NEW DELHI — When former President Barack Obama spoke to a leadership forum in India’s capital on Dec 1, he never once used the words “Donald Trump” and was careful to avoid any direct reference to his successor in the White House.Yet Obama made plenty of veiled references, from climate change to the perils of using Twitter. The responses often drew laughter from the audience at the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit,
which was part of a three-country tour Obama is undertaking in one of his first global outings as a private citizen after leaving office.
Here’s what Obama had to say:
SOCIAL MEDIA
Obama said he uses spellcheck and punctuation. “Which my daughters think is odd. They were explaining to us how if you put a period at the end of a sentence it sounds harsh. I said, ‘No, that’s English. That’s how you know the thought is finished.’” He said he sees people getting in trouble for their tweets, and says they should follow the old advice of thinking before you speak: “Think before you tweet,” Obama said. “Same principle.”
He said social media is a powerful tool, for both good and ill. “And look, I’ve got 100 million Twitter followers. I actually have more than other people who use it more often.” (For the record, Obama has 97 million Twitter followers and Trump has 44 million).
CLIMATE CHANGE
Obama said he could have a debate about climate change with people who said fossil fuels were necessary for growth in poorer nations like India or people who said humans should adapt. But he said he couldn’t debate with people who claimed it wasn’t real.
“If you’re saying it’s a hoax, then there’s no way for us to bridge our differences in a constructive way,” Obama said.
Trump has previously called climate change a hoax.
Obama praised India for helping forge the Paris climate agreement, which he signed last year but which Trump said he planned to withdraw from. “It’s an agreement, even though we have a little bit of a pause in American leadership, that is giving our children a fighting chance,” Obama said.
LEADERSHIP
Obama said politicians usually reflect public opinion.
“And so if you see a politician doing things that are questionable, one of the things as a citizen is to ask yourself ‘Am I encouraging, or supporting or giving license to the values I’m hearing out of the politician?’” Obama said. “Because frankly, politicians tend to be more of a mirror and more of a reflection of forces in the society.”
OSAMA BIN LADEN
Obama was asked if Pakistan was hiding Osama bin Laden or was unaware of his presence and therefore incompetent ahead of the U.S. raid in May 2011 that killed the al-Qaida leader at his compound.
“We had no evidence that the Pakistan government was aware of bin Laden’s presence there,” Obama said. “That is something, obviously, that we looked at. I will leave it to you to characterize beyond what I just said.”
DUCK OR TRUMP?
Obama was asked who reflected the real America, Donald Duck or Donald Trump?
Obama didn’t answer directly. He said Americans could often be kind and noble, and at other times cruel and shortsighted.
“It is just this cacophony of life. And it throws up all kinds of variety,” he said. “And there are political trends in America that I don’t agree with or abide by, but I recognize as part of a running thread in American life.”
He said he took heart from the fact that the trend lines of America and the world were heading in the right direction when it came to inclusion, health, education, equality and kindness.
He said that despite the bad news people hear every day, that when it came to having a good life, right now was the best moment to be born in all of human history.
Manmohan Singh
A lot was written about his friendship with PM Narendra Modi.
Obama paused a beat, and then reminded the audience that he was “also great friends” with another Prime Minister India had not so long ago. “I like him (Modi)...I think he has a vision for the country...he is making efforts to modernise some elements of bureaucracy. But I was also great friends with Dr. (Manmohan) Singh,” said Obama.
The 44th US President then talked about how former PM Singh, a Cambridge-trained economist, was a great support in the aftermath of the 2009 financial crisis.
On the sidelines of another G20 summit, Obama had called Singh “a wise and wonderful man”. He also praised PM Modi. He said the PM was a big driver of the Paris Climate Agreement of December 2015.
Chapatis
Obama was asked if he was surprised that he’s turned out to be a good cook, since demitting office.
“Yes, yes,” said Obama, agreeing that he’s become a good cook.
“But I can’t make chapatis. Too difficult. Hard to get it all right and flaky,” said Obama.
He also had something interesting things to say about the humble ‘daal’. Obama recounted that, the wait staff who was serving him ‘daal’ began to explain the dish and its recipe to him. The former US President told him then that he need not explain what ‘daal’ is, because he knew how to make it and had his own recipe he got a long time ago from an Indian roommate when he was a student.He then deadpanned that he was probably the first US President to have a recipe for the dish. He is good though, he said, with some other dishes as well. “My keema is also good, and my chicken is OK,” he said, to the audience’s delight.
Here’s what Obama had to say:
SOCIAL MEDIA
Obama said he uses spellcheck and punctuation. “Which my daughters think is odd. They were explaining to us how if you put a period at the end of a sentence it sounds harsh. I said, ‘No, that’s English. That’s how you know the thought is finished.’” He said he sees people getting in trouble for their tweets, and says they should follow the old advice of thinking before you speak: “Think before you tweet,” Obama said. “Same principle.”
He said social media is a powerful tool, for both good and ill. “And look, I’ve got 100 million Twitter followers. I actually have more than other people who use it more often.” (For the record, Obama has 97 million Twitter followers and Trump has 44 million).
CLIMATE CHANGE
Obama said he could have a debate about climate change with people who said fossil fuels were necessary for growth in poorer nations like India or people who said humans should adapt. But he said he couldn’t debate with people who claimed it wasn’t real.
“If you’re saying it’s a hoax, then there’s no way for us to bridge our differences in a constructive way,” Obama said.
Trump has previously called climate change a hoax.
Obama praised India for helping forge the Paris climate agreement, which he signed last year but which Trump said he planned to withdraw from. “It’s an agreement, even though we have a little bit of a pause in American leadership, that is giving our children a fighting chance,” Obama said.
LEADERSHIP
Obama said politicians usually reflect public opinion.
“And so if you see a politician doing things that are questionable, one of the things as a citizen is to ask yourself ‘Am I encouraging, or supporting or giving license to the values I’m hearing out of the politician?’” Obama said. “Because frankly, politicians tend to be more of a mirror and more of a reflection of forces in the society.”
OSAMA BIN LADEN
Obama was asked if Pakistan was hiding Osama bin Laden or was unaware of his presence and therefore incompetent ahead of the U.S. raid in May 2011 that killed the al-Qaida leader at his compound.
“We had no evidence that the Pakistan government was aware of bin Laden’s presence there,” Obama said. “That is something, obviously, that we looked at. I will leave it to you to characterize beyond what I just said.”
DUCK OR TRUMP?
Obama was asked who reflected the real America, Donald Duck or Donald Trump?
Obama didn’t answer directly. He said Americans could often be kind and noble, and at other times cruel and shortsighted.
“It is just this cacophony of life. And it throws up all kinds of variety,” he said. “And there are political trends in America that I don’t agree with or abide by, but I recognize as part of a running thread in American life.”
He said he took heart from the fact that the trend lines of America and the world were heading in the right direction when it came to inclusion, health, education, equality and kindness.
He said that despite the bad news people hear every day, that when it came to having a good life, right now was the best moment to be born in all of human history.
Manmohan Singh
A lot was written about his friendship with PM Narendra Modi.
Obama paused a beat, and then reminded the audience that he was “also great friends” with another Prime Minister India had not so long ago. “I like him (Modi)...I think he has a vision for the country...he is making efforts to modernise some elements of bureaucracy. But I was also great friends with Dr. (Manmohan) Singh,” said Obama.
The 44th US President then talked about how former PM Singh, a Cambridge-trained economist, was a great support in the aftermath of the 2009 financial crisis.
On the sidelines of another G20 summit, Obama had called Singh “a wise and wonderful man”. He also praised PM Modi. He said the PM was a big driver of the Paris Climate Agreement of December 2015.
Chapatis
Obama was asked if he was surprised that he’s turned out to be a good cook, since demitting office.
“Yes, yes,” said Obama, agreeing that he’s become a good cook.
“But I can’t make chapatis. Too difficult. Hard to get it all right and flaky,” said Obama.
He also had something interesting things to say about the humble ‘daal’. Obama recounted that, the wait staff who was serving him ‘daal’ began to explain the dish and its recipe to him. The former US President told him then that he need not explain what ‘daal’ is, because he knew how to make it and had his own recipe he got a long time ago from an Indian roommate when he was a student.He then deadpanned that he was probably the first US President to have a recipe for the dish. He is good though, he said, with some other dishes as well. “My keema is also good, and my chicken is OK,” he said, to the audience’s delight.