Posted on 09/15/2008 7:23:47 AM PDT by Tolik
A Fair and Balanced Paradox
The contention is not that the media shouldnt investigate Palin, but whether they are doing it in the manner, spirit, and level of intensity that they likewise explore Biden (and Obama).
So far that is simply not the case. And the voters know that. And it is hurting Obamas efforts as the polls show. A weird paradox arises: the more the elite media wish to aid Obama, the more their bias and invective seem to turn off voters and help McCainand the more they in turn redouble their anger, as if more smears and furor, not fewer, are the answer. Strange to say, they dont seem to get it that they are, well, not liked or respected.
If one thinks I exaggerate, then cf. the latest concerning the Atlantic Monthly, a creepy story that few would believe:
http://americandigest.org/mt-archives/bad_americans/the_atlantic_mo.php
No Foreign Policy Experience?
That, of course, is the charge against Palin, and it is a legitimate consideration. But as an executive of a key state, I trust her administrative skills and experience will ensure she is surrounded with policy wonks, in the way that other Governor-VP picks were in the past.
Other thoughts: I am far more worried about the top, not the bottom, of a presidential ticket. Barack Obama has no foreign policy experience whatsoever, as we have seen in his historically inaccurate and silly speech at Berlin, his flips on Jerusalem, Iran, and the surge, as well as his confusion over Georgia (go to the UN, both sides are to blame, Iraq was the Russian model, etc.) and NAFTA.
Joe Biden claims to know the world as a long-time Senate insider; but that tenure seems to have had almost no positive effects in honing his judgmentsinasmuch after 9/11 he wanted to send millions to Iran as a good will gesture. He talked in 2003 in saber-rattling fashion about going to Iraq, only to abandon his war support when it was politically advantageousbut not until loudly advocating a trisection of the country into permanently warring rival fiefdoms. His candidacy thus far has been a daily gaffethon.
McCain and the Press
The liberal press, which is the mainstream press (NY Times, DC Post, NPR, PBS, ABC, NBC, CBS, Time, Newsweek, MSNBC, CNN, etc.), hates McCain.
Why? They claim he has changed and no longer is his old maverick self that they used to josh with and kid around with on the straight-talk express. But in truth, they only flirted with him in 2000 for two reasons: (1) he was going to lose to George Bush; (2) he wasnt George Bush. In their eyes, he was a useful foil. Period.
And now? He (1) could well win; (2) and could well win by defeating their once-in-a-lifetime heartthrob, Barack Obama.
So suddenly he lies, is a liar, and a disgrace.
Issues, What Issues?
For all the talk from the Obama campaign about issues, rather than personalities, I think the McCain positions resonate more with the voters. Heres my take on issues, and hope they will be soon discussed rather than McCains keyboard expertise, or Obamas sex-education programs.
1. Foreign policy. Note that Obama on Iran, the surge, Georgia, Afghanistan, Israel, free trade, and drilling has moved more to McCains position. I cant think of a single instance where McCain emulated Obama, whose main argument seems to be more deference to the UN, restoration of ties with allies, and more multilateralism.
But he doesnt seem to score points here, at least in 2008, when our bilateral ties with the UK, Germany, France, Italy, India, China, etc. are not suffering all that much. Iraq is now on the backburnergiven that far more Americans are killed each week in Detroit or Los Angeles than in Iraq.
Note that whereas a year ago Edwards and Obama were demanding apologies from Hillary for supporting the war, now Obama is vulnerable on having advocated a total withdrawal from Iraq by March 2008de facto defeat when victory is now in the grasp of the elected Iraqi government. Things can change instantaneously, but right now foreign policy is all McCains.
2. Energy. McCain should drop opposition to ANWR and give credit for that change to Palin. Note againObamas emphasis on wind and solar is a de facto (hard to tell given his shifts) neglect of more drilling, more refineries, clean coal, and nuclear. McCain can argue he is as strong on wind and solar as Obama is as weak on gas, oil, coal, and nuclearand thus the only holistic candidate for doing everything we can to avoid going broke.
3. Spending. Both candidates are murky. We either have to raise taxes or cut spending or bothor insidiously see our financial position erode. Raising taxes and raising spending seem to be more the Obama approach that will either raise or keep static the current deficits. We dont know the details of all of the McCain platform (cut or not cut more taxes?), but it seems to be at least to cut spending and hope the economy grows itself out of a deficit without raising taxes. The latter would resonate more with voters, though who knows once entitlements are capped and there are no new gifts? We await the candidate who promises that archaic notion of a balanced budget first, and worries about the rest later.
Note that drilling would add billions in federal revenues, cut trade deficits and helping to restore the dollars strength by curbing US demand on world supplies.
4. Illegal immigration. Both seem to talk of comprehensive reform, but are relatively quiet now, and hoping the sudden Bush switch to building a fence, fining more employers, and hiring more guards have cut down illegal entries, and thus will by attrition make the contentious issues (where both are at odds with the public) like amnesty, guest workers, and fines moot once the influx tapers and the powers of integration, smaller numbers, and voluntary deportation began to come into play. Better enforcement may explain why the issue is growing dormant compared to energy and foreign policy.
5. Cultural issues. There is a sort of schizophrenia here with voters. They dont want late-term abortions, but seem not to wish to outlaw abortion entirely. They want the death penalty, but then wish to abolish it entirely any time a state executes on even a single occasion someone of questionable guilt or mental capacity. They dont much care what you do in your own bedroom, but dont want gay marriage; they oppose biases, but dont want affirmative action. They want tougher sentences and tougher judges, but no more costly prisons and politically-wired guard unions. McCain here again seems better positioned, and more likely not to have political crazies on the fringe than does Obama, whose hard-left he has courted even more than McCain has the hard right.
With Friends Like These
One thing that is losing voters for Obama and (is ignored) is the growing public anger at celebrities and media elites. McCain has no worries that a sober Clint Eastwood or respected Robert Duvall will say something stupid about Obama. But daily a Matt Damon, Pamela Anderson, Sean Penn, or Richard Dreyfuss will mouth off in a way that reveals arrogance, viciousness and stupidity, and turn the public against whatever they are for.
Ditto the media. A Limbaugh has his own show and a particular audience; a Hannety on TV is balanced by Combs. But a Chris Matthews, Anderson Cooper, or Keith Olbermann assumes the veneer of a newsperson, and so the bias for the viewer is harder to take.
So far a George Will, David Brooks, or Charles Krauthammer has analyzed, often in tough fashion, the campaign rather than demonized Obama; a Paul Krugman, Maureen Dowd, or Bob Herbert are overtly partisan, and often amateurishly and embarrassingly so. And when one throws in the fringe, witless crowd like Michael Moore (nuff said), Andrew Sullivan (recently peddling rumors that Palins daughter delivered her Down Syndrome child), and Randi Rhodes (Palin a sexual threat to teen-aged boys), Obama, fairly or unfairly, suffers by guilt through association with the supportive unhinged as well.
Some of the McCain surge is surely due to the publics weariness with the New York Times, MSNBC, CNN, and the nut-blogsall brought to their attention, with editorializing, by widely visited conservative outlets like Limbaugh, Hannety, Fox, Drudge, etc. So another paradox: the elite media suffers both ways. It has lost respect from the public; but its sensationalist charges dont always result in more sales or attention, since many of the public likely learns, second-hand, of their bias and extremism through Drudge, National Review, Pajamas Media, Limbaugh, and the regional talk radio stations.
The Old Fish
After all the liberal lectures about bias, racism, sexism, and the other assorted isms, we are down to one desperate last card: McCain is too old, and by extension so are most over 70, given that McCain is more active than most his age.
Thus we hear him compared to an old stinky fish. Its not that he doesnt know how many houses he has, but doesnt any more as if his memory is now shot. He cant do email or the Internet (never mind the effects of five-years plus of physical torture). He is confused and angry.
This is rather strange for a reform candidate like Obama, and ultimately counterproductive as well. Consider that we were warned that anti-Obama forces would use race. None in the McCain campaign so far have. Though Obama himself surely did, via associates like Wright and Pfleger, though his own preemptive warnings about his name, religion, and race, and through his media surrogates who screeched that his failure would mean we were racists and disgraced in the eyes of the world.
But again examine: sexism? Hillary sure thought Obama played the sexist card. We see it again with Palin. How many have asked Obama whether he has tucked his two children in at night; or have gone after Joe Bidens wife; or have ridiculed Bidens hair (a bee-hive surely is preferable to hair plugs for most in the fashion world)?
So here we have an anomaly: the candidate that we were warned would be victimized by racial hatred has quite insidiously waged a campaign that plays on fears of women and old people. Again, voters are not stupid and that hypocrisy in part explains the current Obama slide. If one were to examine the mysterious Illinois Senate race of 2004, in which both the Democratic and Republican challengers, Blair Hull and Jack Ryan, in the respective primary and general elections fell victim to a weird concentrated rumor campaign, spurred on by anonymous sources and the Chicago newspapers, about their sealed divorce records, resulting in their withdrawals and a walk-in win for Obama, one would not be surprised that hope and change needs to be qualified by Chicago politics.
Casting the first stone
I was reading this in the recent column of Bob Herbert in the New York Times:
While watching the Sarah Palin interview with Charlie Gibson Thursday night, and the coverage of the Palin phenomenon in general, Ive gotten the scary feeling, for the first time in my life, that dimwittedness is not just on the march in the U.S., but that it might actually prevail. . John McCain, who is shameless about promoting himself as Americas ultimate patriot, put the best interests of the nation aside in making his incredibly reckless choice of a running mate. But there is a profound double standard in this country. The likes of John McCain and George W. Bush can do the craziest, most irresponsible things imaginable, and it only seems to help them politically.
But wait! I remember this Mr. Herbert, who on television showed his own degree of erudition, intelligence, and common sense by assuring his audience that a McCain ad film clip of Obama addressing thousands before the Victory Column in Berlin was really a snippet, yes, of the Washington Monument and the Leaning Tower of Pisa! And why did Herbert confuse these easily distinguished towers? To prove the point that McCain was peddling phallic imagery to tie Obama with white women through supposedly taboo liaisons. And so goes the New York Times commentary on a gutsy Governor handling the slanted questioning of Charlie Gibson.
This is not the exception. It is striking how many critics of Palin, whether in politics such as Joe Biden, or in journalism such as Joe Klein, have themselves demonstrated in the past poor judgment, a lack of intellectual honesty, and have been caught in false assertionsand yet nearly weekly are offering sweeping denunciations of Palin.
Imagine
I posted a longer version of this on the NRO corner:
To understand John McCain participating in a live-audience forum at Columbia University, Obamas alma mater, and being interviewed by Time editor Richard Stengel (formerly Bill Bradleys campaign adviser and speechwriter) and PBS correspondent Judy Woodruff (married to Al Hunt), and answering questions on how the government should expand public service agencies, imagine Barack Obama going to West Point before an audience of cadets, to be interviewed by serious-thinking Michael Gerson and a circumspect George Will, on US defense strategy and the military. Both are perfectly legitimate enterprises and have merit, but the latter would be immediately deemed by the left as disproportionate. This, and the Gibson missteps in the Palin interview, are the apparently unconscious and highbrow versions of CNN/MSNBC.
Corrections and Replies
Thanks to readers for spotting the date concerning the Carter mistake. I wrote correctly in two columns that we havent had a Democratic ticket without a lawyer (if one counts Al Gore who dropped out of law school) for a quarter-century, but a third time in reply to critics wrongly wrote since 1976thus incorrectly not including the farmer Carters second run in 1980, the last time someone on the Democratic ticket had not been to law school.
Next time I will reply to the usual weekly critics, this time on the right, Dinesh DSouza, and the left (?) Michael Scheuer.
Let me know if you want in or out.
Links: FR Index of his articles: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=victordavishanson
His website: http://victorhanson.com/
NRO archive: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson-archive.asp
Pajamasmedia: http://victordavishanson.pajamasmedia.com/
Karl Rove Everywhere? [Victor Davis Hanson]
Anyone who had read a Greek tragedy could have predicted what is now happening in this close race. For almost 3 months, the Obama campaign has been running victory laps, fueled by ever more hubris that led to really silly and unnecessary things like the Berlin extravaganza (how many vote in Germany?), and the faux Greek temple and outdoor rock concert, as well as an absolutely shamelessly biased media that did all but coronate Obama. (In Obama's defense, he cannot control the petty foolishness that despised Hollywood celebrities offer daily, that only ends up in raging Drudge headlines that even more so turn off moderate voters.)
Meanwhile amid the high-fives no one seemed to notice an existential problem in that Obama's actual positionsmore taxes, more government, indecision on key foreign policy issues, cultural liberalism, big-city scratch-back machine politicswere not all that different from, or indeed more out-of-touch than, past liberal platforms that for a quarter-century had doomed all northern liberal presidential candidates who did not have a southern accent and a southern governorship to fall back on as moderate/conservative cover.
All it took, thenthe more messianic Obama got with this stop-the-seas-from-rising and planet-from-heating nonsense, the more enthused the in-house media becamewas a small needle to deflate the balloon, which would then loudly zoom all over the place as it lost air.
That jab partly came with Alaskan Governor, mom of five Sarah Palin, partly with the growing unease of the inexperienced and suddenly rather professorial and boring Obama in interviews, partly with his rather brazen (but politically necessary) back-peddling on campaign finance reform, FISA, NAFTA, abortion, capital punishment, guns, Iran, the surge, drilling, etc.So hubris finally evoked nemesis.
What we are seeing now, unfortunately for Obama if it doesn't cease, is a weird sort of puerile panic and hysteria on the part of Democrats. They are losing it with wild and rather vicious talk about Palin's various supposed misdemeanors, Obama's campaign itself that is suddenly shrilly whining and screaming about lies and liars, when Obama himself is not gaffing like Biden with silly lipstick riffs and arrogant dismissals of small town mayorships (and after his Pennsylvania clingers speech no less!)all while liberal bloggers, the MSM columnists, the talking heads on CNN, MSNBC, etc are losing their sanity seeing Karl Roves everywhere stealing their hope and change dreams.
Watching some of this hysterical outpouring of anger is surreal, as grown-ups sound like children whose mothers did not buy them a snack or failed to take them to the zoo as promised.
Unless Obama's team can get a handle on this self-induced and paranoid madness, they risk turning a small, natural, and probably temporary 2-3 point bumpquite normal in such a tight see-saw raceinto a permanent and insurmountable 5-6 point McCain lead, as the quiet swing voters shrug and say to themselves, "Hmmm, liked that Obama, but if he and his supporters panic and go wild and vicious like this, what in the world would they do when elected?"
Hate to be a broken record, but old pro Hil as VP at this fire would have had an extinguisher in hand (Bill manning the hose), not a Biden match and more Axelrod fuel.
He gives today's Drudge far too much credit IMHO, it was different ten years ago. Nowadays I use Drudge as a quick way of finding links to online news sources.
The Old Fish [Victor Davis Hanson]Obama's latest ad suggests that McCain is old and out of step with his fashion and inability to do email. This follows last night's televised protestations that Obama wanted a different campaign but would not agree to meet McCain 'anytime, anywhere' as he once promised in town halls (he will, if he falls further behind). This is not the hope and change we were promised. And it follows the earlier lines about McCain's confusion and inability "any more" to know how many houses he has.
The problem with all this, as we saw with the lipstick quote and small-town mayor sneers, is twofold. Obama's original charm for many was his Olympian other-worldliness and easy cool post-politics. Now he seems no different from, or nastier than most, any other candidate. (You saw another sort of that disconnect between divinity and reality when he chose a plastic Greek temple and outdoor stadium throng to deliver pedestrian wonkish points about spending priorities). In his defense, his thousands in media are doing him a disservice, and turning off the electorate in daily buffonish partianship.
Also, his recent attacks against an 'old fish' and 'lipsticked pig', and those of his supporters, come off as ageist and sexist and that can't go well with a lot of voters. Yes, he is registering new voters, but since 2004, millions, to match them, have gone into their sixties and are "evolving," as they say, in their views. Some may well identify with a feisty older McCain in the way middle America does with Palin. And when you add up the daily outbursts of disdain and condescension from Hollywood celebs, unhinged pundits, Biden's daily fare, and the sneers of lower-tier Democratic politicians, the image is one of furor and panic, not calm governance. Another 2 weeks of this and I think millions are going to keep quiet, say they are "undecided," but privately conclude that they have had enough of all this bias, and simply won't vote for any more of Obamania.
The degeneration of the American Free Press into a Propaganda Machine is one of the most dangerous events in American history--a truthfully informed electorate being essential to representative government.
Most Americans realize this, and they fear and deeply resent the substitution of propaganda for truthful information by the Press and its so-called "reporters" and "journalists".
Hanson writes more often, and more accurately(!) than I thought.
I had expected he was more of a once-a-month column, book-a-year type.
I can’t compete w/ Hanson—he’s a favorite, but I wrote something earlier this year along this line.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1973419/posts
Hanson may think the issue of illegal aliens has “grown dormant,” but it’s the one issue that guarantees I will never vote Republican again, no matter who the GOP nominates. They have ignored an invasion of our country by 30 million Mexicans, along with all the problems and burdens it creates for Americans. They have ignored the fact that we no longer have a southern border. They, along with George Bush, are traitors.
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