The Democratic Party is simply an adjunct to establishment journalism. Establishment journalism exists to attract attention to itself, and to promote the idea that it is the font of all wisdom (which onanistic fantasy I now interreupt with the obvious reality that, far from being objective, journalism is superficial and arrogant).Democratic politicians, taking we-the-people as being infinitely maleable by PR, arrogantly assume that PR is the only power. It is a POV which cannot accord respect to the armed citizen - not individually, not as a member of the police, and not as a member of the military.
What explains this?! I just don't believe a normal, rational person can hold these beliefs while living in this society and being almost "lionized" for "holding America accountable".
I think it's a kind of desperation for adequacy and it is, ironically, found at both extremes of American society. In the poor it is, seemingly, explicable: "I don't have, and everyone else does, so what does that make me?" In the rich it seems to be a combination of condescending pity for "the poor" (who BTW are as well off as the middle class was fifty years ago) and a desire to manifest distinctness from the middle class.The middle class has no desire to tear down the rich and can't afford to patronize "the poor," since its separation from that status is a work in progress.
In any event, the phenomenon of American antiAmericanism puts me in mind of the story of the Almanac editor who received a draft prediction of the year's weather and called up its author:
"Look here," the editor said. "You are predicting that it will snow on the tenth of July. In all of recorded history it has never snowed on the tenth of July."These people are so desperate to be superior to middle America that they make fantastic claims - and if any of them ever pans out they will, at least in their own minds, be amazing prophets."No," the author replied, "and it probably won't this year either - but if it does, I'll be the durndest prophet that ever lived!"
Impromptus: On Dean and Company
National Review Online ^ | 7 Dec 2005 | Jay Nordlinger