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America Under Barack Obama: An Interview with Nat Hentoff
Sebeka (MN) Review-Messenger ^ | 12/11/2009 | John W. Whitehead

Posted on 12/13/2009 6:42:18 AM PST by markomalley

"I try to avoid hyperbole, but I think Obama is possibly the most dangerous and destructive president we have ever had."—Nat Hentoff

Nat HentoffNat Hentoff has had a life well spent, one chock full of controversy fueled by his passion for the protection of civil liberties and human rights. Hentoff is known as a civil libertarian, free speech activist, anti-death penalty advocate, pro-lifer and not uncommon critic of the ideological left.

At 84, Nat Hentoff is an American classic who has never shied away from an issue. For example, he defended a woman rejected from law school because she was Caucasian; called into a talk show hosted by Oliver North to agree with him on liberal intolerance for free speech; was a friend to the late Malcolm X; and wrote the liner notes for Bob Dylan's second album.

A self-described uncategorizable libertarian, Hentoff adds he is also a “Jewish atheist, civil libertarian, pro-lifer.” Accordingly, he has angered nearly every political faction and remains one of a few who has stuck to his principles through his many years of work, regardless of the trouble it stirred up. For instance, when he announced his opposition to abortion he alienated numerous colleagues, and his outspoken denunciation of President Bill Clinton only increased his isolation in liberal circles (He said that Clinton had "done more harm to the Constitution than any president in American history," and called him "a serial violator of our liberties.").

Born in Boston on June 10, 1925, Hentoff received a B.A. with honors from Northeastern University and did graduate work at Harvard. From 1953 to 1957, he was associate editor of Down Beat magazine. He has written many books on jazz, biographies and novels, including children's books. His articles have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Commonwealth, the New Republic, the Atlantic and the New Yorker, where he was a staff writer for more than 25 years. In 1980, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in Education and an American Bar Association Silver Gavel Award for his coverage of the law and criminal justice in his columns. In 1985, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Laws by Northeastern University. For 50 years, Hentoff wrote a weekly column for the Village Voice. But that publication announced that he had been terminated on December 31, 2008. In February 2009, Hentoff joined the Cato Institute as a Senior Fellow.

Hentoff's views on the rights of Americans to write, think and speak freely are expressed in his columns. He is also an authority on First Amendment defense, the Bill of Rights, the Supreme Court, students' rights and education. Friends and critics alike describe him as the kind of writer, and citizen, that all should aspire to be—"less interested in 'exclusives' than in 'making a difference.'" Critiquing Hentoff's autobiography, Speaking Freely, Nicholas von Hoffman refers to him as "a trusting man, a gentle man, just and undeviatingly consistent."

Hentoff took to heart the words from his mentor, I. F. "Izzy" Stone, the renowned investigative journalist who died in 1989: "If you're in this business because you want to change the world, get another day job. If you are able to make a difference, it will come incrementally, and you might not even know about it. You have to get the story and keep on it because it has to be told."

Nat Hentoff has earned the well-deserved reputation of being one of our nation's most respected, controversial and uncompromising writers. He began his career at the Village Voice because he wanted a place to write freely on anything he cared about. And his departure from the publication has neither dampened his zeal nor tempered his voice.

Hentoff, whose new book, At the Jazz Band Ball—Sixty Years on the Jazz Scene (University of California Press), is due out in 2010, took some time to speak with me about Barack Obama, the danger of his health care plan, the peril of civil liberties, and a host of other issues.

John W. Whitehead: When Barack Obama was a U.S. Senator in 2005, he introduced a bill to limit the Patriot Act. Now that he is president, he has endorsed the Patriot Act as is. What do you think happened with Obama?

Nat Hentoff: I try to avoid hyperbole, but I think Obama is possibly the most dangerous and destructive president we have ever had. An example is ObamaCare, which is now embattled in the Senate. If that goes through the way Obama wants, we will have something very much like the British system. If the American people have their health care paid for by the government, depending on their age and their condition, they will be subject to a health commission just like in England which will decide if their lives are worth living much longer.

In terms of the Patriot Act, and all the other things he has pledged he would do, such as transparency in government, Obama has reneged on his promises. He pledged to end torture, but he has continued the CIA renditions where you kidnap people and send them to another country to be interrogated. Why is Obama doing that if he doesn't want torture anymore? Throughout Obama's career, he promised to limit the state secrets doctrine which the Bush-Cheney administration had abused enormously. The Bush administration would go into court on any kind of a case that they thought might embarrass them and would argue that it was a state secret and the case should not be continued. Obama is doing the same thing, even though he promised not to.

So in answer to your question, I am beginning to think that this guy is a phony. Obama seems to have no firm principles that I can discern that he will adhere to. His only principle is his own aggrandizement. This is a very dangerous mindset for a president to have.

JW: Do you consider Obama to be worse than George W. Bush?

NH: Oh, much worse. Bush essentially came in with very little qualifications for presidency, not only in terms of his background but he lacked a certain amount of curiosity, and he depended entirely too much on people like Rumsfeld, Cheney and others. Bush was led astray and we were led astray. However, I never thought that Bush himself was, in any sense, "evil." I am hesitant to say this about Obama. Obama is a bad man in terms of the Constitution. The irony is that Obama was a law professor at the University of Chicago. He would, most of all, know that what he is doing weakens the Constitution.

In fact, we have never had more invasions of privacy than we have now. The Fourth Amendment is on life support and the chief agent of that is the National Security Agency. The NSA has the capacity to keep track of everything we do on the phone and on the internet. Obama has done nothing about that. In fact, he has perpetuated it. He has absolutely no judicial supervision of all of this. So all in all, Obama is a disaster.

JW: Obama is not reversing the Bush policies as he promised. But even in light of this, many on the Left are very, very quiet about Obama. Why is that?

NH: I am an atheist, although I very much admire and have been influenced by many traditionally religious people. I say this because the Left has taken what passes for their principles as an absolute religion. They don't think anymore. They just react. When they have somebody like Obama whom they put into office, they believed in the religious sense and, of course, that is a large part of the reason for their silence on these issues. They are very hesitant to criticize Obama, but that is beginning to change. Even on the cable network MSNBC, some of the strongest proponents of Obama are now beginning to question, if I may use their words, their "deity."

JW: Is the so-called health commission that you referred to earlier what some people are referring to as death panels? Is that too strong a word?

NH: That term was used with hyperbole about the parts of the health care bill where doctors are mandated, if people are on Medicare and of a certain age or in serious physical condition, to counsel them on their end-of-life alternatives. I don't believe that was a death panel. It was done to get the Medicare doctors to not spend too much money on them. The death panel issue arose with Tom Daschle, who was originally going to be the Health Czar. Daschle became enamored with the British system and wrote a book about health care, which influenced President Obama.

In England, you have what I would call government-imposed euthanasia. Under the British healthcare system, there is a commission that decides whether or not, based on your age and physical condition, the government should continue to pay for your health. That leads to the government not doing it and you gradually or suddenly die. The present Stimulus Bill sets up the equivalent commission in the United States similar to that which is in England. The tipoff was months ago on the ABC network. President Obama was given a full hour to describe and endorse his health plan. A woman in the audience asked Obama about her mother. Her mother was, I believe, 101 years old and was in need of a certain kind of procedure. Her doctor didn't want to do it because of her age. However, another doctor did and told this woman there is a joy of life in this person. The woman asked President Obama how he would deal with this sort of thing, and Obama said we cannot consider the joy of life in this situation. He said I would advise her to take a pain killer. That is the essence of the President of the United States.

JW: Do you think Obama is shallow?

NH: It's much worse than that. Obama has little, if any, principles except to aggrandize and make himself more and more important. You see that in his foreign policy. Obama lacks a backbone—both a constitutional backbone and a personal backbone. This is a man who is causing us and will cause us a great deal of harm constitutionally and personally. I say personally because I am 84 years old, and this is the first administration that has scared me in terms of my lifespan.

JW: But he is praised for his charisma and great smile. He can make people believe things just by his personality.

NH: That was a positive factor in his election. A good many people voted for Obama, and I'm not only talking about the black vote. A lot of people voted for Obama because of our history of racial discrimination in this country. They felt good even though they didn't really know much about him and may have had some doubts. But at least they showed the world we could elect a black president. And that is still part of what he is riding on. Except that, too, is diminishing. In the recent Virginia election, the black vote diminished. Now why was that? I think a lot of black folks are wondering what this guy is really going to do, not only for them but for the country. If the country is injured, they will be injured. That may be sinking in.

JW: One of the highest unemployment rates in the country is among African-Americans.

NH: Not only that, the general unemployment rate is going to continue for a long time and for all of us. I have never heard so many heart-wrenching stories of all kinds of people all across the economic spectrum. As usual, the people who are poorest—the blacks, Hispanics and disabled people—are going to suffer more than anyone else under the Obama administration. This is a dishonest administration, because it is becoming clear that the unemployment statistics of the Obama administration are not believable. I can't think of a single area where Obama is not destructive.

JW: A lot of people we represent and I talk to feel that their government does not hear them, that their representatives do not listen to them anymore. As a result, you have these Tea Party protests which the Left has criticized. What do you think of the Tea Party protests?

NH: I spent a lot of time studying our Founders and people like Samuel Adams and the original Tea Party. What Adams and the Sons of Liberty did in Boston was spread the word about the abuses of the British. They had Committees of Correspondence that got the word out to the colonies. We need Committees of Correspondence now, and we are getting them. That is what is happening with the Tea Parties. I wrote a column called "The Second American Revolution" about the fact that people are acting for themselves as it happened with the Sons of Liberty which spread throughout the colonies. That was a very important awakening in this country. A lot of people in the adult population have a very limited idea as to why they are Americans, why we have a First Amendment or a Bill of Rights.

JW: Less than 3% of high school students can pass the immigration test while over 90% of people from foreign countries can pass it. The questions are simple—such as, "What is the supreme law of the land?" or "Who wrote the Declaration of Independence?" Civic education in the United States is basically dead.

NH: I have been in schools around the country, and I have written on education for years. Once, I was once doing a profile on Justice William Brennan and I was in his chambers, and Brennan asked, "How do we get the words of the Bill of Rights into the lives of the students?" Well, it is not difficult. You tell them stories. When I speak to students, I tell them why we have a First Amendment. I tell them about the Committees of Correspondence. I tell them how in a secret meeting of the Raleigh Tavern in Virginia, Thomas Jefferson and Patrick Henry, who did not agree with each other, started a Committee of Correspondence.

Young people get very excited when they hear why they are Americans. It is not hard to do. We hear talk now about reforming public education. There are billions of dollars at stake for such a reform. But I have not heard Arne Duncan, who is the U.S. Education Secretary, mention once the civic illiteracy in the country.

JW: Adults are constitutionally illiterate as well.

NH: A few years ago, I was lecturing at the Columbia Journalism School of Education. I asked them about what was happening to the Fourth Amendment. I said, "By the way, do you know what is in the Fourth Amendment?" One student responded, "Is that the right to bear arms?" It's hard to believe these are bright students.

JW: I ask law students who attend our Summer Internship Program to name the five freedoms in the First Amendment. I have yet to find one who can.

NH: That is a stunner.

JW: You lived through the McCarthy era in the 1950s. Is it worse now than it was then?

NH: McCarthy's regime was ended by Senators who realized that he had gone too far. What we have now may be more insidious. What we have now in America is a surveillance society. We have no idea how much the government knows and how much the CIA even knows about average citizens. The government is not supposed to be doing this in this country. They listen in on our phone calls. I am not exaggerating because I have studied this a long time. You have to be careful about what you do, about what you say, and that is more dangerous than what was happening with McCarthy, but the technology the government now possesses is so much more insidious.

JW: You don't sound very optimistic.

NH: If James Madison or Thomas Jefferson were brought back to life and they looked at television and read the papers, they would not recognize the country.

The media has been very bad about informing us about what is going on. They focus on surface things. They do not focus enough on the fact that the Fourth Amendment is on life support and that we need a return to transparency in government. The media ignores what is really going on. But I am optimistic. I have to be optimistic, as I know you are. That is why you keep writing and keep doing what you do. You have to do this because we have been through very dark periods before. There are enough people who are starting to be actively involved that we can turn things around. And we need to encourage others to become involved.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: formom; hentoff; nathentoff; obama
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To: markomalley

Nat Hentoff is a “Jewish atheist”; Oriana Fallaci was a “Christian atheist”. Both have told unvarnished, hard truths buttressed by Judaeo-Christianity.

The Universal Vague Religion can never produce such atheists (who I have been strangely blessed by)!


41 posted on 12/13/2009 9:38:04 AM PST by avenir
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To: Aria

You’re exactly right. He said it’s just a collection of “negative rights” and, as such, is deficient. He wants an enumeration of all the wonderful things government should do for us.

The First Amendment can be summed up as “Leave us alone!”


42 posted on 12/13/2009 9:44:40 AM PST by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: FreeReign

Yeah, it is a great quote. I enjoyed the entire interview, even though he’s griping about issues from his Leftist point of view, he’s right about Obama being all about self aggrandizement.


43 posted on 12/13/2009 9:45:52 AM PST by onyx
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To: onyx
IT'S NOT HYPERBOLE WHEN IT'S THE TRUTH
44 posted on 12/13/2009 9:55:55 AM PST by Lady Jag (Double your income. Fire the government)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

I believe he lied when he took the oath of office vowing “to protect and defend” the Constitution. If our Congress had any guts they’d throw him out.


45 posted on 12/13/2009 9:58:56 AM PST by Aria ( "The US republic will endure until Congress discovers it can bribe the public with the people's $.")
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To: livius
Nat Hentoff is one of the good guys.

Yes, he is.
I have been an occasional reader of his columns for decades (when they were available in local newspapers here) and disagreed with him about half the time. But I always considered Nat to be an honest man, and that counts for a lot in my book.

46 posted on 12/13/2009 10:03:18 AM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: Lady Jag

Zactly so! I love that quote!!!!


47 posted on 12/13/2009 10:05:27 AM PST by onyx
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To: STARWISE

When my late father worked at Southern Bell in the late 1960’s (in Miami FL) his sole job was to tap phones for the FBI, Florida State Police, IRS, etc. The phone companies have been playing footsie with the government since Alexander Graham Bell.


48 posted on 12/13/2009 10:08:48 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet (I will raise $2 million for Sarah Palin: What will you do?)
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To: markomalley

Thanks for posting.
Nat Hentoff was the one sane columnist in “The Village Voice” magazine.
(Although they did occassionally have a well-done feature article.)


49 posted on 12/13/2009 10:08:52 AM PST by VOA (I)
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To: bray
I don't remember the details, but I am positive that I've read in numerous places that BHO was never a professor.

He was a lecturer in law, which is an entirely different ballpark.

And Nathoff should NOT be surprised, because he must have heard that infamous BHO quote, to wit: The Constitution is a FLAWED document.

So NO surprise that they have no respect for it.

50 posted on 12/13/2009 10:24:37 AM PST by hennie pennie
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To: Aria
a hollow man at the helm

Hmmm. Nice turn of phrase. If I may expand on it?

The difference between patriots and 0bama supporters:

Patriots think we have a hollow man at the helm.
0bamanists think we have a hallowed man at the helm.

needs some work...

51 posted on 12/13/2009 10:43:37 AM PST by null and void (We are now in day 326 of our national holiday from reality. - 0bama really isn't one of US.)
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To: onyx
My favorite is

"I am 84 years old, and this is the first administration that has scared me in terms of my lifespan."

52 posted on 12/13/2009 10:45:53 AM PST by null and void (We are now in day 326 of our national holiday from reality. - 0bama really isn't one of US.)
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To: null and void

Hey null and void! :)

I like that one too. It speaks volumes.


53 posted on 12/13/2009 11:48:05 AM PST by onyx
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To: hennie pennie
I don't remember the details, but I am positive that I've read in numerous places that BHO was never a professor. He was a lecturer in law, which is an entirely different ballpark.

You're right.

If this turns out to be a temporary link, go to www.uchicago.edu and enter Barack Obama into their search engine.

They refer to him being "a former Law School Senior Lecturer".

Examples:

President Barack Obama, a former Law School Senior Lecturer, wins ...... President Barack Obama, a former Law School Senior Lecturer, wins Nobel Peace Prize. October 9, 2009. US President Barack Obama, whose ...
http://news.uchicago.edu/news.php?asset_id=1730 - 16k - Cached

University of Chicago Law School > News 11.04.2008: Former Senior ...... Home > News > News 11.04.2008: Former Senior Lecturer Barack Obama Elected President of the United States News 11.04.2008 Former..
http://www.law.uchicago.edu/news/obamaelected/ - 17k - Cached

54 posted on 12/13/2009 11:56:30 AM PST by DumpsterDiver
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To: onyx

It troubles me that Nat Hentoff did say that. No one with power had said that. No one in power has stood up for us.

If they have and I don’t know it they should gather on Congress’ steps and show it.

Congress needs a high colonic.


55 posted on 12/13/2009 1:08:49 PM PST by Lady Jag (Double your income. Fire the government)
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To: Lady Jag

I have been sitting here wondering how many democrats in congress have heard about or have read this interview. I’m certain Obama has been told.

Hentoff was always one to speak his mind. I can remember reading his Village Voice articles posted here. This one is a stunner. He thinks Obama is dangerous for reasons different from mine, but we reach the same conclusion. Amazing.


56 posted on 12/13/2009 1:35:11 PM PST by onyx
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To: EternalVigilance; wagglebee

There is an extremely interesting interview with Nat Hentoff over here.


57 posted on 12/13/2009 2:25:16 PM PST by hennie pennie
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To: onyx
They've got the networking world record, you can bet they know about this interview. What tidbits I've heard over a few decades convince me that it's impossible to be anonymous. Except for BHO, they know plenty about each one of us.

In the 60’s two computers of the IBM 1400 series had capacity of 1.4 KB and 2 KB and they ran banks, transit systems and the government that was already spying on us.

IMHO, everybody thinks WhoseSane is dangerous.

58 posted on 12/13/2009 2:54:42 PM PST by Lady Jag (Double your income. Fire the government)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Maybe why Bell won his copyright case in court?


59 posted on 12/13/2009 3:03:59 PM PST by RobbyS (Pray with the suffering souls.)
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To: Lady Jag

I think it’s impossible to overstate the importance of Hentoff’s assessment of Obama. I mean, it’s absolutely stunning.


60 posted on 12/13/2009 3:23:43 PM PST by onyx
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