Posted on 01/13/2009 7:00:04 AM PST by Sherman Logan
In the last few days, Ive been thinking a little about Dick Cheneys image. This stems from a lunch a group of us had with him last week (and I wrote about it here). Cheney is an unusual person: very sensible, very measured, very trustworthy. No wonder he has been entrusted with so many sensitive government positions. He is a calm person, and he has a calming effect on others. He is the kind of man you want in public service party or partisanship quite aside.
In the course of our lunch, he said that the recent Democratic victory was part of the normal cycle of a competitive two-party system, and fundamentally healthy for the nation. He also talked about how wondrous it was to swear in the first black president.
And what is his widespread image? He is a kind of Dr. Evil to people, although, unlike the Austin Powers one, not a comical Dr. Evil. He is a right-wing menace, a scourge of civil liberties, a Torquemada. This is absolutely perverse.
And what of President Bushs image at least one aspect of it? They say that he is less than bright: that he is stupid. And stupid is the last thing President Bush is. Call him willful, call him stubborn, call him petulant or cussed or difficult. Stupid, he is not.
Consider one more public figure: Sarah Palin. I keep hearing and reading, in various quarters, that she is a bimbo. That is the word I hear about her, rather a lot: bimbo. This is a woman, of course, who has been married since her early 20s. She and her husband, Todd, have five children. Sarah is governor of her state; Todd works in the oil fields. From what anyone can tell, they delight in each other, and in their family. They seem almost an advertisement for monogamy: for the married life. And yet people say bimbo.
In a nation full of bimbos, Governor Palin is one of the few who arent.
It seems to me that the Left has won: utterly and decisively. What I mean is, the Saturday Night Live, Jon Stewart, Bill Maher mentality has prevailed. They decide what a persons image is, and those images stick. They are the ones who say that Cheneys a monster, W.s stupid, and Palins a bimbo. And the country, apparently, follows.
I have a friend who teaches at a prominent university, and she says that, when Palins name is mentioned, the people laugh. In the course of the 2008 presidential campaign, an extraordinarily accomplished woman more accomplished than most of the rest of us will ever be was turned into a laughingstock.
What are the shaping institutions of American life? The news media. Entertainment television. The movies. Popular music. The schools, K through grad school. In whose hands are those institutions? In what areas do conservatives predominate? Country music, NASCAR, some churches? (Talk radio too, I suppose no wonder so many on the left want to shut it down.)
I will be talking more about this in the coming weeks, months, and possibly years. Sidney Blumenthal once wrote a book called The Rise of the Counter-Establishment (meaning conservative associations and institutions). The counter-establishment needs to be tended, and beefed up.
A country that believes that Cheneys a monster, W.s stupid, and Palins a bimbo is a country with its head up its . . .
A report from the Associated Press began as follows: Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Sunday it is unlikely that ailing former Cuban leader Fidel Castro will ever appear in public again. My question is, Will his political prisoners ever appear in public again? Or will they remain in their dungeons until they die?
And do opinion-makers in free countries care?
Jimmy Carter got himself known as a human-rights president, and he has created an image as a human-rights person all around. Very curious. He is certainly selective. Recently, he has been in China, praising that state to the skies. In his meetings with PRC rulers, he apparently said nothing about human rights and this is a country, remember, with a gulag (called laogai). Untold numbers of people have disappeared into it.
Listen to a little of this AP report:
The main thing is for the new administration to work harmoniously with China . . . and overcome those differences which are inevitable and seek out the best ways to cooperate as partners, Carter said on the sidelines of a conference commemorating the establishment of ties [between the U.S. and the PRC] on Jan. 1, 1979.
Human rights issues have . . . been a consistent source of friction between the two sides, with the U.S. pushing China to improve its poor record, including its religious repression and silencing of political dissidents. But Carter, a recipient of the U.N. Human Rights Award and a fierce critic of [the] United States own human rights violations under the Bush administration, did not make any public comments on the issue on this trip.
Instead Carter praised China for its remarkable transformation over the past three decades.
Not even Deng Xiaoping could have anticipated the glorious changes that have taken place in this wonderful country, he said during his opening speech at the academic conference.
So, thats Carter. If Chinese political prisoners are waiting on him, they will be waiting a long, long time. When people such as Carter urge free countries to work harmoniously with China and to cooperate as partners what they mean is, Shut up about human rights. By the way, if the Philippines of Marcos, or the Chile of Pinochet, or the South Africa of the Boers had harvested organs what would Carter and the Today show (to use a shorthand) have said?
And did you catch the AP, above? Carter, a recipient of the U.N. Human Rights Award and a fierce critic of [the] United States own human rights violations under the Bush administration . . .! Not even an alleged!
In Gaza, Tony Blair wants a ceasefire, the French government wants a ceasefire, everyone and his brother wants a ceasefire well, almost everyone and his brother. I am struck by the difference in aims here aims cherished by two sides. On one side are Blair et al.; on the other are the Israelis, or at least most Israelis. (Where the government stands is not entirely clear, because the government has maintained some ambiguity, and wisely.)
For one side, a ceasefire is paramount the cessation of the current violence is paramount. For the other, the destruction of Hamas or at least the hobbling of it, so as to prevent violence in the future is paramount. These two goals are not reconcilable: a ceasefire (which would spare Hamas) versus the end, or crippling, of Hamas.
An elementary point, to be sure, but sometimes the elementary should be aired.
As we learn in this report, French teachers hurled shoes and other objects at police Monday to protest President Nicolas Sarkozys high school reforms, prompting police to respond with tear gas. Hurling shoes, eh? Nice just the sort of people you want teachin the younguns.
British PM condemns princes racial slur, said the headline (over this article). The prince was Harry, and the slur was Paki. Lets just say that slurs aint what they used to be.
It is common (or used to be) in geopolitical talk to refer to the Pakistanis as the Paks. Vice President Cheney did this on television. What a difference a syllable makes, apparently: Paks versus Pakis. It reminds me of something that Rob Long once said (or was it Mark Steyn?). Suddenly, it became trendy in America to have a little Hitler mustache on the lower lip below the lower lip. An inch or two above that: not so cool.
What a difference an inch or two makes.
I was amused by something the APs (notorious) Jennifer Loven wrote, in her article about Bushs final press conference. She said, The news conference, held in the White Houses press briefing room, comes as Bush has been granting a flurry of legacy-focused interviews, often with niche interviewers and news outlets as he seeks to shape the view of his presidency on his way out the door.
So, my officemates and I are niche interviewers, and NR and NRO are niche news outlets. Ill buy that.
Reading that George Voinovich will retire from the Senate, I thought of a story Bill Buckley used to tell. Cardinal Segura, in Seville, was a severe type, who frowned on dancing and the like. After he died, a visitor asked a local, Hows it going, now that the cardinal is gone? Came the reply: When Cardinal Segura left us, both he and we passed on to a better world.
I hope that Senator Voinovich enjoys his retirement.
So, thats a book plug. And if you would like Impromptus fed by RSS if you want an RSS feed for this column go here. (Its free, natch!)
Care for a little music? To read my December New York Chronicle, in The New Criterion, go here. And to read Januarys, go here. Performers discussed include Valery Gergiev, Richard Egarr, Alisa Weilerstein, Lorin Maazel, James Levine, Susan Graham, Daniel Barenboim, Piotr Anderszewski, and Chanticleer.
For The New Criterions homepage, go here.
Reader writes,
Jay,
Im driving home from playing golf around noon Saturday and I pull up to a traffic light. In front of me is a car with a bumper sticker: One Nation, One People, Obama. A chill ran down my spine. Can you guess why? Does that evoke something for you?
Yupperz.
Another letter this one from an Ivy League campus:
Mr. Nordlinger,
I was talking to an undergraduate this evening who told me that he has an assignment for class to write an op-ed piece relating any World War II-related anniversary to modern times. Do you want to guess what hes doing? Hes comparing the liberation of Auschwitz to the closing of Gitmo.
But of course. Ill be surprised if they dont put him on the faculty!
Some columns ago, I had an item a reader had sent it in on a Mr. Dikshit, who was in trouble with the law. Another reader has written,
Jay,
At least Anurag Dikshit can thank his lucky stars that his first name isnt Prikshit, like the childhood buddy of an Indian friend of mine. Thats right, Prikshit Dikshit: one dude who wont be emigrating to an English-speaking country anytime soon.
I have had a great many responses to a few recent columns: about Bush and Cheney; about Marilyn Horne; about Elliott Carter; and, above all, about the intrusion of partisan politics into nonpolitical spheres My Kingdom for a Safe Zone. I hope to publish some of those responses in coming weeks. Then again, I still want to deal with mail concerning my Iraq journal of last October . . .
And this would be a good time to issue one of my periodic apologies: I am dreadfully behind on my mail, and sorry for it.
In Sundays Philadelphia Inquirer, I had an op-ed piece on Bush his basic decency and likability: here. I cited several incidents that I thought showed a characteristic Bush. I should have mentioned the shoe-throwing in Baghdad: his response to which was almost the definition of cool (in my opinion).
Ah, well: Cant remember everything, I guess. But you can always write again!
I dont believe I have ever quoted Hugh Hefner in this column, or anywhere else. Shall I end that way today? I ran across something amusing recently, and thought you might find it so too. Hefner, 42, meets Barbi Benton, 18. He asks her out. She says, Ive never gone out with anyone older than 24. He says, Thats okay, I havent either.
Oh, I cant end with Hef lets end with a little language. Something language-related. Indeed, I think Ive had this in Impromptus before. But the other day, I mentioned the word stewardess as in, cant say it, must say flight attendant instead. A man wrote, My young daughter pointed out a while back that stewardesses is the longest word she knows that can be typed entirely by the left hand. Do you know a longer one?
No, but that reminds me of my junior-high basketball coach, Ken Treaster: who pointed out that his last name was typed by the left hand alone.
On that non-Hefnerian note: See you.
Exactly.
I have a friend who teaches at a prominent university, and she says that, when Palins name is mentioned, the people laugh. In the course of the 2008 presidential campaign, an extraordinarily accomplished woman more accomplished than most of the rest of us will ever be was turned into a laughingstock.
The money quote. Thanks for posting the article.
Jimmy Carter is a waste of gravity.
This has got to be an urban legend. Even The One's worshipers aren't that blatant.
... is a country with its head up its ... so far that passing gas could cause their eyeballs to explode....
All words longer than "stewardesses" can be typed by the left hand.
But I know what he means.
Irregular Goods: For Progressive Resistance
Obama One Nation One People BumperstickerWhy vote Obama for President? Vote Obama because we are one nation and one people. E Pluribus Unum is something the Republicans have forgotten. It's time for America to remember itself.
$4.65
Found it, I see. They ARE that blatant! Shocking.
One of the better articles I’ve read in well over a month. Thanks for posting it. Bookmarked.
Yes, I misoverestimated the enemy. I’m still sitting here shaking my head in disbelief. Do these people have no shame? And they call us the fascists.
Ein reich, Ein volk, Ein 0bama.
Brilliant. Thanks for posting.
I think most Russian words/names can be typed with only the right hand. Or is that polish?
“What are the shaping institutions of American life? The news media. Entertainment television. The movies. Popular music. The schools, K through grad school. In whose hands are those institutions? In what areas do conservatives predominate? Country music, NASCAR, some churches? (Talk radio too, I suppose no wonder so many on the left want to shut it down.) “
Which is exactly why we need to avoid those institutions at all costs (public schools, most if not all movies, and definitely the MSM..)....Trust me you’ll be living a happier life in the long run if you avoid polluting your brain with liberal nonsense
To paraphrase a popular quotation, "If you think babysitting is expensive, wait 'til you see what it costs when it's free."
Any conservative who is taking advantage of the free welfare program known as public schooling, should do some soul-searching.
OBAMA IS STUPID
Of all people, the Vice President should know what is at stake, what has been lost and should not propagate such false and vacuous vanities. We are not all OK, and it's not all good and swearing in the first black president is meaningless if we are blinded by the "wonderous"ness of it all as if there are not much more important matters to contemplate, discuss and take action upon. No wonder our nation and the world are sliding into a bloody and depraved oblivion!
I LOVE Dick Cheney....he is the BEST!!!
True, as far as it goes. But if the 25% of Americans who are really conservative withdraw from competition and participation in the public institutions, we will be overwhelmed by the 75% who continue to participate.
We quite literally cannot isolate ourselves. Not unless we want to do the whole Amish thing or something similar. If we did, what do you think the odds are that the triumphant liberals would be willing to leave us alone? Would raising our children as conservatives be reclassified as child abuse? Not unlikely.
This stuff is good to chronicle as it's happening. William Shirer made a career out of it with respect to Nazi Germany.
I love Mr.Cheney. He is a real man, a great American and if HE were going to be inaugurated Jan.20th, I’d be thrilled, and would know our country is in capable hands. As reality stands, we are in deep doo doo.
Favorite Cheney quote...”Hey Leahey, go F yourself.”
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.