Posted on 01/19/2017 5:15:07 AM PST by SJackson
Bruce Thornton is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
The last days of the Obama presidency are being filled with legacy talk. Critics have catalogued all the domestic and foreign policy disasters Obama will leave in his wake, from Obamacare to the rise of ISIS. The president himself has held a revival-tent rally and made various public statements that describe an alternate universe in which his manifest failures are transformed into epochal achievements. But in the long view, what do the Obama years represent about our political order and its future?
We can start with the complete discrediting of the mainstream media, the culmination of a degradation that started, like most of our political, social, and cultural diseases, in the sixties. The biased, politicized coverage of the Watergate scandal and the war in Vietnam marks the point when journalism moved from the usual liberal prejudices into activist advocacy. The open contempt with which most of the press covered Ronald Reagan and his presidency was another milestone, in contrast to the generally favorable coverage of Bill Clinton, followed by the malicious, sometimes vicious treatment of George W. Bush.
The candidacy of Barack Obama both climaxed this decades-long abandonment of journalistic ethics and integrity, and raised the presss advocacy to levels of worshipful praise that would have embarrassed the foppish courtiers and groveling sycophants in Louis XIVs Versailles: he was a rock star, the Democrats Tiger Woods, a politician its hard to be objective when covering, who made one reporters leg tingle, and whose very trouser-crease astonished another; one so impressive, so charismatic, something special, possessing chiseled pectorals, a keen analytical intelligence, prodigious talents, an amazing legislative agenda, and huge achievements; one of our brightest presidents, a huge visionary, our national poet, the most noble man who has ever lived in the White House; the political equivalent of a rainbow, a sudden preternatural event inspiring awe and ecstasy, something special, a man who makes difficult tasks look easy, the visionary leader of a giant movement; a president able to game out scenarios before the experts in the room, a confident, intelligent, fascinating president riding the surge of his prodigious talents from triumph to triumph, Hegels world historical soul; the perfect father, the perfect husband, the perfect American, a president better than the body politic deserved, and a great speech writer whose words comprise one of the most moving, inspiring valentines to this country that Ive ever heard.
Add the medias ongoing deranged, duplicitous coverage of president-elect Donald Trump, and Rich Noyes catalogue is a fitting epitaph for the mainstream media. Except with their fellow progressive cultists weeping and cowering in safe spaces, they have no credibility or journalistic dignity left. Their collective suicide is Obamas legacy.
Indeed, reading such outlandish, uncritical comments from the self-appointed watchdogs of the republic, Im reminded of Charles Mackays classic Extraordinary Delusions and the Madness of Crowds:
In reading The History of Nations, we find that, like individuals, they have their whims and their peculiarities, their seasons of excitement and recklessness, when they care not what they do. We find that whole communities suddenly fix their minds upon one object and go mad in its pursuit; that millions of people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion, and run after it, till their attention is caught by some new folly more captivating than the first.
What else besides an extraordinary delusion explains how so many people, including so-called conservatives who should have known better, suspended their critical judgment and elected the most unprepared, unaccomplished, left-wing president ever to run for office in postwar America?
The answer to that question brings us to another Obama legacy, his worsening of race relations and further corruption of our national discourse on racial matters.
The very fact of Obamas political ascent is the culmination of a social and cultural dysfunction that also arose in the sixties. The progressive embrace of illiberal grievance politics and multicultural diversity, mostly among the elites in media, popular culture, and academe, created a sick dynamic for how blacks and whites viewed one another and interacted. Rather than Americans liberated from legal segregation and racial injustice, blacks were transformed into internal colonial subjects continually victimized by institutionalized racism and the subconscious bigotry it creates among whites.
Thus black identity was predicated grievance, one that could be corrected only by various sorts of reparations from social welfare spending to affirmative action programs affecting hiring, government contracts, and college admissions. In other words, victims without agency and thus needing superior white progressives to improve their lot.
Grievance politics, however, requires a grievance, even if it has to be invented. Thus the great strides in improving black lives and marginalizing racist behavior has to be ignored or downplayed. The incessant complaints of racismnow redefined in ever subtler manifestations like institutional racism, or in statistical voodoo such as disparate impact keep the feedback-loop of black grievance and white guilt humming along, as does an insidious double standard that ignores or rationalizes black bigotry even while castigating microscopic white microagressions.
Who benefits? The Democrats find electoral gold in a nearly unanimous demographic voting bloc that put a Democrat back in the White House. At the same time, the smear racism provides Democrats a powerful rhetorical bludgeon to use against their enemies, as we have seen in the continuing use of racism to discredit Obamas critics or misdirect voters from his failures. The metastasizing executive branch creates more agencies and more federal jobs to investigate and monitor racism, and to manage the federal programs that claim to ameliorate its effects. A whole race industry of academics, politicians, activists like Obama, journalists, and outfits like the ACLU and the Southern Poverty Law Center flourishes. And white, affluent progressives can compensate for their privilege and display their superior virtue by parroting politically correct racial received wisdom, even as they are insulated from the lethal consequences. Its not the tony progressive enclaves that have suffered an increase in murders because of the Ferguson effect created by Black Lives Matter.
Rather than breaking this destructive dynamic, Obama worsened it. His campaign rhetoric about no black America, no white America turned out to be duplicitous, as he doubled down on the all-purpose white racism explanation for problems created in fact by the libertinism spawned in the sixties, the marginalization of faith, and the virtue-killing dependency nourished by the welfare state. He and his corrupt DOJ fed the lies about voter suppression, white privilege, and the police war on black men, thus misdirecting many blacks from his complete failure to improve their lives by growing the economy and providing economic opportunity. But why would he? The distant disorder and misery of the inner-city black underclass is simply too valuable, for it fuels the racial grievance that in turn gives social, political, and economic leverage to Democrats and race industry operativesand that elevated Obama to the presidency.
Millions of Americans twice suspended their skepticism and voted for Obama on the desperate hope that this racial dynamic corroding our social and political order would finally be broken. And twice they were betrayed as racial conflict deepened and racial reconciliation faded. The Democrat white working class in particular became fed up with being labelled deplorable racists, and lectured on their white privilege by black commentators, professors, entertainers, athletes, and politicians who possess more economic, political, and social capital than they. Following Martin Luther Kings advice, they finally ignored Obamas superficial blackness and hope and change sophistries, and recognized the flawed contents of his character and his political incompetence. So they rejected his chosen successor, herself a master at exploiting the racial-grievance machine to smear them as white supremacists and racists. And they voted for a candidate who has promised to set aside that divisive melodrama of grievance and guilt, and make America great again.
Time will tell if these legacies of the Obama presidency will endure, and finally mark the end of the bad ideas that for fifty years have corrupted our politics and divided our citizens. Its a monumental task, given how deeply our notions of racial grievance and activist journalism have burrowed into popular culture, school curricula, and government institutions. Lets hope that Donald Trump matches deeds with words and makes the Obama years the epitaph for those failed ideologies.
The Enemy will in some other form...but Barky is exiting the political stage.
Only One More Day Until The Great Imposter And The Mooch Are Tossed Out Of The White House!
‘he doesn’t have the work ethic needed to fight the new administration.’
He’s a choomer. He’s waited 8 yrs for unfettered access to his favorite recreational drug. He’s about to embark on an epic choom-fest.
Look for pics of puffy, bleary eyed O ranting about his genius. Dopers are the smartest dumb fools in the room.
Back to the Community sock drawer organizer..,Mugabe II ...
When George W. Bush held a press conference, it was Daniel in the lions' den. When Obama holds a press conference, it's a rock star surrounded by a bunch of teen-aged groupies.
+1
Add Narcissism to pothead syndrome, and many of Obama’s supporters will be disappointed in his post-WH years.
And that's the story of his 8 years as president.
In a way America is fortunate that he's a doper and a slacker instead of a hard working, hard charger.
Obama could have created a heck of a lot more damage if he had actually applied himself and worked hard to implement his radical agenda.
Like so many other dopers he had grandiose ideas.
And like other dopers when it came to actually working hard and getting the job done he just couldn't get going.
Every once in a while he would wake himself up and decide to get something done.
But he didn't have the concentration to keep at it so he always ended up taking the easy way out.
That's how we ended up with government by Executive Order.
And that is why it will be relatively easy for Trump to kill 90% of Obama's "legacy".
Obama ruled by the pen and he will be erased by the pen.
Is calling MSM reporters teens giving them too much credit?
https://www.reddit.com/r/The_Donald/comments/5ou6b0/msm_be_like/
That is excellent analysis. Just remember there was one thing Obama was generally able to get going on: golf. It’s conceded even by Leftists that Obama is still a relatively mediocre golfer, but it wasn’t for lack of practice. He put in the hours.
Quite right, he’d rather be golfing.
1 more day until the little man/boy, inept, petulant, insufferable, incompetent,
first President to not reach 3% annual GDP Growth, lying,”you can keep
your doctor”, Barack Obama, for the mercy of the Republic, will be kicked
out of the office he was never qualified for. Hopefully the Trump team will hire
Servpro’s best teams to go into the White House and clean the place up “like it
never even happened” (BO’s presidency)
Cue Kevin Spacey in “The Ref”:
“Excuse me, excuse me, EXCUSE ME! I believe the corpse still has the floor.”
Champagne is in the fridge chilling right now, I may drink some tomorrow morning!! Soooo happy!!
I know someone who attended Occidental while Obama was there. She said he used to give grandiose soapbox diatribes about how he was going to change the world. At the time she just smirked and thought “Yeah right.” She’s a big lefty and voted for jugears of course, but it fits your description. The pothead dreamer who became Chauncey Gardiner. You’re also right that someone more aggressive, say like Bill Ayers, would have done a lot more damage.
Chauncey Gardiner would have made a *much* better president. Chauncey understood that to cause the plant to grow, you must develop the roots. That works for the economy and other aspects of life, as well.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.