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Obama: Not the Great Stone Face (Victor Davis Hanson)
NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE ^ | August 6, 2010 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 08/06/2010 11:48:57 AM PDT by neverdem

Obama: Not the Great Stone Face

Obama could still restore his standing with the American people if he copied the Clinton of 1995 and abandoned his unpopular agenda. But he won’t.

 

In 1850 Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote an allegory about a series of small-town would-be heroes who the gullible public claimed resembled the Great Stone Face on the side of a New Hampshire mountain. The citizens assumed that these men would have a granite-like ability to stand firm against whatever dangers the people faced. (“About this time there went a rumor throughout the valley, that the great man, foretold from ages long ago, who was to bear a resemblance to the Great Stone Face, had appeared at last.”) The most confident and charismatic of these quick-fix characters — Mr. Gathergold, Old Blood-and-Thunder, and Old Stony Phiz — always in the end proved failures, as the people finally learned that they did not have the qualities they ascribed to the face on mountain.

When a once widely popular George W. Bush left office, he was polling about 35 percent approval and 60 percent disapproval. The country had two years earlier turned out the Republican Congress — to the tune of promises from Nancy Pelosi (in the pre-transcontinental-jet days) to end the wars, end the culture of corruption, and end the power of special interests.

In 2008 Barack Obama ran as a moderate liberal, offering assurances on instituting sound financial governance, getting out of Iraq, repealing the Bush anti-terrorism protocols, and making government work for the little guy by taking over some private enterprise — that is, offering government-run health care, subsidized student loans, and new and extended entitlements. A Newsweek grandee, Evan Thomas, declared Him “sort of God.” He caused another pundit, Chris Matthews, to experience leg tingles. And the world anointed Him a Nobel laureate for good intentions.

After 19 months, a once cool, laid-back Barack Obama — beloved by Oprah in his mesmerizing ability to make the enraptured faint at his sermons — now polls about 45 percent approval and 50 percent disapproval — nearly a 20-point swing in less than two years. Currently, a generic Republican challenger enjoys on average a six-point edge in the polls — quite a turnabout from the twelve-point spread that Democrats mounted in January 2009. Public approval of Congress ranges from about 10 to 20 percent — the Democratic-led Congress getting even lower marks than the pre-2006 Republican one.

One might say the public has changed its opinion of Obama, but it seems more likely that the public is beginning to see Obama as it finally did Bush. The hard Right always felt about Obama as the hard Left did about Bush, but now independents seem simply to have rechanneled their Bush anger to Obama anger — something that has bewildered Team Obama, who cannot gain any traction by blaming the current malaise on the Bush legacy. Voters apparently don’t see the corrective to Bush’s deficit budgeting in Obama’s yet higher spending and larger government.

When the economy under Bush was good, the public was more worried about
Iraq. When Iraq became quiet as Obama entered office, it turned its furor on him for the recession. Obama thought his popularity and charm could win the public over to his unpopular agenda; now he worries that his own growing unpopularity and lack of charm may make any agenda unpalatable. Any more “successes” in enacting a widely unpopular agenda, and Obama’s approvals will be in the teens.

What can we learn from all this?

There is a growing desperation among politicians that the populace perceives them as pretty much alike — alike in the sense of not being appealing. In Obama’s case, the charge is doubly serious, because he made extravagant claims that our first community organizer and our first African-American to become president — and our most purely liberal president in a generation — would be different, as in bringing a new humility and competence to the office.

Instead, over half the electorate sees only hypocrisy. Obama initially called for understanding and patience with the BP spill, in a way he had not when demagoguing Katrina. He suddenly found
Guantanamo, renditions, military tribunals, Predator assassinations, and Iraq to be complex issues, after assuring us that they were open-and-shut cases of simple morality. Bush’s deficit misdemeanors suddenly became Obama’s felonies — after he ran on the theme that Bush had recklessly run up the debt. The 2008 campaign to highlight racial harmony by electing the symbolic postracial Obama has become a sort of nightmare in which the old, tired identity politics of the 1980s rage as never before, fanned by an unpopular president desperate to rev up his base.

The common denominator here is that a largely conservative electorate has always wanted lower taxes, smaller but more competent government, fewer overseas commitments, honest government, and officials who live like the public they represent — and it can’t seem to find that package in any party or candidate being presented to it. Indeed, the Obama medicine is now seen as worse than the Bush disease, in that he less competently oversaw the war in
Afghanistan, blew apart the budget, and lives more royally than any Republican.

The obsequious media have been left scrambling to explain this new Orwellian barn wall: Bush’s aristocratic golf is now Obama’s needed relaxation; Bush’s bumbling press conferences might explain why Obama wisely doesn’t hold many at all; Republican congressional corruption simply led to a “They all do it, even Democrats” narrative; Bush’s failure to articulate how and why we would win in Iraq suddenly morphs into Afghanistan as a baffling experience that confuses all of us. Obviously, even the most adept public-relations-minded journalist could not pull all that off, and so we are left with media now as discredited as they are loathed.

And where does all that leave us?

The public is waiting for an articulate conservative reformer who will quietly keep promises to balance the budget more through spending cuts than taxes, close the border to illegal immigration, either win or get out of long wars abroad, respect federal law and apply it equally, and restore a sense of American confidence and American exceptionalism.

The odd thing is that the entire country senses how Obama could restore his ratings to over 50 percent in the same way
Clinton did in 1995. He would simply call in Republicans to work out a deal to balance the budget, quit his two-year “Bush did it” whine, stop suing the states, reassure business that there will be no more tax hikes, praise the private sector for its ingenuity and competence, stop trying to appeal to his base through race and ethnicity, and get engaged on Afghanistan.

Because there is no chance that Obama will or can do that, we are witnessing another Greek tragedy as our chief executive slowly implodes.

So we, the American public, have become something like the anxious townspeople of
Hawthorne’s morality tale. We keep claiming that our next national leader is some sort of monumental icon who will magically solve our crises, only to learn that in the flesh he turns out not to be the Great Stone Face on the mountain at all. (The Obama euphoria of 2008 was not unlike the Bush worship for a short while between September 2001 and early 2003.)

In the end, if we are lucky, we will end up with a workmanlike candidate similar to the Ernest of Hawthorne’s short story, someone nondescript from the community, someone like the rest of America, who through humility and competence avoids the vanity of high office, balances budgets, wins wars, cuts spending, restores American confidence, finesses the partisan rancor, and restores our global stature and competitiveness — and slowly grows to resemble the visage on the side of the mountain.

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; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: greatstoneface; obama; vdh; victordavishanson
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To: Siena Dreaming

I think it’s more like he was raised in a dem family and it just stuck. It is a conundrum for VDH and one I can’t get my head around. I’m a history nut and his books resonate with me for some reason. Oh well.


21 posted on 08/06/2010 12:51:10 PM PDT by SpitfyrAce
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To: Mr. Wright

It wouldn’t surprise me.

What might be an even better question: What would people like me do if that were to happen? That will have to remain a mystery, for now. ‘>)


22 posted on 08/06/2010 12:53:51 PM PDT by Gator113 (Beauty will devour the Beast in 2012....)
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To: SpitfyrAce
I saw Hanson in a documentary about Greek Gods recently and I've been wanting to read one of his books.

Which one do you recommend?

23 posted on 08/06/2010 12:56:40 PM PDT by Siena Dreaming
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To: neverdem

RE: “Obama initially called for understanding and patience with the BP spill, in a way he had not when demagoguing Katrina. He suddenly found Guantanamo, renditions, military tribunals, Predator assassinations, and Iraq to be complex issues, after assuring us that they were open-and-shut cases of simple morality. Bush’s deficit misdemeanors suddenly became Obama’s felonies — after he ran on the theme that Bush had recklessly run up the debt.”

See my Sowell-quote tagline


24 posted on 08/06/2010 1:02:20 PM PDT by flowerplough (Thomas Sowell: Those who look only at Obama's deeds tend to become Obama's critics.)
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To: Siena Dreaming

If you want to focus on ancient Greece I would read “A War Like No Other” - about the Peloponnesian war between Athens and Sparta. Great stuff.

If you want a flavor of his work spanning ancient Greece, the US Civil War and WWII check out “Ripples of Battle”. A good short read at less than 300 pages. This book highlights what I like most about VDH; his ability to correspond ancient events to modern ones. Excellent book.

I think his best known work is “Carnage and Culture” - awesome book but somewhat long at 500 or 600 pages - can’t remember exactly.


25 posted on 08/06/2010 1:07:53 PM PDT by SpitfyrAce
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To: neverdem

I like DVH, but I’m tired of the Bush bashing no matter form it comes in.


26 posted on 08/06/2010 1:15:57 PM PDT by carton253 (Ask me about The Stainless Banner - a free e-zine dedicated to the armies of the Confederacy.)
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To: carton253
should read: no matter what form it comes in.

note to self, proofread.

27 posted on 08/06/2010 1:19:14 PM PDT by carton253 (Ask me about The Stainless Banner - a free e-zine dedicated to the armies of the Confederacy.)
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To: nascarnation

But, can the Republic survive Hussein?


28 posted on 08/06/2010 1:22:17 PM PDT by STD (We are Witnessing Another Greek Tragedy as Our Chief Executive Slowly Implodes.)
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To: Siena Dreaming

A long time ago, in a galaxy far far away, there were pro-American Democrats. The one to remember today, on the anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, is Harry Truman. Scoop Jackson. Zell Miller. Joe Lieberman (and look where it got him).


29 posted on 08/06/2010 1:22:19 PM PDT by omega4412
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To: livius
Obama is going to have to take a rash action to retain power

Bomb Iran?

30 posted on 08/06/2010 1:22:22 PM PDT by happygrl (Continuing to predict that 0bama will resign)
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To: FrankR

I want that poster!!!!!


31 posted on 08/06/2010 1:23:18 PM PDT by happygrl (Continuing to predict that 0bama will resign)
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To: happygrl

Be my guest! Thanks.


32 posted on 08/06/2010 1:29:45 PM PDT by FrankR (It doesn't matter what they call us, only what we answer to....)
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To: neverdem

I agree with some of the sentiments here about the false equivalence between Bush and Obama.

I was no Bush fan, but whatever faults he had, there is no comparison between what he did or didn’t do and Obama’s deep-seated hatred for the United States. And I don’t say this lightly. It really is difficult for me to accuse any president, regardless of party, of hating his own country.

It really is scary to have a president who is so openly hostile to the American people and our culture, to federalism, to our principles, and to the the Constitution.

What is so despicable about Obama is that he clearly has no respect for his Oath to the US Constitution and is brazenly giving the American people the middle finger, almost asking us “Well, what are you going to do about it?”

I really hope we get a Republican Congress with a spine that puts him in his place.


33 posted on 08/06/2010 1:34:08 PM PDT by radpolis
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To: SpitfyrAce

Thank you.


34 posted on 08/06/2010 4:00:22 PM PDT by Siena Dreaming
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To: neverdem

[The common denominator here is that a largely conservative electorate has always wanted lower taxes, smaller but more competent government, fewer overseas commitments, honest government, and officials who live like the public they represent — and it can’t seem to find that package in any party or candidate being presented to it.]

And wouldn’t recognize her if she was right in front of them being attacked daily by a partisan media.


35 posted on 08/06/2010 4:57:59 PM PDT by KansasGirl
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To: neverdem
someone nondescript from the community, someone like the rest of America, who through humility and competence avoids the vanity of high office . . . .

Hailey Barbour ?

36 posted on 08/06/2010 5:38:45 PM PDT by 1066AD
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To: neverdem
"...we are lucky, we will end up with a workmanlike candidate similar to the Ernest of Hawthorne’s short story, someone nondescript from the community, someone like the rest of America, who through humility and competence avoids the vanity of high office, balances budgets, wins wars, cuts spending, restores American confidence, finesses the partisan rancor, and restores our global stature and competitiveness..."

Hmmm, let's see...

Works for me.

37 posted on 08/07/2010 12:16:25 PM PDT by skimbell
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To: happygrl

No, because Iran is his friend. I think he’s more likely to provoke a crisis with a formerly friendly power, feign an assassination attempt and attribute it to the right, or simply declare that he “needs” to have all power (Hitler’s Enabling Act) to overcome unemployment.

He wants Islamic law installed here. And he wants to be in charge of it, which he will be.


38 posted on 08/07/2010 5:08:04 PM PDT by livius
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To: livius

That’s a lot of far-out stuff you attribute to him, and most worrisome as you are one of my favorite posters.

If you’ve come to believe it, I am truly concerned, not for you, but for my country.

I do think what you propose is possible, as I see 0bama as a most unstable and brittle individual, likely headed for a breakdown when he loses Congress (and possibly, the Senate) in November.


39 posted on 08/07/2010 5:45:36 PM PDT by happygrl (Continuing to predict that Obama will resign)
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To: neverdem
There will come a time, I hope, when I'm capable of feeling sorry for 0bama, but that time is certainly not now. While I do not see him as some sinister Svengalian imam eager to thrust Shari'a on a prostrate public - frankly, he isn't up to the role - I do see him as a knowing agent of certain progressive assumptions about the world that are proving embarrassingly inadequate to address the problems they pretend already to have solved.

He is, after all, a relatively young man raised and insulated by a poisonous intellectual monoculture, outside of which there are only class enemies. That monoculture he shares with a large portion of the mainstream media, who appear to be realizing, albeit dimly, that they're only in front of the zeitgeist parade and not really leading it. That monoculture he has brought with him into office, and it's costing him dearly.

One could not imagine Sarah Palin, to whom VDH refers somewhat obliquely in his comment about the electorate desiring a representative who lives like them - us - one could not imagine her bringing an entire staff of Wasilla housewives into DC to running the government, although it wouldn't necessarily be all that bad an idea. But 0bama has surrounded himself with a cage of parrots fledged exactly like him, who respond to opposition only by shrieking louder. It just isn't healthy.

In January 2010 I wrote, somewhat in despair, that I hoped he would grow in office, and he still might, although he isn't showing many signs of it at the moment. The office could also kill him, and I'm not joking, nor would I wish it to happen, but despite a predilection for the philosophical calm brought on by the well-groomed golf links, he has to be in the office at some point, and it turns out to be a very stressful place. Whether he understood Bush's gasp, as he embraced him at the inauguration - "so relieved" - he understands it now.

But along the way he has used a seldom-precedented majority in Congress to push (1) the sad, old-school party-first porkfest that uses money that is increasingly scarce to reward party supporters, (2) a program of progressive nostrums with regard to health care and environmental routes to the acquisition and centralization of power, and (3) a paralysis in foreign policy that is not helped by the least competent Secretary of State we've had in a century. A clever political operator could adjust in the face of an epochal lack of success; an unreflecting ideologue cannot. And for all the talk of 0bama's intellectual powers, he displays a facility of rehearsed expression more adept at getting him through the finals at Harvard than any deep understanding of the canon he is apt to cite.

In short, he may be a bright enough fellow - I'll take that on credit rather than demonstration - but he isn't in the least learned, and with that comes a lack of humility and humor, and a concomitant arrogance, that is a major character flaw. It is annoying when present in a lecturer; it is disastrous when present in a policy-maker. And that's the real problem. The mistakes he has already made, the catastrophic policies he has already put in place and that his party will defend to the last, have robbed him of the ability to triangulate as Clinton did. The damage he has already done to his country is like a set of self-imposed handcuffs.

There is, however, someone who might pull him through this thing, although I don't see it happening. He needs to call his predecessor, the one he's been blaming the fall of the sparrow on, whose policies he has had to continue even as he has continued the same tired criticism. Because what happened to 0bama was that he went to the briefings, and he heard what Bush had been hearing, and realized at last why what has been done, has been. Were he man enough he'd admit it. He isn't yet, and perhaps he will never be, and it is the country who will suffer for it. All IMHO, of course.

40 posted on 08/07/2010 6:54:22 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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