Hillary "Shot-and-a-Beer" Clinton has given us the perfect illustration of what's so insane about American politics: the philosophical dictum that could be summed up (with apologies to Descartes) as "I seem, therefore I am."
Clinton spent the weekend bashing Barack Obama for not seeming to be enough of a regular guy -- not for any actual deficit of regular-guyness, mind you, but for giving the impression that such a deficit might exist.
The former first lady, whose family has made $109 million since her husband left the White House, then made a show of demonstrating that she's actually just a regular gal. The point wasn't really to convince anyone that she, Bill and Chelsea commute between their two lavish mansions in a five-year-old Ford F-150 pickup with a gun rack and a "Jesus Rocks!" bumper sticker. Her aim was to prove to the nation -- or at least to Democratic primary voters in Pennsylvania and Indiana -- that she's better at feigning regularness than Obama.
This is how we pick a president?
The whole charade is just inane and, frankly, stupid. We've got Hillary and her 100 million and McCain and his (probably) several hundred million* patronizing voters and pretending they understand what blue collar American's lives are like. On top of that we have our elite press corp, based out of New York and Washingon D.C., telling us how blue collar American's will feel about Obama's remarks. As if these talking heads weren't millionaire coastal elites and instead lived in places like Peoria, Des Moines and Scranton.
The preening media, the condescending candidates - it's all just a big kabuki and it's pretty damn insulting. Far more insulting than anything Obama has said.
Former Clinton Labor secretary Robert Reich commented on this Sunday,
*We just have to guess at how much McCain's wife is worth as he has not released his tax returns. The media hounded the Clinton's for months about their tax returns and there has been nary a peep about McCain. Your liberal media at work.Are Americans who have been left behind frustrated? Of course. And their frustrations, their anger and, yes, sometimes their bitterness, have been used since then -- by demagogues, by nationalists and xenophobes, by radical conservatives, by political nuts and fanatical fruitcakes – to blame immigrants and foreign traders, to blame blacks and the poor, to blame "liberal elites," to blame anyone and anything.
Rather than counter all this, the American media have wallowed in it. Some, like Fox News and talk radio, have given the haters and blamers their very own megaphones. The rest have merely "reported on" it. Instead of focusing on how to get Americans good jobs again; instead of admitting too many of our schools are failing and our kids are falling behind their contemporaries in Europe, Japan, and even China; instead of showing why we need a more progressive tax system to finance better schools and access to health care, and green technologies that might create new manufacturing jobs, our national discussion has been mired in the old politics.
Listen to this morning’s “Meet the Press” if you want an example. Tim Russert, one of the smartest guys on television, interviewed four political consultants – Carville and Matalin, Bob Schrum, and Michael Murphy. Political consultants are paid huge sums to help politicians spin words and avoid real talk. They’re part of the problem. And what do Russert and these four consultants talk about? The potential damage to Barack Obama from saying that lots of people in Pennsylvania are bitter that the economy has left them behind; about HRC’s spin on Obama’s words (he’s an “elitist,” she said); and John McCain’s similarly puerile attack.
Does Russert really believe he’s doing the nation a service for this parade of spin doctors talking about potential spins and the spin-offs from the words Obama used to state what everyone knows is true? Or is Russert merely in the business of selling TV airtime for a network that doesn’t give a hoot about its supposed commitment to the public interest but wants to up its ratings by pandering to the nation’s ongoing desire for gladiator entertainment instead of real talk about real problems.We’re heading into the worst economic crisis in a half century or more. Many of the Americans who have been getting nowhere for decades are in even deeper trouble. Large numbers of people in Pennsylvania and across the nation are losing their homes and losing their jobs, and the situation is likely to grow worse. Consumers are at the end of their ropes, fuel and food costs are skyrocketing, they can’t go deeper into debt, they can’t pay their bills. They aren’t buying, which means every business from the auto industry to housing to even giant GE is hurting. Which means they’ll begin laying off more people, and as they do, we will experience an even more dangerous downward spiral.
Bitter? You ain’t seen nothing yet...
1 comment:
Quoting Tim:
"The whole charade is just inane and, frankly, stupid. We've got Hillary and her 100 million and McCain and his (probably) several hundred million* patronizing voters and pretending they understand what blue collar American's lives are like. On top of that we have our elite press corp, based out of New York and Washingon D.C., telling us how blue collar American's will feel about Obama's remarks. As if these talking heads weren't millionaire coastal elites and instead lived in places like Peoria, Des Moines and Scranton.
The preening media, the condescending candidates - it's all just a big kabuki and it's pretty damn insulting. Far more insulting than anything Obama has said."
Great points and I agree with absolutely everything you are saying here except the comparison with Kabuki. I think you owe Kabuki an apology.
And on the subject of Japan, if you really want to feel shitty about the U.S. healthcare system, listen to this NPR segment on the Japanese healthcare system:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=89626309
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