Talyssa
I feel very confident that blackberry would be thrilled to set up a super secure Mr. President only email server for the presidential smartphone. I know in theory anything can be hacked, but RIM runs a pretty technologically tight ship I'm told. Might be okay.
And you know, he can probably get around that whole might be subpeona'd thing by not...doing anything illegal? Is that totally impossible for an elected official? I guess at least the fact that he WANTS to keep his blackberry means he doesn't *intend* to do anything illegal (at least, nothing that's captured by his phone).
This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.
Candice4053
Let the man keep his blackberry just so Sasha and Malia can call him. And he can get sports scores. And maybe get first alerts on sales and stuff. And (this is big) remain connected with reality.
Gee, did we tell presidents that they couldn't ride around in horseless carrigages in the early 1900's? Do they still use gas lamps in the White House? No, when technology changes and improves, everybody gets to use it. President or not.
PeacefulJeff
Buckley beat me to it. I found a picture on the internet of a pair of hands that looked mixed race (according to an African-American friend who's kids are mixed race) holding a Blackberry. I pasted it into a PowerPoint slide with NRA motto below. But I can't upload files to The Daily Beast. Too bad!
finderj
I think that there are security issues here that must be addressed, but good grief! Are they telling us that they can't keep President obama's communications secure? Give me a break! isolating the president behind the yes-men and the political/bureaucratic lifers is not a good idea. Haven't we learned anything?
And Blackberry is not a racist term. It is a berry that really is nearly black, and fairly common in large potrions of the world. It wasn't chosen for racist connotations, but for connotations of taste, like taste buds. It was named, oh, I dunno, maybe hundreds and hundreds of years ago? Some people just hunt for boogies behind every tree.
ScottRose
To be extra sure that Charlton Heston doesn't advocate gun barbarity any more, could we shoot into his grave? Never mind, for a moment, Obama and his Blackberry. Can something be done to subpoena the e-mails and phone messages of Hiram Monserrate to Karla? Get some expert witness testimony going before a grand jury, to see if his messages and the patterns they reveal are characteristic of a domestic violence abuser? Oh off topic, off topic. A glorious new era of American government is dawning, now that we have liberated ourselves from the Republican joke, I mean yoke; and Democrats in the New York State Assembly won't speak out against Monserrate, for fear of losing their majority. Still, it IS funny that they took away Bush's private e-mail to prevent hacking, yet he turned out to be the greatest hack president in history.
(Message sent from my BLACKBERRY. not that I'm trying to show off having one).
needcaffeine
The blackberry is a super secure device already, it's used by the military, congress, fire & police departments around the world; let alone corporations.
There is 3 layers of security, that not even RIM is able to decode messages transferring on it's network. Plus if a Blackberry is on a BES (Blackberry Enterprise Server) you can lock down the device quite tightly. Such as: if the password is incorrectly entered N times it will wipe the device. If you enter the password but with the first character as the last, it will send a notice that you are in trouble & alert the administrator. Also if the device is lost, and it's still seen on a carriers network, you can send a wipe command to it.
Plus you can use smartcards w/ passwords if you want as well. It's a lot more secure then most people know...which is why I was so baffled when Bush's aid lost his in Japan or some such.
magicman
Whattt ??? Number #6 six again??? How does this happen?
magicman
I think I better cut down on the Devil Worshipping at Church. What do you think Buckley?
magicman
The PE's George Mason Speech was pretty perfect I thought.
jaycurrie
Nice to see the big "O" using a fine Canadian product.
Buckley is dead right in the sense that the American President should not be isolated. You don't need a Constitutional Amendment, you just need a law stating that what the President texts can't be used in a Court.
Southpaw
Bush can work the email?
waltben
The G has had secure versions of the BlackBerry for some time, so that's not an issue. Remember the big scare a year or so back when everyone was going to loose service over a law suit? Had DC all in an uproar.
Bigger issue might be how long his thumbs last. I couldn't use one now if I wanted due to arthritis, and he's in his late forties.
Northview
"So when he goes to send the critical message to the Kremlin telling Putin to kiss his black ass, the text message goes to the English teacher at Sidwell Friends School. You with me?"
Buckley, I will be laughing over this piece all day long. Thank you. You make this site worth visiting.
Thank you.
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