Category Archives: Insights

Palin and Randy Scheunemann

As Imsinca, my friend from over at The Plumline, alerted me yesterday, Randy Scheunemann attended Palin in her Hong Kong visit and speech.  That’s more than a little interesting.

As noted below in various posts, this blog’s thesis is that a coterie of influential conservative strategists are now managing Palin’s public image very tightly for the purpose of forwarding her as a candidate (likely for the presidency) in three years (or seven, if three looks too soon).

This thesis holds that:

1) there is an overall strategy to keep her isolated from the press and from any public situation where she might (would be certain to) continue to demonstrate her lack of education and intelligence/thoughtfulness and completel unsuitability for an office such as the Presidency of the US, as happened continually through the election

2) further, this period of isolation will be used to manipulate and rehabilitate her image through having others write her Facebook entries, op eds, etc (clearly the case)

3) these will be followed by key conservative opinion leaders promoting those Facebook entries etc as demonstrations of her “intellectual heft” (Limbaugh used this phrase after her first other-authored Facebook entry and Rich Lowry at the National Review used it again yesterday)

4) her resignation as Alaska governor was in aid of point 1) above.  Had she continued to hold that post, she would have been functioning in a public context daily and it would have been inevitable that she’d continue to blunder and demonstrate her unsuitability

5) a further bolstering of her image/reputation as having “intellectual heft” will be facilitated through speeches or written pieces in high-profile venues – Sarah speaks where Greenspan, Clinton and Gore speak!  In marketing jargon, this is called ‘positioning’, placing your product in association with other things or people broadly considered to be of high value.  Do these people think in this manner?  Andrew Card, ex GM exec, said as regards a question on when war with Iraq would begin,

From a marketing point of view you don’t introduce new products in August“.

(Quick note here on a contending thesis, which one might draw from her ex son-in-law’s recent interview, that she’s just out for money from speaking fees.  Who knows what is in her head?  But the above and what follows suggests there are others involved here who have a different agenda.)

So, the question presents itself, who would be strategizing in this manner and why?

The clues we already had were that Bill Kristol had been a key promoter of Palin after meeting her on a conservative cruise up to Alaska (pay the big bucks and get to mingle with top conservative leaders).  And Kristol’s support for Palin through the election and since has been unwavering.  The National Review and Weekly Standard (Kristol is a senior figure in both) have mirrored Kristol.  Likewise, Limbaugh.  Less vocally, but no less important, the Wall Street Journal.  We’ll note that, following Palin’s speech in Hong Kong, both the WSJ and the National Review (Rich Lowry) immediately put up glowing accounts of Palin’s speech and performance (the WSJ omitting to mention that some Americans present walked out of the speech and Rich Lowry using the Palin showed “intellectual heft” phrase).  There will undoubtedly be much more of this now careening around the rightwing media world but I haven’t had time to survey it all).

Another supporter, as a senior campaign figure and later, has been our Randy Scheunemann fellow.  After the failed election attempt, some voices in the McCain/Palin campaign were rather merciless in their accounts of Palin’s intellectual insufficiencies and in her overwhelming egocentricity and narcissism.    Jumping immediately to her defence (with smears of those who had spoken out) were Bill Kristol, the National Review, the Weekly Standard and Randy Scheunemann.

So, who is Randy?    What’s his political leaning?  Who is he connected with?  Paragraph one of the wikipedia entry kinda gives the game away…

Randall J Scheunemann is an American lobbyist. He is the President of the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq, which was created by the Project for the New American Century(PNAC), of which he is a board member. He was Trent Lott‘s National Security Aide and was an advisor to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Iraq. He is a paid lobbyist for the country of Georgia and was 2008 Presidential candidate John McCain‘s foreign-policy aide

The Project for a New American Century is the neoconservative body which advocated a pre-emptive attack on Iraq back in Clinton’s term (he ignored these people) but who gained central power under George W Bush.   Read up on them at Wikipedia if you aren’t familiar with these people.  Again, Bill Kristol is a central figure.   A or the central doctrine of this crowd is that America ought to act so as to ensure that it remains the single dominant international force, economically and militarily, through beating down any nation or international entity which might act to threaten US dominance.  If you’ve wondered why the UN has been propagandized against with such vigor, that’s the reason.  If you’ve wondered why these people are now suggesting it is better to continue hating Russia and to continue poking it in the eye just to piss it off and show who is boss, that’s the ‘rationale’.

How are the WSJ and Limbaugh related?  To get a complete picture, I suggest you read Annenburg’s “Echo Chamber”, a scholarly study (some of it is a bit of a wade) of how Limbaugh (talk radio generally, but Limbaugh most particularly) and the WSJ have functioned in tandem to manipulate the conservative movement over the last two to three decades (evicting moderates via the primary processes, for example) in order to foster business-friendly and war industry-friendly national policies and notions.  A revelatory, if depressing, exercise is to google the PNAC individuals and look for their ties to the weapons and military-related services industries.

And this all brings up the question of why in hell these folks would want someone so unprepared as Sarah Palin is to actually be pushed forward as national leader?    And the unavoidable conclusion is that they have no illusions about her at all.  She will be a leader nominally only.  Her lack of curiosity, her lack of education, her lack of experience, her lack of a coherent political philosophy, her lack of knowledge of the world, and her lack of strong and grounded opinions which aren’t merely simplistic and manipulatable cliches all make her, quite in the manner of Bush but even more so, a figurehead or placeholder leader.  Her electoral appeal is the other promising feature and it is key.  These folks are concerned with access to power above all else (Limbaugh is something else – he looks to be driven by an appetite for high status and money but I doubt he has a coherent notion in his pathological head re political theory).

Cynical?  Flat out Machiavellian?  You bet.  But if you read Leo Strauss, the neoconservative theorist under whom Kristol was tutored, you’ll find an unyielding Platonist – that is, holding a set of notions derived from Plato’s Republic where it is held that society must be managed by a select elite of political philosophers because the unwashed masses aren’t up to the task of self-governance or communal governance.  It is a seriously un-democratic philosophy.  As Strauss argued, for example, it is not a bad or immoral thing for this elite to lie to everyone else.  It is, within this philosophy, a “noble” responsibility.

Update: Ben Smith at Politico reports that Dan Blumenthal and DC lawyer Kim Daniels worked on the speech as well as Scheunemann.  Blumenthal is an AEI scholar who has co-written with serious war-mongering neoconservative  Robert Kagan.   Kim Daniels is a lawyer who works with the Thomas More Law Center…

The Thomas More Law Center is a not-for-profit public interest law firm dedicated to the defense and promotion of the religious freedom of Christians, time-honored family values, and the sanctity of human life. Our purpose is to be the sword and shield for people of faith, providing legal representation without charge to defend and protect Christians and their religious beliefs in the public square.

So, the Christian Right (who have also remained steadfast supporters of Palin) perceive some advantage in having her marketed  as well.  Any port in a liberal storm, I guess.  But there’s a bit of a conflict here.  From the Christianist perspective, God’s in charge.  From a neoconservative perspective, sure, we can tell that lie if it gets our person elected and then WE are in charge, bub.

Update: Andrew Sullivan notes some details from the new, improved and
re-programmed Sarah

Income inequality trend – what matches it?

Paul Krugman (and others) have noted recent income inequality figures from  Emmanuel Saez at Berkeley.    Here is the historical perspective graphed…

Two major trends are immediately evident – downwards from the 20s and then upwards from the the mid-70s.  We know what brought the trend down from “the guilded age” but what brought it back up?

I’ve previously noted here Lewis Lapham’s essay “The Tentacles of Rage”. What Lapham describes in this essay matches yjod rise and does so far better than any particular individual or party holding the Presidency or the inititation of any particular policy or the establishment of or dismantling of any particular institution related to governance in the US.

Further, one can see quite clearly how what Lapham describes is presently in full bloom in the broad campaign underway to kill healthcare reform in the US and to bring down a President who likely will, if he is able, move the country back towards the sorts of regulations and perspectives which caused or facilitated the downward trend mentioned above.

I encourage everyone to read the essay with care and with attention to the correspondences between the timeline demonstrated in the graph and the correspondences between the thesis Lapham advances with what we have all experienced since the mid 70s and are still experiencing now.

The dictatorial conception of leadership

Barton Gellman writes a rather hagiographic piece (functionally, if not by intent) on Dick Cheney in the Washington Post this morning. In that sense, it is pretty typical of the majority of mainstream press coverage of the man and his tenure as VP and isn’t of much value.

But there are a couple of passages which, if one assumes they are accurate portrayals (and I do assume that), reveal a mindset that is distinctly authoritarian or dictatorial as regards how government ought to operate and how it ought to stand in relationship to citizens.

He’d [President Bush] showed an independence that Cheney didn’t see coming. It was clear that Cheney’s doctrine was cast-iron strength at all times — never apologize, never explain — and Bush moved toward the conciliatory.”

…But there is a sting in Cheney’s critique, because he views concessions to public sentiment as moral weakness. After years of praising Bush as a man of resolve, Cheney now intimates that the former president turned out to be more like an ordinary politician in the end.

These notions do not reflect what we normally consider ought to be the relationship a leader of a representative democracy imagines ideal between himself/herself and the citizens who placed him in office.  Rather, they are notions that we would imagine to reside in someone who is interested only in gaining or maintaining power and which he might then wield with zero regard for the popular will and with absolutely no sense of a responsibility to be honest or forthright or accountable to the citizens.

From such an “understanding” of the proper role of a leader, it is immediately obvious that propaganda operations will define or mandate all communications between that leader and the citizens of such a state, of the press, of Congress and of the courts.  Secrecy, pervasive stone-walling, purposeful deceits and obstruction of Justice Department or other investigations will mark how such a leader will operate.

Bill Kristol, lying, and Straussian neoconservatism

Glenn Greenwald has written a typically exceptional piece this morning.  As he notes up top, what he’s written here was motivated by comments from Bill Kristol, comments of a deeply dishonest (very purposefully dishonest) nature.  What follows is an excellent precis on neoconservativism, Leo Strauss, the Staussian father/son duo of Irving and Bill with nods to others (like Shadia Drury) who have written extensively on Strauss and on neoconservatism.  If you’d like to better understand this whole subject better, I couldn’t point to a better example than Greenwald’s piece.  I’m going to paste it in full here.

Bill Kristol condemns lying for political ends: Seriously

(updated below – Update II)

On Fox News yesterday, NPR’s Juan Williams — who, just by the way, dutifully spouts GOP talking points more reliably than any Fox commentator other than Karl Rove — condemned President Obama for telling ”lies” about the Gates controversy.  That prompted this observation from Bill Kristol, in which he head-pattingly quoted Williams:

Amid all the blather about “teachable moments,” I don’t recall anyone else making this simple but profound observation: “You can’t have a teachable moment if it’s based on a lie.” Another way of putting it might be to say that it’s not a “moment” that’s teachable, it’s the truth that’s teachable.

So a moment in which everyone colludes to obscure the truth (which seems characteristic of most “teachable moments” in contemporary America) is not a moment of teaching; it’s a moment of deception, of misdirection, of obfuscation. Call it an obfuscatable moment.

It’s hard to remember a statement in American politics as deceitful and obfuscating as this one from Bill Kristol, pretending to condemn politically-motivated lies.  It’s not hyperbole to say that the central political tactic of neoconservatism is the “noble lie” — exactly what Kristol self-righteously condemns here.  The political philosopher most revered by neoconservatives, Leo Strauss, explicitly advocated such lies, as Philosophy and Political Science Professor Shadia Drury documented:

[Strauss] therefore taught that those in power must invent noble lies and pious frauds to keep the people in the stupor for which they are supremely fit. . . . Like the Grand Inquisitor, he thought that it was better for human beings to be victims of this noble delusion than to “wallow” in the “sordid” truth. And like the Grand Inquisitor, Strauss thought that the superior few should shoulder the burden of truth and in so doing, protect humanity from the “terror and hopelessness of life.

Though that may be a bit of an oversimplification of Strauss’ views, Kristol’s dad, Irving, the so-called Godfather of Neoconservatism,was a devout follower of what he understood to be Strauss’ beliefthat feeding lies to citizens is necessary for good political ends:

Kristol has acknowledged his intellectual debt to Strauss in a recent autobiographical essay. “What made him so controversial within the academic community was his disbelief in the Enlightenment dogma that ‘the truth will make men free.’” Kristol adds that “Strauss was an intellectual aristocrat who thought that the truth could make some [emphasis Kristol's] minds free, but he was convinced that there was an inherent conflict between philosophic truth and political order, and that the popularization and vulgarization of these truths might import unease, turmoil and the release of popular passions hitherto held in check by tradition and religion with utterly unpredictable, but mostly negative, consequences.”

Based on that understanding, Irving Kristol explicitly advocated that ordinary citizens be lied to for their own good and the good of society:

There are different kinds of truths for different kinds of people. There are truths appropriate for children; truths that are appropriate for students; truths that are appropriate for educated adults; and truths that are appropriate for highly educated adults, and the notion that there should be one set of truths available to everyone is a modern democratic fallacy. It doesn’t work.

As Professor Drury notes based on Bill Kristol’s writings on such topic, Kristol himself, just like his dad whose life he followed, is a “Straussian clone.”  That’s why Bill Kristol’s public career is filled with too many lies to count.  Lying is a justifiable tactic to them, which is what explains typical Kristol statements like this:

What the Bush administration did say–and what so many reporters seem to have trouble understanding–is that Iraq and al Qaeda had a relationship that, by its very existence, posed a potential threat to the United States.

Another by-product of Kristol’s fervent belief in political lies was when he pretended to support evangelical Christians in the Terri Schiavo travesty (Straussian neoconservatives love to manipulate and inflame mass religious beliefs, especially Christianity, feigning sympathy with it, as the ultimate form of control) and said this:

After all, we are a “maturing society,” as the Supreme Court has told us. Perhaps it is time, in mature reaction to this latest installment of what Hugh Hewitt has called a “robed charade,” to rise up against our robed masters, and choose to govern ourselves. Call it Terri’s revolution.

This is what was always most striking (and revealing) about The New York Times‘ hiring Kristol as a columnist (and The Washington Post‘s immediately swooping him up after he was let go by the NYT):  Kristol is someone who not only lies constantly, but who quite obviously believes in lying as a legitimate and important political weapon.  In general, there are far too many instances of extreme hypocrisy and deceit in our political culture to bother noting them when they arise.  But reading Bill Kristol — the living, breathing embodiment of deceitful propaganda — condemn the use of lies for political ends is really too much to ignore. It would be exactly like reading Saddam Hussein condemn human rights abuses or Dick Cheney condemn torture or George Bush condemn lawbreaking or Michael Gordon condemn mindless, government-serving stenography or Cokie Roberts condemn conventional-wisdom-spouting punditry, etc.

UPDATE:  As CarolynC notes in Comments, the Straussian endorsement of “noble lies” is completely consistent with the two-tiered system of justice that dominates our political culture (the subject of today’s first post), as only some people — the elite — are permitted to tell such lies, while ordinary citizens who do so must be punished.  From Harper‘s Earl Shorris in July, 2004:

For Strauss, as for Plato, the virtue of the lie depends on who is doing the lying. If a poor woman lies on her application for welfare benefits, the lie cannot be countenanced. The woman has committed fraud and must be punished. The woman is not noble, therefore the lie cannot be noble. When the leader of the free world says that “free nations do not have weapons of mass destruction,” this is but a noble lie, a fable told by the aristocratic president of a country with enough nuclear weapons to leave the earth a desert less welcoming than the surface of the moon.

That Harper‘s article also notes that Bill Kristol, like his dad Irv, is a devoted Straussian. Indeed, when Kristol pretends to reject politically-motivated lies, that in itself is an example of a Straussian lie:   Obama should be condemned for “lying” because he’s not noble, whereas Kristol and his comrades are free to lie because they are devoted to noble ends.

UPDATE II:  I’m well aware of, and explicitly referenced, the debate over whether Kristolian neoconervatives faithfully summarize Strauss’ views or whether they distort them.  Contrary to the assertions of several commenters, that debate is hardly clear-cut.  In addition to the above-cited Drury and Harper‘s articles arguing that neocons reflect exactly what Strauss believed, here is arestrained and very well-informed condemnation of Strauss fromHarper‘s Scott Horton.  Horton notes that “even among those who love him, there seems to be a very catty rage over just who are the proper ‘Straussians’”; that “the Neoconservative movement [] properly claims roots in the writing and thinking of Leo Strauss”; and that Strauss, at least early on, “sees real appeal in fascism, Mussolini style.”  Also according to Horton:

One of the pillars of liberal democracy is the embrace of the Rule of Law, and the notion that no one, even the king or Executive, stands above the law. For Strauss this idea was foolishness. . . . Strauss applies this criticism to law; law spells weakness; law is a trick of the weak to tie down the strong. Hence, Strauss applauds the decisive leader who acts outside of the law to achieve his goals.Nevertheless, the consequences of Strauss’ dismissive attitude towards the Rule of Law can be seen today in the Neocon advocacy of jettisoning traditional norms of the law of armed conflict and in allowing the president to operate outside of clear criminal statutes (like FISA) as an aspect of his war-making powers.

And see here for some short though seemingly incriminating Strauss quotes (citation is here).

As a former philosophy major, I could find that debate interesting if I wanted to, but it has little to do with anything I’ve written here.  As a contemporary political matter, that debate over Strauss matters little.  Leo Strauss isn’t subsidized by Rupert Murdoch to spew propaganda on Fox News and at The Weekly Standard; doesn’t write columns in virtually every major American newspaper and magazine; and doesn’t exert substantial influence in our political debate.  Neoconservatives do.  What matters is how they understand and embrace Strauss, regardless of whether that interpretation is or is not faithful to Strauss himself.  As the excerpts from Irving Kristol make conclusively clear, neocons cite Strauss to support their belief that lies in pursuit of noble political ends are justifiable (indeed, Bill Kristol sits on the Advisory Board of the Leo Strauss Center at the University of Chicago, along with Harvard Professor and Machiavelli lover Harvey Mansfield, who explicitly rejects the rule of law as a constraint on Presidents, or at least on George Bush).

That’s what matters:  what neoconservatives believe.  And what they believe is the virtue of political lies when spouted by certain people (themselves) in service of certain goals (their own), and relatedly, the complete absence of any limits on what they can do in pursuit of those “noble” goals.

Obama speaks

I wrote this elsewhere but thought I ought to put it here.

Listening to Obama tonight, I realized that there is an aspect in which he differs not a whit from George W Bush. No difference discernible. Both of them presume, when they are speaking to other people, that those other people are exactly as smart as they are.

Cheney’s motivation

I’ve noted before the curious question of why Cheney has now broken protocol and twice spoken critically of Obama administration policies.  Here’s a possible explanation that I hadn’t thought of (nor have I seen mentioned by others) which does make sense…

By relentlessly taking to the airwaves, Cheney is re-politicizing issues that should be strictly legal ones. And as long as the issue of law-breaking remains political, and not legal, in nature, Cheney and his cohorts Donald Rumsfeld and former Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez can rest easy. By becoming the voice and face of the Bush administration’s wrongdoings, Cheney is gambling, so far correctly, that Obama won’t have the political guts to pursue him.

Continue reading here

h/t Andrew Sullivan

Damn!

So much to read…just got started reading Michael Tomasky’s piece from the latest NYRB and wanted to link it here for you all but it is one of the pieces for which money is required.

But dagnabit, it’s only $3 measly bucks so make the investment.

Washington: Will the Lobbyists Win?

But if you’re the cheap sort, for free you get Mark Danner’s extraordinary   “US Torture: Voices From The Black Sites”

Oral history of the Bush White House

I’ve linked this Vanity Fair piece previously, but I had cause to re-read it and was again taken with how good a job Philippe Sands has done in reporting here

Important perspective from Josh Marshall

Wired

Several times over the last few weeks I’ve said that notwithstanding the last two elections DC remains wired for Republicans. And each time I say that people write in to ask, what does that mean exactly? So here’s what I mean. In Washington there’s a formal government and a para-government. The formal government itself has all sorts of different layers to it — the current crop of political appointees, the career employees, etc. But for the moment, let’s put everyone who draws a paycheck from the United States government to one side and focus on everyone else.

Who are we talking about? The journalists. The lobbyists. The people who work in the think tanks and quasi-think tanks where purported policy experts work. The employees of the majority activist groups on both sides of the political spectrum. The list could go on and on. But this gives a basic flavor of who we’re talking about.

We’re coming off of, or at least we’ve had a period of (because who knows about the future) thirty plus years of conservative dominance of Washington. By some measures you could say forty years. But at least thirty, notwithstanding Bill Clinton’s eight years in office. That conditions a generation of people with mindsets based around Republicans being the party of power, the party whose ideas get vindicated at the polls. Most of all Washington is a city that coddles up to and worships power. But a generation of one party holding the reins selects for certain kinds of journalists in key positions of power, the policy experts at the think tanks who get the journalists calls, the lobbyists who move the most money and so forth. You build up a set of assumptions about what kinds of people and ideas are respectable and which aren’t. Which are old-fashioned, which are ‘cutting edge’ and so forth. Who defines conventional wisdom?

In all of these respects, DC remains overwhelmingly wired for the GOP.

Over time, the formal government shapes the para-government. But there’s no immediate transition. In fact, in the short-run there’s usually an intensified conflict between the two. And you see evidence of the disconnect in repeated failures of people in the capital to predict the reactions of the country to key political developments — which is something you’ve seen repeatedly in 2006 and 2008. And even into 2009.

The role of organized money obviously plays a big role too, though money’s partisan attachments are highly, highly malleable. The most important factor is the para-government and its entrenched attitudes.

Yikes. What’s a party to do? What is the nation to do?

From Charles M. Blow at the NY Times:

[Republicans are] in trouble, and they know it.

Take a look at these statistics:

1. According to a poll conducted by The New York Times and CBS News this month, only 21 percent of respondents said that they consider themselves Republicans. This was the lowest percentage for that response since The Times started asking the question in 1992. By comparison, nearly twice as many respondents said that they consider themselves Democrats.

INSERT DESCRIPTIONThe Pew Research Center for the People and the Press.

2. In a Pew Report issued on Thursday, a similar sentiment surfaced:

“More than six-in-ten Americans (62%) say they have a positive opinion of the Democratic Party, compared with 40% who say they have a favorable opinion of the Republican Party. The current Democratic favorability advantage is the largest measured in nearly two decades. The widening gap is primarily a result of an increase in favorable views of the Democratic Party since the election, up from 57% in late October 2008.”

INSERT DESCRIPTIONGallup

3. According to a Gallup report issued on Wednesday, the Republicans have a party identification advantage in only five states. Those states have a grand total of 20 electoral votes. (You need 270 to win.)

There isn’t, of course, unanimity among Republicans/conservatives as to how they might best move so as to regain a competitive position in the public mind and electorally.  But we can roughly divide them into two camps – “moderate or it’s doom” and “moderation is the path to doom”.  Colin Powell or Rush Limbaugh.

But the more moderate voices have been marginalized and dis-empowered within the party over the last three decades (see Nina Easton’s “Gang of Five” on Rove, Abramoff and Norquist’s strategy for removing moderates beginning with their tenures with the College Repubicans – it’s a very good book, by the way…she wrote it before marrying a Republican strategist and subsequent work at Fox).  Talk radio and Fox, particularly, have provided a broad and effective propaganda campaign which has pushed the party and movement to its present extremes.  Hundreds of millions of dollars have been donated by ultra-conservative agents (Scaife, Bradley Foundation, Coors etc) to support the more extremist candidates, policies, ‘think tanks’ and other propaganda or organizational efforts.  So we’ve ended up in a position where moderates in this party and movement are darn near extinct.

And it isn’t merely that they are rare, they are also relatively powerless.  When Bill Buckley’s son Cristopher spoke out and advised moderation, that didn’t turn the party or the staff at National Review (which his father had founded), rather Christopher was pilloried and forced to resign his position at the NR.  When a Republican congressman spoke out last week and suggested Limbaugh was not the best voice the party might listen to for direction, he was forced to grovel in apology within 24 hours.  During the first debate for RNC chair, all candidates understood they had no option other than to answer “Ronald Reagan” to the question “Who was the greatest President ever?”.

Further, the conservative movement has, over the recent decades, built up internal organizational systems which carry the extremist notions down into local party operations, into school boards, into hospital boards, into the chapters of College Republicans and into large sectors of the religious community.  If you were to ask who or what might be educating young republicans in a moderate or more historically grounded set of notions about what ‘conservatism’ is, or has been, or can be, there aren’t many hopeful answers to that question.

Given these realities, which have been validated by the emerging strategies evident in how Republicans in Congress and the Senate (not to mention the propaganda operations which feed and support the movement) are proceding in relation to the Obama administration, we have no good reason to imagine that the right will be able to change or evolve in the direction of moderation and bipartisan effort for the forseeable future.  We have much reason to presume they will continue as they are presently.  My guess is that it will take another two electoral cycles, with continuing losses in both, to significantly change the internal dynamics of the party and movement.  I believe that will be so even if the economy continues to decline, as looks certain, and even if that decline becomes shockingly severe.

All of this (and note I haven’t even brought into consideration the reactionary influences that will certainly arise from enormous financial/corporate interests who benefit from things as they are)  presents a significant challenge for the Obama administration and for all of us who desire functioning governance and a civil, tempered and thoughtful communitarian polity.

If I have this even close to being an accurate reflection of real states of affairs, then what this administration must do is:

1) operate with honesty, integrity and transparency

2) create a broad and substantial marketing/propaganda operation which will match and exceed what the right now has in place BUT which is dedicated not to the goal of gaining/maintaining power, rather to the goal of transmitting facts and balanced analyses of our situation AND agressively pointing up where falsehoods, deceits and logical flaws are being pushed into the national dialogue along with identification of who is perpetrating them.

3) understand very clearly that your marketing/propaganda efforts will be mostly ineffective if they are not informed by contemporary understandings of how people are really moved and motivated (George Lakoff, Drew Westen, etc).  One reason the right has been so much more effective in this sphere is, at least in part, because this knowledge and the techniques which arise from this knowledge exist mainly within the business community (see, as one important example, Larry Tye’s “The Father of Spin – Edward L. Bernays and the Birth of Public Relations).

4) continue the very promising grassroots organizational efforts and methodologies which this team has developed over the period leading up to the election because you are definitely going to need them if merely to counter what the right has developed over the last decades.

5) do allow the various relevant investigations into likely Bush administration illegalities to move forward and discern the facts of these matters because Americans will be less informed, stupider and poorer citizens if they believe things that are false and disbelieve or do not know those things which are true.

And now I’ll stop talking.

The rise and fall of the trouble-maker

I’ve written previously of the curious sanctification of Ronald Reagan in the mythology of the new conservative movement.  I’d be quite content to wager that over the last three months (likely more but I’ll be conservative) not a single hour of conservative talk radio (or a single hour of Fox punditry or a week of WSJ editorials) has passed without a laudatory - indeed an exaltive - “this is the one man who had it right and did it right” mention of Reagan.  The recent RNC chairmanship debate I’ve noted earlier is precisely in this mode.

Kevin Drum and Ezra Klein take a quick look at this same event and the apparent weirdness of Reagan’s centrality:

FAVORITE PRESIDENTS….At a recent debate, all the candidates for RNC chairman named Reagan as their favorite Republican. Ezra Klein comments:

It’s really weird that Republican candidates for high office almost never named Abraham Lincoln as their favorite Republican president. He was, after all, a Republican. And he was inarguably more consequential than Reagan, no matter how enamored you are of Reagan’s tenure. Indeed, most historians consider him America’s greatest president.

Ezra chalks this up to coded racism, and maybe that’s right. I guess I’d guess be a little more generous, though, and attribute it instead to the different valences of favorite vs. greatest, figuring that Lincoln would be more likely to come up if these guys were asked who the greatest Republican was. Maybe.

But this is really just an excuse to observe the weird fact that for modern conservative Republicans, Reagan isn’t merely their most frequently named favorite, he’s pretty much their only possible answer to this question. Bush Jr. is obviously damaged goods. Bush Sr., Ford, and Eisenhower are more or less considered closet Democrats these days. Nixon was a crook. Hoover — ’nuff said. Coolidge and Harding were do-nothings. If you’re restricting yourself to the past century, you’re basically stuck with Reagan and no one else.

Democrats have it way better. Sure, most Dems of the past century produce mixed sentiments (especially Wilson and LBJ) but virtually every one of them is at least a plausible candidate for “favorite Democrat.” Modern liberals haven’t excommunicated any of them.

Why is this? Why is it that Republicans have produced only one president in the past century that they’re still enthusiastic about?    Kevin Drum at Mother Jones

The New Right or the new conservative movement is generally understood to have developed as a backlash political movement in the south as response to the federal inititiatives in support of equal rights for blacks during the early to mid-sixties.  The rise of the women’s rights movement, the ‘sexual liberation movement’, and other social changes of that period (the pill, Supreme Court decisions on race matters and abortion, ‘drug culture’, and Viet Nam) can be seen to have contributed to the discontent initially stoked by the civil rights issue.  It took a while for this reactionary response to evolve from merely a vocal and angry mob supporting Goldwater to the sophisticated movement that championed Reagan and put him into the White House. 

This movement then and now differentiated itself from Republicanism or conservatism which preceded it and to which it was rebelling against.  It was a splinter group which managed (as many splinter groups do not manage) to gain ascendance over that from which it derived.  And then something, something probably quite inevitable, happened.

Human organizations calcify.  Fresh ideas , available for animated discussion and reflection, become fixed and sacred ‘truths’ which only the heretical will question.  Structures of power and influence become entrenched and establish defensive mechanisms to keep themselves entrenched in order to (the thinking is) ensure the survival of the movement and to protect it’s hold on and promulgation of those important truths it has worked so hard to birth.

There are no shortage of examples here.  Let’s just point to the Catholic Church and Luther breaking away.  Let’s point to Luther and the Great Awakening evangelism breaking away.  Etc etc.

But let’s note a key feature of the dynamics of the belief system which either generates or is a logically necessary component in such splintering.  Splinter movements hold, perhaps always, that the older form they reject has moved away from the key truths or values or principles or simplicity of the founding form and have finally betrayed it.  By contrast, it is held that the splinter group is now the most pure (unsullied, innocent, doctrinally faithful) representation of the core or soul of the original form.

It was just such calcification which led the new conservative movement to reject prior conservative ideas and structures and to push towards a new form of conservatism (or perhaps more accurately, provided justification for such a rejection).

  And it is what that splinter movement itself now suffers from.   Just listen to Rush Limbaugh or the WSJ talk about any ‘conservative’ who might not agree that Reagan is the greatest leader the world has ever known (Jesus excepted, of course).  These heretics are named, their heresies enumerated and their excommunication demanded.

A cult of personality looks to be a somewhat different critter than what I’m describing above but to the degree that human organizations require such a cult of personality that will manifest itself in the mechanisms I’ve described.  And surely that will be particularly so where the organization involved is authoritarian in nature and where its “truths” involve issues such as moral precepts or principles of community behavior which depend for their force not upon empirical observation but rather upon the persuasive force of a representative personality.

Reverend Ruckus

The choice of Rick Warren to deliver Obama’s inauguration invocation has definitely caused a ruckus among activists on the left, particularly within the gay community.  To this point, no other appointment or move by Obama (contrary to wishes and claims from various voices on the right and in the conflict-joyous mainstream media) has really caused this level of protest.  And it’s understandable - the guy is a chump on homosexuality and this moves into being a chump on civil rights issues as well.  Of course many on the left will be pissed off.  I expect the Obama camp predicted all this going in.

So the question becomes, wise decision or foolish?  I’ll  suggest that it was a necessary decision. 

I’m not sure who first used the term “culture war” but the modern conservative movement has whole-heartedly (hole-mindedly?)  adopted this term to describe the nature of their imagined contest in American society.  Equally notable for extremism are the common statements from movement leaders  that compromise is the territory of traitorous weakness, of watered-down principles which means no principle at all, they suggest.  The liberal or the democrat (same thing) has no proper role in governance or leadership of true America.  America is a conservative and Christian country.  Period.  And further, for the “practically-minded” on the right (meaning those who like Datona more than the Book of Revelations) conservatism is also the only workable philosophy of governance and social orderliness.  Put those liberals in power and they’ll take your guns and your Hummers and give you taxes and sissy cars that run on composted arugula.

To say that America has been polarized is an understatement.  To say that this polarization has been facilitated and magnified by movement leaders in order to mobilize emotion and activism is simply factual.  It’s brought thirty years of electoral dominance for them.  But it is poisonous and it has to end. 

And that means we on the left cannot follow the model of people like Norquist, Gingrich or Dick Armey (“bi-partisanship is like date-rape”).  It means the left has to expand the realm of that which we consider “us”.  It means compromise.  There’s no other way that isn’t merely a reiteration of culture war parameters and fixed ideas. 

The fear of many on the left is that, once again, we move but they do not.  It’s another naive step back which will be answered by the right moving that step forward.  There’s some reason, historically, which justifies these fears.  But once again, what’s the alternative?  Crush the opposition until it and its children are all dead? 

By a number of different measures, the US has moved significantly rightward over the last three or so decades.  But, as the brilliant writers of West Wing had a character say in one episode (after an important bi-election had gone south), “Democracy means that sometimes the bad guys win.”  It’s a cliche to say that politics is cyclical, but it’s true nonetheless.  And things are looking up for us on the left now and we ought to be wiser about this whole “war” metaphor/mythology and not be trapped and limited by it.

And, after all, isn’t this a fundamental notion that has attracted so many of us to Obama since his coming-out speech?  “We are not a blue nation and a red nation…”   That ain’t gonna mean, in any real world, that only the other guy has to change course.

In this morning’s NY Times piece on this Reverend Warren matter, there’s a quote from an email sent out by christian fundamentalist and organizer Gary Bauer who focused on the differences in social issues between Obama and Warren…

“In my view, the new president is trying to exploit Warren,”

First, reformulating political allegiances through using religious issues and religious figures has been one of the key strategies of the conservative movement (gay issues like Prop 8 the most contemporary case).  This isn’t just a pot/kettle hilarity…Bauer is pissed that Obama might do this too and that it is likely to work.

Second, Bauer is here clearly attempting to maintain the old divisions and polarities.  Do any of us want this stupid fucking metaphor of war to continue to be the frame in which we think and act?

Top dozen insights of Conservatives, 2008

It was a brutal year for the conservative movement, which at long last came crashing down after dominating American politics for nearly 30 years. One small consolation for at least some leading thinkers on the right is that they began to demonstrate perceptiveness that by and large eluded them in preceding years. Here are the top twelve insights of prominent conservatives in 2008:

P.J. O’ Rourke, The Weekly Standard

An entire generation has been born, grown up, and had families of its own since Ronald Reagan was elected. And where is the world we promised these children of the Conservative Age? Where is this land of freedom and responsibility, knowledge, opportunity, accomplishment, honor, truth, trust, and one boring hour each week spent in itchy clothes at church, synagogue, or mosque? It lies in ruins at our feet, as well it might, since we ourselves kicked the shining city upon a hill into dust and rubble.David Brooks, The New York Times

Now it’s just a circular firing squad with everybody attacking each other and no coherent belief system, no leaders. You got half the party waiting for Sarah Palin to come rescue them. The other half waiting for Bobby Jindal, the Louisiana governor, to come rescue them. But no set of beliefs, really a decayed conservative infrastructure. It’s just a world of pain.Matthew Continetti, The Weekly Standard

The GOP is shell-shocked from last month’s election results. The gains the party made in the years since the 1994 Republican revolution have been erased. Republicans are without a clear agenda. People say that Republicans don’t have any ideas, but that isn’t entirely true. They have plenty of ideas–but too many of them are about which part of their coalition is to blame for their current misfortunes.This sort of squabbling is less than useless. It’s inward-looking, woolly-headed, and only furthers the perception that the GOP is out of touch. Unfortunately, when Republicans have tried to be in touch, they’ve been tempted to be irresponsible. In September, more than a few were ready to risk the global banking system’s collapse in the hopes that they could ride anti-Wall Street populism to victory.

 

Alan Greenspan, former Federal Reserve chairman

I made a mistake in presuming that the self-interests of organizations, specifically banks and others, were such that they were best capable of protecting their own shareholders and their equity in the firms.The crisis is at two levels – the dreadful incompetence and incoherence of the Bush-Cheney administration, which has poisoned the Republican brand for more than one generation, and the emergence of inherent flaws in several strains of conservative thought.The banking crisis is so close to us and so unresolved it’s hard to see it in context, but I fear that Greenspan is right: it’s a huge flaw that cannot be explained away by government. The limits of hard power are, in fact, perfectly in line with conservatism’s deeper insights into human affairs, with Bush and Cheney acting more as over-reaching utopians than conservative statesmen. And the social conservatism problem has been a function of Christianism: an inability to shape society as it is because their theological doctrine demands adherence to eternal dogma not development of pragmatic policy. So we have their rigid refusal to countenance any legal abortion or any civil recognition of gay couples.

Grappling with any one of these problems would be serious enough. Untangling all three at once? The GOP had better hope Obama really screws up.

 

Rod Dreher, Beliefnet

There is a conservative Establishment — a political establishment, yes, but also a think-tank establishment and an opinion-leader establishment — that has become ossified in its thinking and, over time, more interested in policing its heretics than in thinking creatively about conservatism and its application to the challenges facing our nation and our culture at this particular time. That establishment is dying.Ross Douthat, The Atlantic

Conservatism in the United States faces a series of extremely knotty problems at the moment. How do you restrain the welfare state at a time when the entitlements we have are broadly popular, and yet their design puts them on a glide path to insolvency? How do you respond to the socioeconomic trends – wage stagnation, social immobility, rising health care costs, family breakdown, and so forth – that are slowly undermining support for the Reaganite model of low-tax capitalism? How do you sell socially-conservative ideas to a moderate middle that often perceives social conservatism as intolerant? How do you transform an increasingly white party with a history of benefiting from racially-charged issues into a party that can win majorities in an increasingly multiracial America? etc.Watching the McCain campaign, you’d barely even know that these problems exist, let alone that conservatives have any idea what to do about them.

 

Kathleen Parker, syndicated columnist
The movement created by that superelite, but never elitist, William F. Buckley Jr. was handed over to Joe Six-Pack. Know-nothingness was no longer a stigma, but a badge of honor. The Republican Party’s Baghdad Bobism with regard to Palin, a denial so pernicious that party operatives were willing to let her sit a heartbeat away from the presidency in a time of war and financial collapse, revealed what really ails the party. The ‘P Factor’ isn’t a single person but a sickness that will have to be acknowledged and cured–Republicans will be reciting their newly tailored principles only to themselves. 

David Frum, American Enterprise Institute

Sarah Palin symbolizes a party that has decided that we just don’t care about making the government work anymore.Colin Powell, former Secretary of State

Can we continue to listen to Rush Limbaugh? Is this really the kind of party that we want to be when these kinds of spokespersons seem to appeal to our lesser instincts rather that our better instincts?Rich Lowry, The National Review

Tuesday’s Republican debacle was, as the social scientists say, ‘over-determined.’ It had many causes. Was it brought on by congressional corruption, Bush administration incompetence, intellectual exhaustion or John McCain’s failings as a candidate? All of the above — and then some….One temptation will be to say that if only Republicans had stayed truer to the faith, especially on fiscal discipline, none of this would have happened. Earmarks unquestionably contributed to the culture of corruption that has so bedeviled Republicans in recent years. But fighting them became an overriding obsession of some conservatives and of McCain, as if opposing earmarks alone — 1 percent of federal spending — would constitute a winning economic agenda.

 

William Kristol, The Weekly Standard and The New York Times

I can’t help but admire some of my fellow conservatives’ loyalty to the small-government cause. It reminds me of the nobility of Tennyson’s Light Brigade, as it charges into battle: ‘Theirs but to do and die.’ Maybe it would be better, though, first to reason why.

Andrew Sullivan, The Atlantic

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/12/19/the_top_dozen_insights_of_cons/#more

“Kiss and tell”, what a lousy metaphor in politics

Matthew Miller writes today in a WP op ed that:

But if the next president really wants to transform the culture of Washington, he’ll go further and close down another revolving door: the ability of top aides to cash in by peddling tales of what they saw.

Scott McLellan and George Stephanopoulos are among the most notorious recent examples of this breed. No amount of money or media acclaim can erase the stain that comes from being a close presidential adviser who chooses to trade confidential conversations for dough while the president is still in office.

Miller goes on to, predicitably, use the word “betrayal” and the metaphor “kiss and tell” as descriptors of the activity he criticizes.  And he’s got it all just about 180 degrees wrong.  Keeping secrets isn’t going to change the “culture of Washington”, it will function to maintain it.

Governance, that is, the acceptance of a role wherebye one is to take on the responsibility to represent the best interests of the citizens foremost is not the same species of thing as a adolescent romantic relationship.  We know why young males (particulary) kiss and tell.  And it isn’t the same set of motivations as a government whistle-blower or a political historian.   Nor are the consequences even remotely comparable, except perhaps in the perceptions of a Washington insider whose perks and position are at risk when someone turns the lights on.

We need more people who’ve functioned within government to write books and reveal internal workings and events, not less.  We need far more DiLulio’s and Richard Clarkes and Scott McClellans, not less.   We need more civil servants who understand that “betrayal” of a party or a political boss is a duty where democracy, law, and true accounts of events are concerned.

Miller’s values here are the values of a Washington insider - stick together and protect ourselves and our position.   I don’t know this guy, but I don’t like him already.

His op ed is here…    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/05/AR2008120503170.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

 

update:  Glenn Greenwald writes about this Op Ed as well.  As usual, it’s excellent.  http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2008/12/07/secrecy/

Claude Levi-Strauss turns 100

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/29/books/29levi.html?8dpc

Though I took a number of anthropology and sociology couses when I was at university, I was never assigned to read any of this famous anthropologists writings.  But one professor introduced me to a thesis for which this man is known and I’ve found it an extremely useful tool to help understand why we behave as we do.

His proposition held that the human mind builds a woldview or establishes meaning using a structure of binary opposites; us/them, good/bad, dark/light, sacred/profane, clean/unclean, loyal/traitorous, etc.

It seems to me that whatever else might be going on in the functioning of our minds, this structural basis is real.  This does seem to describe something very fundamental about how we do the job of thinking, assigning meanings and assiging values. 

An observation that I’ve made in the decades since I bumped into Levi-Strauss’ thesis is that individuals vary in their ability to assume some more complicated or nuanced means to think about things.  We all know people who, for whatever set of reasons, have difficulty getting past black/white conceptualizations (e.g., “you’re with us or against us”).

In terms of politics and the uses of propaganda, we can see pretty quickly that a fundamental goal will be to cast issues (or people or policies etc) in these simplistic black/white opposites.  Acknowledgement of complexity and nuance works against simplification, of course.  When we use words like ‘primitive’ or ‘coarse’ to describe political rhetoric, what we are referring to is this intention to cast matters in the unsophisticated terms of either/or. 

Populist rhetoric is absolutely filled with this sort of casting of things.  Read any transcript of Hannity, Limbaugh etc with this in mind, and it puts them in an altogether interesting light.

It also helps us understand, I think, why some americans fall so much more easily than others to the myth of American exceptionalism.  Clearly, it is much simpler (as a cognitive task) to ignore the serious complexity of adjudicating or evaluating America’s footprint on the world and to simply assume it must be positive.

update/edit… It strikes me too that this urge for clear and simple binary oppositions is manifested in those who appear to desire or need or prefer (whatever word is best) a solid distinction between the genders.  That would also have a consequence for their acceptance or rejection of the complexity and nuance associated with same-sex relationships.

And, did we know… these to guys are cousins? They are.

 

 

jerry-lee-lewis     jimmy-swaggart

 

Nothing tells the tale of ”Middle America” quite so openly as this family.  It’s quite refreshing in its illumination, if you think about it. 

It’s a tale about preachers.  And scalliwags.  Which are the same category.

Insight – the “intellectual elite” notion

Every now and again, we bump into an idea that resolves a puzzle or clarifies a confusion. 

Modern conservative movement propaganda forwards a number of key notions, evident through their constant repetition and broad dissemination (lots of different voices used to forward them).  Effectively promoted, they become received wisdom within the community that inhales this stuff which, of course, is precisely the goal.

One example of this is that the mainstream media is unfairly biased against conservatives/conservatism.  Limbaugh has been probably the most vociferous advocate forwarding this notion.  How extreme does he get? 

The Republican base considers the media to be part of the enemy that has to be defeated and overcome.

But here I want to look at another notion…that there is an “intellectual elite” who look down their noses at and despise “normal” or “real” Americans.  They are to be found, we are told, in universities, Massechusetts, New York, large cities in general, California, “high brow” publications and the mainstream media. 

One can properly see this as a continuing expression of a very old populist strain in America (see Hofstadter particularly) supported by a desire for local political autonomy as well as a defence by some religious communities against the encroachment of secular ideas.  So, there was already a rich soil in the US for cultivation of this notion of “intellectual elites” seeking to over-ride the “knowledge” and “wisdom” and “liberty” of the common folk.

But in the modern conservative world, this notion is asserted every day.  If you can find a Limbaugh transcript for any day of the last five years which doesn’t contain it, I’ll send you five bucks.  It is an absolutely predictable mantra of the voices on the right.

One obvious and commonly-noted function achieved in this particular propaganda strategy is to isolate and self-validate the community of listeners Limbaugh and others like him have cultivated.  “You don’t have to be concerned”, the message says, “with people who have prestigous degrees (this phrase will be spat out like a nasty bug that somehow got in the speaker’s mouth) or listen to people who read lots of books (which were written by others with prestigious degrees) or listen to “the authorities” .  They are all snooty elitists, full of themselves, without “common sense” and they despise you and your faith and your values, etc.  Ignore them and your inherent goodness and wisdom will prevail.  Attend to them and you will be seduced into falsehoods and un-Americanness and then you and your family will surely come to great and destructive peril.   

This all serves to insulate the audience from opposing or alternate ideas.  It keeps the ‘base’ in the fold, keeps them angry at and fearful of some distant class of people who are “different” and are “in control”.  Importantly, it also serves to define a difference between Democrats/liberals and Republicans/conservatives. 

It also serves, as we can see presently with Limbaugh (and others doing the same set of propaganda functions) to provide a rationale for why those allies previously in the Republican/conservative community who are now speaking in the voice of apostates (Powell, Buckley, Noonan, Brooks, etc) deserve to be ignored…they are part of the snooty “intellectual elite” or they have become infected/seduced by it (validating and magnifying the peril of moving even an inch away from doctrinal truths and prior alliances). 

But now here, finally, is the idea I’ve just bumped into which fills in an important puzzle piece, for me at least.  It helps us understand the odd and quite counter-intuitive coalition of business, religion and populism (the latter defined as discourse or ideas which pit “the people” against “the elites”).   

To gain and hold power, conservatives must also frustrate the possibiliity that one pillar of the base will see another as a threat to its fundamental values.  The base melts down if the traditional Democratic attack – that the Republican Party is the party of the few – resonates sufficiently with social conservatives to turn them against the policies that disproportionately benefit wealthy business conservatives.  Seeking that wedge, Democratic presidential nominee Al Gore argued in 2000 that the tax policies of his opponent, Governor George W. Bush, favored the upper 1% of income earners.  Democrats also position their party as the party of the middle class, and by implication not the party of the poor, by promising “middle-class tax cuts” and assuring audiences that they will only raise taxes on the rich.  In this Democratic configuration of the world, social conservatives who do not share the values or the wealth of the Wall Street business conservatives are invited to see conservatism as an ideology of wealthy, amoral elites.  “So ‘middle-class’ tax cuts, even phony ones, are offered as a ‘wedge’ to divide middle -income earners from the greedy ‘rich.’” obseved the [Wall Street] Journal of the Clinton campaign of 1992.  “The theme of resentment – encapsulated in the word ‘fairness’ – is designed to break voters away from the opportunity based coalition of Ronald Reagan and, at least in 1988, of George Bush.”

In a skillful act of redefinition, conservatives sidestep that alternative by substituting a more threatening “cultural elite” – one that is godless, patronizing, and a threat to every value social conservatives cherish.  Doing so requires disassociating the notion of ”elite” from that of “the wealthy” and attaching it instead to those who embrace “liberal” social values.  The dispacement of one elite by another gains traction if at the same time the beneficiaries of Republican tax policies are cast as residing on Main Street, not Wall Street, and defined as the owners of “small businesses” and “family farms,” not “giant corporations” and ”agribusiness.”  (Echo Chamber, Jamieson and Cappella, p 63-64)  

I find this a brilliant insight.  Notice too, how it helps us understand why the conservative movement voices push the notion of Reagonomics (trickle down theory…let the big boys get really wealthy and the “rising tide will lift all boats”.  The present post-election rhetoric from these people is marked by threats that if Obama is to repeal Bush’s tax cuts (to the very wealthy) then nothing but mayhem and disaster will strike the economy.  And (importantly) this will result in what will effectively be a tax raise on the middle class.