White House leans again to the left(ies)

Posted on Wednesday, January 21, 2009 7:00 PM PT
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By Diane Mapes

With the inauguration of President Barack Obama, the left has taken over the White House yet again – just as it did with Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.

 Confused? Don’t be. We’re talking hands, not political ideology.

“I’m a lefty. Get used to it,” Obama said as he signed his first official documents on Tuesday, making him the sixth southpaw-in-chief we’ve seen since the end of World War II.

Image: StateBarack Obama Is sworn In as 44th President Of The United s
Molly Riley / Getty Images file

Interestingly, his opponent, John McCain, is also left-handed, as were former presidents Harry Truman and Bill Clinton, former vice presidents Nelson Rockefeller and Henry Wallace and 1992 presidential candidate Ross Perot.

Why so many lefties in or near the White House?

“Nobody knows,” says Dr. Daniel Geschwind, professor of neurology, psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “From a statistical standpoint, it looks like something’s going on, but what it is, we don’t know.”

While the presidential southpaw connection remains a mystery (at least for now), researchers have discovered many other interesting tidbits about lefties in the last few decades. Left-handedness, for instance, occurs in approximately one in 10 individuals, with slightly more men than women preferring their left hand over their right.

Leaning left also runs in the family (again, we’re talking hands, not politics), with the odds of two left-handed parents having a left-handed child weighing in at a hefty 26 percent. That percentage drops to 19.5 for a “mixed” lefty-righty marriage and just 9.5 percent for two righties.

Lefties have an upper hand when it comes to combat, according to a study from the University of Montpellier in France, which cites fencing, tennis and baseball as other areas of advantage. It’s also a boon for pianists, some say, with the proportion of left-handed pianists on par with that of southpaw presidents.

The concert hall, baseball diamond and Oval Office aren’t the only places lefties excel, though. There are so many artists and entertainers on the lefty list – David Bowie, Enrico Caruso, Charlie Chaplin, Leonardo Da Vinci, M.C. Escher, Greta Garbo, Judy Garland, Cary Grant, Matt Groening, Jimi Hendrix, Franz Kafka, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Shirley MacLaine, Paul McCartney, Marilyn Monroe, Wolfgang Mozart, Mark Twain, H.G. Wells and Sting to name a few – that many have come to believe creativity goes hand in hand with sinistrality, i.e. left-handedness.

“Studies have been done that indicate left-handedness is increased in artists and musicians,” says Geschwind, adding that MIT professors are also more likely to lean to the left.

 “Generally speaking, left-handers have more of a symmetrically distributed brain and right-handers are more asymmetric,” he says. “For right-handers, language is on the left side, for left-handers it’s more likely to be on both sides, or on the right side. The thought is that this has given rise to a different way of thinking, a different cognitive style. Maybe this difference provides lefties with a social advantage.”

Sadly, the lefty style has not always been as accepted – or understood.

During the first part of the 20th century, people commonly viewed left-handedness as some kind of disability, associated with stuttering, feeblemindedness, delinquence – even a criminal career. Teachers and parents routinely forced left-handed kids to write with their right (aka their “wrong” hand), which some psychologists believe could have compromised the brain’s language functions and disrupted both memory and concentration.

Although the practice has since gone the way of radium baths and asthmatic cigarettes – also popular during that era – the left is still commonly vilified throughout our language. Bad dancers have two left feet, oddball ideas come straight out of left field and unflattering or left-handed compliments are seldom something you’d hear from your good old reliable right-hand man.

This ages-old bad rap – even the Bible decries the left – may be one reason lefties have joined hands in recent years to declare their own holiday, International Left Handers Day (celebrated Aug. 13), and created a number of Web sites, institutes and societies such as Anythingleft-handed.co.uk, Handedness.org, and LeftiesforObama.com.

As for our new president, he joins a slew of celebrated lefty leaders, movers and shakers including Alexander the Great, Napoleon Bonaparte, Julius Caesar, Charlemagne, Henry Ford, Helen Keller and Mahatma Gandhi, prompting at least one right-handed researcher to wonder whether there may just be a left-hand path to greatness.

“It is an interesting question as to why left-handedness has stayed around,” says Geschwind. “If it didn’t give us some advantage, it would have been wiped out. But it’s been around for as long as recorded time. You see it even in cave drawings.  It might be interesting to develop a scale that looked at social cognition and leadership abilities and then look at handedness to see if lefties are better at social tasks.”


Comments

I am a leftie, my husband is a rightie.  Our daughter is a rightie, but our identical twins are split--one's a leftie, one's a rightie.  Interesting!  I was beginning to feel a bit outnumbered til they were born....
I also noticed that President Obama writes as I do, with his hand (left) above the line being written. As to why I do that, I attributed it to the fact that my teachers in grade school attempted to get me to write 'right' handed but when they were not watching, I switched to my left hand causing the paper to be turned wrong from my left hand, thus, my hand is above the line. Since President Obama is of a generation that does not attempt to make people write 'right' handed, I'm sure this not the reason he writes with his left hand above the line being written.
"Out of left field" refers to a place you wouldn't have wanted to be when Babe Ruth was playing, because he was in right field.  It has nothing to do with handedness.
We needed a new pair of scissors at home.  I found a pair of left-handed ones and bought them.  I told my wife that I hope she is as good at using them as I have been using her right-handed scissors!
Being left-handed, I find it interesting that the term for left-handedness, sinistrality, has the same root as sinister, perhaps there were too many righties coming up with such a term.  And why is it if you can't dance, or are uncoordinated, it is said that you have two left feet?  When I turn that around to say two right feet, meaning the same thing, most people have
no idea what I'm talking about.  Having two left feet to me would seem like a good thing.
Isn't Bill Clinton left handed?
Both of my parents where right handed. My father was one of those people who thought I should be right handed and tried to change me. That is until I started to say, "My name, My name, My name" when asked who I was. My mother put a stop to the attempt to change me from left to right handed. The world is still slanted toward right handers, and every so often I find another thing that makes being left-handed more difficult. i.e. the way necklaces are strung, can openers, railings on stairs, and the like.
I use both hands to write with and do house work with my lift more then my right. Both my Sons do both hands also.My Sons are 35yrs and 38yrs.Nothing wrong with us.
...and don't forget Ned Flander's Leftorium
For years, I've been saying that I'm ambisinistrous, because lefties are not right, they're better!
As a left-hander, I was so excited when my second child indicated that he too was going to be left handed. I noticed in law school that in a small class of 20 students, HALF were left-handed. Maybe that's why lefties get a bad rap - so many of them are lawyers! Which is probably why so many presidents are left handed.
I can use both hands except for writing, never practiced.I think to develop both side of your brain
by using both ends on various task makes for a larger brain web of neurons connections, in turn that help cognitive,strategic and spatial abilities that helps the being to have wider perspective of the world and is able to synthesize at a higher speed and accuracy.
everyone is born right handed. only the GREAT ones overcome it!!!  :o)
Very interesting. So where does that leave us ambidextrous ones? I grew up writing mostly with my right hand, but can almost as easily write with my left. I do so much with my left that many people assume I am a soutpaw. Turns out when I was little my parents and teachers forced me to write with my right hand. Actually I have found it to be very useful-especially when cutting in while painting a room. It makes the job alot easier!
My ex-hubby and I (both left handed) had 2 children together....One left handed, one right handed.  

I'm sure that stats are a national average, not a family average.

For the person wondering about Bill Clinton, read the article again...you missed something.
I don t approve of your banner, White House leans to the left, such a minor thing at a historic time. I am a liflong died in the wool Republican and  I greatly like what President Obama has done so far.
life republiccan california (Thursday, January 22, 2009 11:19 AM)
_________________________________________________He hasn't done anything yet, of what do you speak of "life republican"(which I high doubt)
I too am proud to be a lefty.  I think we are very special, and now I'm sure with Prez. Obama in Office.
my sister is left handed and her twin brother is right handed and the rest of the siblings are right handed.
Ronald Reagan was right-handed.
I, too, am left-handed - and I love it!  Interestingly, though, I iron, bat, shoot (I am in law enforcement), and use my computer mouse with my right hand.  To try to write or eat right-handed doesn't work, though.  I remember my second grade teacher actually letting me write on the back of spiral notebook pages, because the spiral hurt my hand and made writing awkward.  I loved her for it and have never forgotten her (I'm now 47, so that was quite a few years ago).  Just one generation ahead of me, though, my uncle was forced to learn everything right-handed.
I've been wondering if my 2-1/2yo will be left handed since he started eating with his left hand at 9 months old. Now, he kicks a ball, colors and draws and continues to eat with the left. Very little doubt now that he's left handed.

He also has above average language skills and is displaying some early aptitude for sports...hmmm, makes me wonder.
I always thought that lefties were smarter.  In the days of Phareses who were the only ones who could right - they developed languages that wrote from left to right; i.e Hebrew, Aramaic.  When the masses learned to write, the written word switched the other way.  Makes you wonder!!

My father was left handed and was of the era that made their chilkdren write w/ their right hand.  Although, he did everything else left handed.  The only descendent that is left handed is one grand-daughter out of 4 grandchildren.
We had mixed parents (rightie Dad and leftie Mom) who produced nine kids, 5 of whom are left-handed. My husband is also left-handed but our two kids are righties, though we did think our son might turn out ambidextrous. I had a left-handed college roommate, obstetrician, and numerous acquaintances. For us, left is the norm.
My wife and I are both left handed and all 4 of our children are also, what are the odds of that?
Good article, but I didn't care for the statement about lefties "preferring" their left hand, as though it is a "lifestyle choice". It isn't, its orientation.
BTW, while my father is right-handed, my mother, brother and I are left-handed, and I like the distinction of having a trait that sets me apart from most people.
I joke with righties that lefties belong to a higher class of people!
2 sons, one fully left-handed, one left-handed for writing and eating only, 2 different fathers. No lefties that I can find in my family and none in their fathers' families. This subject fascinates me.
Gee whiz, folks; it's six of one, half-dozen of the other. Either, or. No mystery.
My daughters and I are righties; my son and his father are lefties. We're all functional, creative, smart and talented people.
Where's the story, here?
my next wife will probably be a lefty.
Everyone in my family is right-handed....parents, grandparents, siblings....except me. Proud to be a Lefty!
My husband and I are both left-handed and come from multi-lefty families.  Both of our children are righties, to our surprise.  Maybe all of our grandchildren will be lefties.  We can be the ones to teach them how to tie their shoes!
I went to MIT as an undergrad -- 10 of us were sitting around a table eating lunch and we decided to see who was left-handed.  9 of us were.
I am left handed, my twin sister is left handed, our husbands are left handed, our oldest children are both right handed and our youngest children are both left handed.  Go figure!!!
Our 13 year old daughter is a lefty. My husband and I are both right handed and no one as far back in our family tree as we can go has ever been a lefty. She started showing signs shortly after she was born.
I have an interesting if un-scientific observation...I know or have known a number of dyslexic folks....all of them were lefties is there a correlation?
My husband and I are both righties and we have one son, a lefty.  Yet I hang my clothes and use my computer mouse the same as a lefty?  What gives?
I'm feeling pretty special after reading that article.  My parents are both righties and of 3 children, I'm the only lefty!  We still have no idea why I was inclined to use my left but whatever the case, I'm a communications major and have played the piano since age 6, so there seems to be some merit in the article's content!  However, I have absolutely no aspirations to be President. : )
Sorry to see that Obama learned to write incorrectly..  Not the left-handed thing, but the position of his hand.  My father, many years ago went to my 1st grade teacher and said, "She is left-handed, she will turn her paper in a position for the left hand. Consequently, I dont' write as though my wrist were broken.  Thanks Dad.
My husband is a lefty and I am an ambidextrous.  Our daughter appears to be able to use both of her hands equally.  When she draws she will use both hands.  She tends to lean more on her right though.  His family is full of lefties though, he has about 8 cousins and his sister are lefties.  Both of his parents are righties.  So I don't believe his family fits into the 10% rule at all.
Bill Clinton uses left hand !!!
I am an engineer working in the aerospace business. In my line of work I know enough lefties who are coworkers that I often find myself counting the number of lefties present in a staff or project meeting or in the lab. Including myself we run pretty close to 50% and in some cases, we have constituted a majority.
I had read an article about left-handed CEO's a few years back, It had commented that a large percentage of them were left-handed.  After that I began to wonder why such a disproportioned amount of left-handed people had risen to such levels.  As a lefty myself, I began to remember how I learned to do regular tasks, writing, using a scissors and such.  Soon I realizing that I have to constantly adapt to my surroundings to be successful and that I have a willingness to attempt to complete tasks from a different angle.   This in turn keeps my mind open to doing thing differently and analyzing issues from multiple perspectives on a constant basis.  With all that said, “GO LEFTIES!!”
My ex-husband and I are righties and my daughter is a leftie. My brother and his wife are righties and all three of their kids are lefties. My sister and her husband are righties and 2 od their four children are lefties. And my other brother and his wife are righties and one of their two children is a leftie, and a political science degree holder! Maybe in a few years, we'll be voting for him!!
When I was little (back in the 1960s) I wanted to be left-handed just to be different in school, so I prayed and prayed for God to make me left-handed. Well He didn't make ME a lefty but years later He gave me a left-handed son, who is bright, insightful, intelligent, compassionate, and leans toward being a born leader. He both support President Obama, so all the good traits aren't exclusive of lefties!
I love that so many Presidents, including Mr. Obama are left-handed! My mother was one of those that was forced to use her right hand instead of her left; I am left-handed and my brother is ambidextrous; our right-handed father is very proud of us!  Alas, my sons are righties, but I'm hoping for a left-handed grandchild one day!
We have learned to adjust in a right-handed world, so it's only natural we adapt to a lot of things. Left handed and proud of it!!
My mother was a righty and my father was a lefty.  They had five kids and I'm the only one that's left-handed.

I think one thing with leftie's is, as in my case, growing up you learn how to do a lot of things from a right-handed perspective as well as left-handed.  When you're already right-handed, living in a right-handed dominated society, you only learn the right-handed perspective.  Makes you think twice as much which I guess could end up being some kind of advantage.  Or cause you to overthink which could be considered a disadvantage sometimes.
regarding the Biblical reference...

it seems that most ancient middle eastern cultures considered the left hand dirty because, well, it was...this was the hand primarily used when wiping one's behind.  Eating on the other hand used the right hand.

My parents, both righties, have two left handed daughters and two right handed sons. And grandma on dad's side was ambidextrous!
There are still instances of teachers "forcing" children to use their right hand over their left.  One of those instances is my 10 year old son.  In pre-school, he would color with either hand, depending on what side of the table the crayon was on.  The teachers told me he had to pick one or the other.  I argued because isn't advantageous to be able to use both?  They didn't think so.  So, I picked left, because he was dominant left in my opinion.  He held his fork with his left hand, he picked up toys with his left hand, etc.  But, the teachers disagreed and picked his right.  Not a whole lot I could do to stop them unless I took him out of school, which was/is not an option.  He's now 10, eats with either hand, but uses a knife with his left, spoons with his left, bats with his left and has horrid handwriting (with his right).  So, every conference I've had since, when the teacher says, his handwritting is unacceptable, I say, then you might want to go down the hall to the pre-school and discuss that with them.  His handwriting is never mentioned again until the next year with a new teacher.  
Lefties have shorter life spans and a much higher than average rate of accidents.  Perhaps it is because the righties have all the benefits and we are forced to make do..  


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