Lord Obama
By Victor Davis Hanson in PJ
Media
If we were living in normal times, the following scandals and
failures — without going into foreign policy — would have ruined a presidency
to the point of reducing it to Nixon, Bush, or Truman poll ratings.
Think of the following: the Fast and Furious scandal, the VA mess,
the tapping of the communications of the Associated Press reporters, the NSA
monitoring, Benghazi in all of its manifestations, the serial lies about
Obamacare, the failed stimuli, the chronic zero interest/print money policies,
the serial high unemployment, the borrowing of $7 trillion to no stimulatory
effect, the spiraling national debt, the customary violations of the Hatch Act
by Obama cabinet officials, the alter ego/fake identity of EPA head Lisa
Jackson, the sudden departure of Hilda Solis after receiving union freebies,
the mendacity of Kathleen Sebelius, the strange atmospherics surrounding the
Petraeus resignation, the customary presidential neglect of enforcing the laws
from immigration statutes to his own health care rules, the presidential
divisiveness (“punish our enemies,” “you didn’t build that,” Trayvon as the son
that Obama never had, etc.), and on and on.
So why is there not much public reaction or media investigatory
outrage?
In one sense there is: an iconic, landmark president was ushered
into office with a supermajority in the Senate and a solidly Democratic House,
at a time the public felt angry over the Iraq war and the 2008 financial
meltdown. Six years later, Obama’s poll ratings bottomed out at about 43%. He
lost the House in 2010, and he probably will see the Senate gone in 2014. But
that said, amid such failure Obama will never descend to 30% approval ratings,
and that again bring to mind the question: why?
Obvious answers:
1) His record support among minorities will not change since
70-90% of various hyphenated groups see the Obama tenure as long-overdue
representation of their own interests — economic, ethnic, and symbolic. It does
no good to cite rising unemployment rates among African-Americans or a
deterioration in household income among Latinos. The point is that Obama feels
their pain, even if his policies helped cause it. In this view, expecting
blacks, to take one example, to defect from Obama would be as if right-wing
rural Texans would have abandoned Bush in 2006, or the Malibu set would have
given up on Clinton during Monicagate. In short — unlikely.
2) The media is not just overwhelmingly hard left, but hard left with a chip on its shoulder that its own views are neither
accepted by the majority nor usually implemented by government.
All the above scandals and embarrassments would have ruined a
Bush, given that such mishaps would have been headlined daily in the New
York Times (e.g., “VA, Benghazi, AP, NSA, IRS overwhelm sinking Bush
administration”) or Washington Post (“Bush Cabinet Paralyzed by
Scandal”).
For the media, Obama is not Jimmy Carter or even Bill Clinton whom they overwhelmingly supported. He is
quite different — the first gold-plated liberal president since FDR, and probably the last for a while,
intent on fundamentally transforming the United States, by redistributing income and accumulated wealth,
and recalibrating the American profile abroad.
The media believes that both are socially just and long overdue.
Why then nitpick a president on details, when his intentions are noble?
Extraordinary ends sometimes require tawdry means. Note here: when Obama leaves
office, and should he be replaced by a Republican president, then we will see a
press playing catch-up, intent on restoring its shattered image by exposing
cabinet members who violate the Hatch Act and the insidious revolving door between Wall Street/
banking and White House billets. But for now, the media is invested in seeing
Obama as a once-in-a-lifetime emissary of its own politics.
3) The well-off are indifferent to the Obama record, interested
only in its symbolic resonance. Doctrinaire liberalism resonates mostly with
the very wealthy. We see that by the voting patterns of our bluest counties, or
the contributions of the very affluent. In contrast, Republicanism is mostly
embedded within the middle class and upper middle class, while liberalism is a
coalition of the affluent and the poor.
The result is that the Kerrys, Gores, and Pelosis are dittoed by
millions of the affluent in Malibu, Silicon Valley, the Upper West Side, the
university towns, Chicago, academia, the arts, highest finance, corporate
America, foundations, the media, etc. Their income and accumulated wealth
exempt them from worries about economic slowdowns, too much regulation, higher
taxes, or the price of gas, electricity, or food. That under Obama gasoline has
gone from $1.80 a gallon to $4.10 is as irrelevant as it is relevant that he
has so far not built the Keystone Pipeline. That the price of meat has
skyrocketed or that power bills are way up means little if global warming is at
last addressed by more government.
For the liberal grandee, there is a margin of safety to ensure
that the California legislature takes up questions like prohibiting the sale of
Confederate insignia or ensuring restrooms for the transgendered or shutting
down irrigated acreage to please the delta smelt. In their view, Obama
represents their utopian dreams where an anointed
technocracy, exempt from the messy ramifications of its own ideology, directs
from on high a socially just society — diverse, green, non-judgmental, neutral
abroad, tribal at home — in which an equality of result is ensured, albeit with
proper exemptions for the better educated and more sophisticated, whose perks
are necessary to give them proper downtime for their exhausting work on our
behalf.
But one objects that these one-percenters — the Steyer brothers,
the Sean Penns, the George Soroses, the Paul Krugmans, the Al Gores, etc. — are
very few. Yes, but these few million are enormously influential, given that
their money and ideologies are manifested not just in nice homes, vacations,
and perks, but in public venues, movies, universities, newspaper editorials,
NPR, PBS, the major networks, foundations, PACs, political donations, etc.
I leave you with one final paradox. Is one reason that Obama resonates
so well with the very wealthy his assurance to them that the muscular
successful classes will not be following them into the elite?
Whom does the liberal elite detest? Not the very poor. Not the
middle class. Not the conservative wealthy of like class. Mostly it is the
Sarah-Palin-type grasping want-to-be’s (thus the vicious David Letterman jokes
or Katie Couric animus or Bill Maher venom).
Those of the entrepreneurial class who own small
businesses (‘you didn’t build that’), who send their kids to San Diego State
rather than Stanford, who waste their ill-gotten gains on jet skis rather than
skis and on Winnebagos rather than mountain climbing equipment, who employ 10
rather than 10,000, and who vacation at Pismo Beach rather than Carmel. The
cool of Obama says to the very wealthy, “I’m one of you. See you again next
summer on the Vineyard.”
Obama signals to the elite that he too is bothered by those
non-arugula-eating greedy losers who are xenophobic and angry that the world
left them behind, who are without tastes and culture, who are materialistic to
the core, and who are greedy in their emphases on the individual — the
tea-baggers, the clingers, the Cliven Bundy Neanderthals, the Palins in their
Alaska haunts, and the Duck Dynasty freaks. These are not the sort
of successful people that we want to the world to associate with America, not
when we have suitably green, suitably diverse zillionaires who know where to
eat in Paris.
Finally, Obama has “cool.” Or what his wife calls “swag.” The very wealthy are with him also
because he instructs them how to indulge, to ignore the problems of others, to
be narcissistic and self-absorbed with a veneer of hipster cool. Golf, shoot
hoops, wear shades, hang with Jay-Z and Beyonce, talk about your rap menu on
your iPhone, fluctuate your cadences, do you Final Four predictions — all that
means you can be cool and very rich and very self-absorbed while fooling hoi
polloi and feeling great about your privilege at the same time. If you are a
jean- and T-shirt wearing Silicon magnifico, Obama is your guy. The palatial
estate, the imported cars, the indulgent hobbies — they are not really
one-percenter excesses (try water skiing for that), but the swag that assures
others that outsourcing, offshoring, tax-avoiding, lobbying, and insider
cronyism are just part of the hip deal.
Before we reach November of 2016, we will see unimaginable things
under this administration, but one of them will not be a defection of his
constituencies.
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