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Victor Davis Hanson: Our American Catharsis - Will Obama-time be a transitory experience or an..?
NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE ^ | April 9, 2010 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 04/10/2010 7:49:19 AM PDT by neverdem

Our American Catharsis

Will Obama-time be a transitory experience or an enduring tragedy?

 

For years conservatives have railed about the creeping welfare state. They have tried to tag liberals with being soft on national security, both for courting those who faulted America and for faulting others who courted it. The parameters of all these fights were well known, as talk radio, the blogs, and cable news hourly took up hammer and tongs against the creeping “liberal agenda.”

But for all the furor, there were few unabashed leftist gladiators in the arena who openly fought under the banner of radically transforming the country into something that it had never been. Bill Clinton was a centrist pragmatist who put Bill Clinton’s political interests well above any ideology. His brief flirtation with Hillary’s hard leftism was rendered inoperative after the Republicans took Congress in 1994. Indeed, Hillary herself eventually ended up running as a blue-collar, Annie Oakley centrist alternative to Barack Obama.

One-termer Jimmy Carter remained a Democratic embarrassment. He was elected on the fumes of Watergate — and through his own efforts at convincing voters for a few crucial weeks in the autumn of 1976 that his folksy Southern Christian Democrat persona was no veneer, but the natural expression of a true conservative.

By 2000 even Democrats talked more fondly in retrospect of the Reagan years than of the era of appeasement and stagflation of 1977–80. The old progressive dream of electing a genuine leftist president was rendered quixotic by the disastrous campaigns of Northern liberals like George McGovern, Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis, and John Kerry.

All this is not to say that statism did not make advances. By 2008, almost 40 percent of the population was either entirely, or in large part, dependent on some sort of government handout, entitlement, or redistributive check. The size of government, the annual deficit, and the aggregate debt continued — no matter who was president — to reach unprecedented highs.

Nonetheless, until now we had not in the postwar era seen a true man of the Left who was committed to changing America into a truly liberal state. Indeed, had Barack Obama run on the agenda he actually implemented during his first year in office — “Elect me and I shall appoint worthies like Craig Becker, Anita Dunn, and Van Jones; stimulate the economy through a $1.7-trillion annual deficit; take over health care, the auto industry, student loans, and insurance; push for amnesty for illegal aliens and cap-and-trade; and reach out to Iran, Russia, Syria, and Venezuela” — he would have been laughed out of Iowa.

It was not his agenda but his carefully crafted pseudo-centrism that got Obama elected — that, and a dismal McCain campaign, weariness over the Iraq War, a rare orphaned election without any incumbent candidate, the September 2008 meltdown, and the novelty of the nation’s first serious African-American presidential candidacy.

Now, however, for the first time in my memory, the United States has an authentic leftist as president — one who unabashedly believes that the role of the U.S. government at home is to redistribute income in order to ensure equality of results through high taxes on a few and increased entitlements for many, while redefining America abroad as a sort of revolutionary state that sees nothing much exceptional in either its past role or its present alliances — other than something that should be “reset” to the norms embraced by the United Nations.

In sum, for years the loud Right warned Americans about what could happen should they vote for a genuine leftist. We mostly did not believe their canned horror stories. But now the country has got what it unwittingly voted for — and at last we have evolved beyond the rhetoric and entered into the real liberal world of the way things must be.

In just a year, the manner in which Americans look at things has changed radically. Something as mundane as buying a Ford or a GM car now takes on ideological connotations: The former company, in politically recalcitrant fashion, resists government takeover; the latter has been transmogrified from Michael Moore’s Roger & Me bogeyman into a sanctioned, government-subsidized brand. Toyota went from the good green maker of Priuses to a foreign corporate outlaw whose handful of faulty accelerators symbolizes the non-union threat to fair-play American production.

The whole notion of capital and debt has changed — mostly on the issue of culpability. Buying too much house at too high interest is the bank’s fault. Not being able to pay a debt is certainly negotiable and most certainly nothing to feel bad about. Maxing out credit cards and getting caught with high interest is proof of corporate malfeasance. Cash in the bank earns little, if any, interest. Owing lots of money costs little, and it does not necessarily have to be paid back, if one is able to stake a persuasive claim against “them.”

The reaction to a hated and greedy Wall Street is now to be an omnipotent, all-wise, and all-caring state technocracy. Today there is nothing so simplistic as the actual “unemployment rate”; “jobs saved” by government borrowing is the better barometer of who is actually working and who is not. A $200-billion shortfall is a “deficit”; a trillion-dollar one is “stimulus.”

Not purchasing a cheap catastrophic-health-care plan is quite understandable. The Department of Motor Vehicles, Amtrak, and the Postal Service are models of what good government can do. Social Security and Medicare are not unsustainable or insolvent; those loaded adjectives are simply constructs of a wealthy class unwilling to pay the taxes needed to fund them.

Worrying about the deficit or national debt is a neurotic tic. Why fret, when millions in the oppressing class have enough money to eliminate these problems whenever we acquire the backbone to make them pay what they owe us? We are in a them/us, winners/losers zero-sum age, one in which a forever static pie must have its finite slices radically reapportioned.

Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice were not paradigms of racial equality, as we once assumed. The new correct protocol of unity and togetherness is not to ignore race but to accentuate difference whenever possible. Thus we have a uniter and his flock talking of a “typical white person,” of white country folk who “cling” to their fears and superstitions, of “cowards” who refuse to discuss racial matters, of a “wise Latina,” of police who “stereotype” and act “stupidly,” and of polluters and high-school mass-murderers identified as typically “white.” In place of real civil-rights marches, we have psychodramas where congressmen wade into a crowd of protestors in search of a televised slur. To this president, the tea-partiers are sexually slurred “tea-baggers,” in his Manichean worldview of opponents to whom we are “to get in their faces” and “bring a gun” to their knife fight — all as we praise “unity,” “bipartisanship,” and “working across the aisle.”

Fourteen months ago, the number $250,000 meant little. Now the arbitrary figure is an economic them/us Mason-Dixon line seared into our collective thoughts. Those who cross it are the proven greedy who profit inordinately and must have their payroll, income, and health-care taxes commensurately increased. But those who earn below it are still kind and decent folk deserving of credits and entitlements.

I used to think that old-stand nations like Britain, Canada, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Israel, Norway, and Poland were our natural friends by virtue of a shared Western heritage and values, commitment to constitutional government, and acknowledgment of a distinguished intellectual history. Today their leaders are to be snubbed, ignored, or lectured; we are unsure only whether their sin is post-imperialism, post-colonialism — or pro-Americanism.

In contrast, more revolutionary states that bore America ill will, and certainly despised George W. Bush, must ipsis factis have been onto something — and therefore can be courted. Iran, the Palestinians, Russia, Syria, and Venezuela are, at worst, misunderstood. At best, their strong leaders are somewhat sympathetic for their prior opposition to much of what America has done and stood for.

In 2008 I had no idea of what an “overseas contingency operation” or “man-made disaster” was. And even Michael Savage could not scare me into thinking that the U.S. government would attempt to try the beheader and architect of 9/11, the self-avowed jihadist Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, in a civilian courtroom, replete with Miranda rights, lengthy appeals, and government-appointed lawyers — all that a couple of thousand yards from the scene of his own mass murdering.

The watchdog media have become a house kitten that purrs rather than barks at such radical change. Mass assemblies — so common in protests against wars during the last decades — are now racist and subversive. Grass-roots political expression like talk radio and cable TV is in need of government-enforced fairness. Hollywood no longer produces movies like the anti-war, anti-administration Redacted and Rendition; Knopf no longer publishes novels like Checkpoint; and there are, we may be thankful, no longer docudramas about shooting presidents — the latter would be both unpatriotic and clearly defined as hate speech. Filibusters are not traditional ways of checking Senate excess; the “nuclear option” is now a slur for legitimate majority legislative rule; and recess appointments don’t thwart the legislature’s will but resist its tyranny.

In other words, the last 14 months have been a catharsis of sorts. At last the world of Rush Limbaugh’s fears and Sean Hannity’s nightmares is upon us, and we can determine whether these megaphones were always just alarmists — or whether they legitimately warned of what logically would follow should faculty-lounge utopian rhetoric ever be taken seriously. Europe screamed for a multilateral, multipolar, non-exceptional America. Now in place of the old Johnny-on-the-spot NATO colossus, they are quickly getting what they wished for — America, the new hypopower. Perhaps the European Rapid Reaction Force will take on the Milosevices and Osamas to come.

Keynesians have sermonized for decades about a truly appropriate mega-debt. Now we’re quickly on the way to achieving that vision, to testing just how much debt a country can incur and still survive. If Reagan and Co. talked about “starving the beast” — cutting needless government spending by first reducing tax revenue — this is the age of “gorging the beast”: borrowing and spending as much as possible to ensure later vast increases in taxes, and with them proper redistributive change.

Politics is high-stakes poker with real losers and winners, not a mere parlor game. The country voted for the party of Pelosi, Reid, and Obama, and for once such statists are governing in the manner of their rhetoric. Time will soon tell whether this strange American experience is transitory and so becomes a needed catharsis, or whether it will be institutionalized and thus result in an enduring tragedy — this rare moment when the dreams of a zealous few are at last becoming the nightmares of a complacent many.

NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, the editor of Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome, and the author of The Father of Us All: War and History, Ancient and Modern



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: american; catharsis; enduring; experience; obama; obamatime; tragedy; transitory; vdh; victordavishanson
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To: DustyMoment
My hope is that nobama will be a transitory experience similar to (in many ways) a bad case of diarrhea.
21 posted on 04/10/2010 8:43:47 AM PDT by hal ogen ($10 (I think) ajmo0unts through the internet from all over the world.)
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To: OneWingedShark
Will Obama-time be a transitory experience or an enduring tragedy?

It will with us long after 0bama is gone.

From an earlier thread on FR:

“The danger to America is not Barack Obama, but a citizenry capable of entrusting a man like him with the presidency. It will be easier to limit and undo the follies of an Obama presidency than to restore the necessary common sense and good judgment to an electorate willing to have such a man for their president.

The problem is much deeper and far more serious than Mr. Obama, who is a mere symptom of what ails us. Blaming the prince of the fools should not blind anyone to the vast confederacy of fools that made him their prince.

The republic can survive a Barack Obama. It is less likely to survive a multitude of fools such as those who made him their president.”

22 posted on 04/10/2010 8:54:25 AM PDT by cayuga (Caligula is in the White House. Where are the Praetorian Guard when you need them?)
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To: hal ogen
My hope is that nobama will be a transitory experience similar to (in many ways) a bad case of diarrhea.

Funny, nobama ran on "hope". He just didn't mention that it would be fading under his regime.

23 posted on 04/10/2010 9:01:32 AM PDT by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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To: DustyMoment
The problem we face this November is that there aren't enough replacements with strong conservative values to reverse the damage the Obot Party has done before the Obots can do more.

My concern also. At this point in time, it is a given that the Democrats will get creamed - and therein lies the problem. The RINOs will fingure they don't have to change, just ride in on the tide, and as you say, will not reverse the tide. The point to hammer home to the voters is that even the RINOs have to go, as many have been saying. We can't convert 'em, so dump 'em as well. IMO, the Tea Party groups are the main hope now.

24 posted on 04/10/2010 9:24:20 AM PDT by Oatka ("A society of sheep must in time beget a government of wolves." –Bertrand de Jouvenel)
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To: neverdem
Time will soon tell whether this strange American experience is transitory and so becomes a needed catharsis, or whether it will be institutionalized and thus result in an enduring tragedy...

Precisely,... or whether it will evolve into something much more bloody and horrible.

25 posted on 04/10/2010 10:04:25 AM PDT by Gritty (It's no longer a game. People will die because of actions taken by this country's leftists-JR Dunn)
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To: DustyMoment
The problem with the 'Pubbies is that they are too afraid of making the Dems mad at them. I don't get it. The Dems already hate them and treat them as America's "whipping boy", how much worse could it get if the Dems "get nad at them"?

I suspect that the problem is that most Republicans just want their piece of the action.
26 posted on 04/10/2010 11:00:04 AM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: neverdem

bump


27 posted on 04/10/2010 11:02:03 AM PDT by gibsosa
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To: neverdem

Best, most cogent article he’s ever written.


28 posted on 04/10/2010 11:23:06 AM PDT by Attention Surplus Disorder (Voters who thought their ship came in with 0bama are on their own Titanic.)
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To: bassmaner

Ever since income tax + federal reserve...


29 posted on 04/10/2010 11:54:13 AM PDT by karnage (worn arguments and old attitudes)
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To: neverdem

VDH bump. He sure nails it here.


30 posted on 04/10/2010 12:03:27 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
The sooner we forget this turd the better.

This turd should just return to where turds come from.

31 posted on 04/10/2010 1:05:40 PM PDT by libh8er
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To: Gritty
Precisely,... or whether it will evolve into something much more bloody and horrible.

May I ever be so humble, I don't believe baloney.

32 posted on 04/10/2010 3:00:33 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: DesertRhino
I agree with you except I'd say the Leftest Revolution has been creeping through this republic for at least 77 years. Creeping doesn't even begin to describe whats happened since the election of FDR.

"roll back the creeping leftist revolution of the past 20 years"

33 posted on 04/11/2010 12:13:30 AM PDT by XHogPilot (A thief might rob you, but politicians can rob your family for countless generations.)
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To: RatRipper
I believe Bill Clinton has always been numbered with the hard Leftists. Just look at the same kooks that surrounded him who ended up with Zer0.

I think you're right. He was SDS back in the day, just as much as Hillary, and it's pretty obvious, given his appointments on entering office, that his "Blue Dog" imposture was just that. Bill Clinton was never a "Blue Dog" but a liar and a Trojan horse (in all sorts of ways). His indiscipline and bad moral habits proved to be our godsend and his limiting factor.

By the way, always remember that it was Tom Daschle, out of office, rejected by his South Dakota voters, who invented the Obama presidential campaign strategy. He even surfaced it in a PBS interview before the election -- talk about arrogance!

But Daschle always had the look of the ideological hardface, the Strelnikov wannabe who wanted to ride around in an armored train, standing whole villages against a wall for supporting the competition.

And the MSM, instead of profiling for us what these guys were and what we were getting, covered for them all and campaigned for them.

34 posted on 04/11/2010 1:32:04 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: Gritty; neverdem
.....,... or whether it will evolve into something much more bloody and horrible.

Unfortunately, "bloody and horrible" is the percentage bet, based on human history. Wish it weren't so, but...... even my liberal friends are unbelievably stupid, purblind, wilfully blind, about this. They have no sense of history.

"Whom the gods would destroy ....."

35 posted on 04/11/2010 1:44:12 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: Oatka
The RINOs will fingure they don't have to change, just ride in on the tide, and as you say, will not reverse the tide.

I fully agree, but the 'Pubbie Party has morphed into the RINO Party and provides no hope at all for conservatives. Since 2006 and 2008, they have done little to indicate that they have returned to their conservative principles or plan to remain rooted in the conservative principles.

I listen to these bozos on the radio all the time. They say the right things, but actions speak louder than words and the actions aren't there . . . Juan McVain, Lindsey Graham Cracker, Kay Bailey Hutchison, John Cornyn, etc., etc., etc. Pence and Boehner and Bachmann seem to be carrying the water for the other RINOS and I don't follow their records closely enough to really know if they are worth anyone squandering a vote on them. And then, there's Michael Steele. Dump his butt before things get any worse!!

36 posted on 04/11/2010 12:58:50 PM PDT by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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To: algernonpj
I suspect that the problem is that most Republicans just want their piece of the action.

I'm not following you. How does playing doormat to the Dems get them their "piece of the action"?

37 posted on 04/11/2010 1:00:20 PM PDT by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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To: algernonpj
I suspect that the problem is that most Republicans just want their piece of the action.

I'm not following you. How does playing doormat to the Dems get them their "piece of the action"?

38 posted on 04/11/2010 1:01:48 PM PDT by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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To: DustyMoment
I'm not following you. How does playing doormat to the Dems get them their "piece of the action"?

By not rocking the boat, by 'reaching across the aisle', by not doing anything substantive to stop their sidling to the left, the republicans get to share in the spoils-corruption / buy-offs (aka campaign contributions) / living the good life at the expense of American taxpayers.
39 posted on 04/12/2010 6:34:18 AM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: algernonpj

That doesn’t make sense. They are currently the target of conservatives’ enmity and disdain. Why on earth would they pursue such a self-defeating action??

I don’t deny that the GOP hasn’t lived “the good life at the expense of American taxpayers”, but it isn’t paying off for them in a good way.


40 posted on 04/13/2010 3:43:55 PM PDT by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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