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September 29, 2012

The Great Disconnect

Mark Lilla in The New York Times:

Lilla-articleLargeOnce upon a time there was a radical president who tried to remake American society through government action. In his first term he created a vast network of federal grants to state and local governments for social programs that cost billions. He set up an imposing agency to regulate air and water emissions, and another to regulate workers’ health and safety. Had Congress not stood in his way he would have gone much further. He tried to establish a guaranteed minimum income for all working families and, to top it off, proposed a national health plan that would have provided government insurance for low-income families, required employers to cover all their workers and set standards for private insurance. Thankfully for the country, his second term was cut short and his collectivist dreams were never realized.

His name was Richard Nixon.

Whenever conservatives talk to me about Barack Obama, I always feel quite certain that they mean something else. But what exactly? The anger, the suspicion, the freestyle fantasizing have no perceptible object in the space-time continuum that centrist Democrats like me inhabit. What are we missing? Seen from our perspective, the country elected a moderate and cautious straight shooter committed to getting things right and giving the United States its self-­respect back after the Bush-Cheney years. Unlike the crybabies at MSNBC and Harper’s Magazine, we never bought into the campaign’s hollow “hope and change” rhetoric, so aren’t crushed that, well, life got in the way. At most we hoped for a sensible health care program to end the scandal of America’s uninsured, and were relieved that Obama proposed no other grand schemes of Nixonian scale. We liked him for his political liberalism and instinctual conservatism. And we still like him.

But more than a few of our fellow citizens are loathing themselves blind over Barack Obama. Why?

More here.

Posted by Azra Raza at 06:34 AM | Permalink

Comments

Wonderful book review, worth emailing to reasonable friends and relatives of the conservative persuasion. Anything that helps mute the hysteria would be helpful at this point.

Posted by: Susan | Sep 29, 2012 2:21:38 PM

I agree that it was a fine book review. But I wonder why the reviewer did not suggest, even in passing, that racism has a role in the right's hysteria over Obama.

Posted by: David Hammer | Sep 29, 2012 2:30:55 PM

OK, this is purely anecdotal, but here goes: I know a few ppl who seem to have serious obama-derangement-syndrome, but who are not consciously racist at all. Even if we do the proper leftist thing and ascribe their beliefs to hidden and unconscious racism, it would have to be buried very deep under other bullcrap. I am not saying there are no racists out there going nuts about Obama because he is half-African, but I think on the left fringe its become too much of a convenient one-stop explanation.
It may not be a USEFUL explanation. I get the impression that the same people i know are equally deranged about all-White Hillary Clinton and seem to be pretty much deranged about a lot of other centrist democrats. Racism isnt the whole story here.

Posted by: omar | Sep 29, 2012 2:48:57 PM

"Race and Obama getting elected" make a different topic from "Race and Obama holding onto the presidency." For a black man to be elected was a historical inevitability -- it remained only to be seen which man, which year. For a black man to preside, and get re-elected, is altogether another story.

While I am not a person of color, I am a student of history who grew up in the Civil Rights era in Texas. Believe me -- for a black man to hold onto power, as Obama bids fair to do, is a rough, rough ride that speaks to a level of racism white folks cannot find in themselves even with an electron microscope. But it's there. No one needs to speak of it because it is acted out rather than discussed. If you want to look at the language that gives it voice, listen for qualities of condescension and terror.

Posted by: Elatia Harris | Sep 29, 2012 5:07:22 PM

It's true that racism plays an exceptional role in Obama-hatred and it is also true that the racism is joined by the existing scare politics and liberal-baiting that ran through the latter half of 20th century America. On the populist level, Limbaugh, et. al., were sounding the fear and alarm sirens long before a black man ran for president. This anti-liberal scare rhetoric, with its Straussian foundations, seems to characterize the book Mark Lilla is reviewing -- which might explain the absence of racism from his analysis.

It looks like the only way Romney can win is for his side to paint the calm, sober-sided Obama as something truly monstrous. About a dozen anti-Obama books have recently been released. The TV ads in the last few weeks before the election should be doozies.

Elatia, I agree with you that the racism component sends a huge, loaded charge into the existing swirl of emotions, and that "our" (white folks') reluctance to acknowledge our own traces of racism places it deeply into the territory of the irrational subconscious. Having lived my life in "the north," I view my own remnants of racism as one of many snobbish misconceptions I've had to overcome on the (lifelong) path to some kind of genuine humanity and spiritual maturity. But like many northerners, I've sensed the intensity and complexity of race relations in the South. I recently finished a couple of Faulkner novels, August Light and Absolom, Absolom! that (if Faulkner's fiction is based in truth) drive home the schizophrenic, even mystical, enmeshment of blacks and whites in the Deep South. It's not hard to imagine how charged the Obama presidency would be to Southern whites.

Posted by: Susan | Sep 29, 2012 8:03:34 PM

... and now that my comment is posted, I see that I misspelled Absalom Absalom!. So it goes.

Posted by: Susan | Sep 29, 2012 8:08:27 PM

To see why President Obama makes them so terribly afraid, just walk into any elementary school classroom and look at the progression of Presidential photos stretching along the wall above the blackboard. It's not (in every case) specifically that he is "blah", as one of them put it, but that he forces them to confront what they know is true: the growing multiculturalism and diversity in today's America may finally be represented among the ruling elite. And with that comes the death of their most cherished myth that, despite the demographics they are hiding from, they will always remain comfortably in control of a country in which they are, thankfully, now only a withering minority.

Posted by: melior | Sep 30, 2012 1:53:27 PM

Sorry, but I really don't see the racism angle playing out very cleanly or compellingly. "those" people hated Bill and Hill with the same passion, and the most vocal and angry of them seem to adore people like Thomas Sowell, Col. Allen West, Condi Rice, Colin Powell, Alan Keyes, Mia Love, Roy Innis, etc.. Their equivalents on the left despise Bush and Romney to an identical extreme, and treat Sowell, West, Rice and Thomas et al to some very disconcerting racial stereotyping. All is fair in love and war, but nothing's fair about politics.

Posted by: Carlos | Sep 30, 2012 3:31:03 PM

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