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How to Criticize Our Next President
Pajamas Media | Frontpagemagazine ^ | November 07, 2008 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 11/07/2008 5:14:33 AM PST by SJackson

How to Criticize Our Next President  
By Victor Davis Hanson
Pajamas Media | Friday, November 07, 2008

Reconciliation

I wish President-elect Obama well, and hope that even his critics can concede that he waged a successful and often brilliant (if not shrewdly stealthy) campaign.

It seems to me that conservatives have a golden opportunity to offer criticism and advice in a manner that many liberals did not during the last eight years. By that I mean I hope there are no conservative versions of the Nicholson Baker Knopf-published ‘novel’ Checkpoint, the creepy documentary by Gerald Range, the attempt to name a sewer plant after an American President, or the celebrity outbursts that we have witnessed with the tired refrain of Hitler/Nazi Bush—that all have cheapened political discourse. When I hear a partisan insider like Paul Begala urging at the 11th hour that we now rally around lame-duck Bush in his last few days, I detect a sense of apprehension that no Democrats would wish conservatives to treat Obama as they did Bush for eight years.

In the future, criticism should be offered in unified pro-American tones, rather than anti-Obama screeds. When disagreements arise, they should be couched in a sense of regret rather than ebullition. There should be no conservative counterparts of Bill Maher, Michael Moore, or Al Franken.

That said, read on.

Be Careful of what you wish for…

Note the Iraqis immediately rushing to say Obama surely won’t pull out of the Iraq prematurely. Note secondly that just recently they were grandstanding that we had to leave. I had noted earlier a Zen-like possibility with an Obama victory: those who counted on Bush-Hitler to both defend them and be a big target for their cheap anti-Americanism, might not like going it alone as equal “partners” in the much praised “multilateral” fashion.

Obama may just say “We are right behind you when you deal with Russia, Iran, North Korea, China, etc.” Note again, as Europe goes wild over Obama, the subtext is, “This would never happen here.” After all, we Amis have had African-American secretaries-of-state for eight years (well over a quarter-century ago Andrew Young was UN ambassador)—and still no Turkish-German Foreign Minister or Congolese-French Prime Minister? In some sense, Obama will bring welcome moral clarity to foreign relations, because if he really is a multilateralist, current opportunistic foreign dependencies will be forced to weigh in on multilateralism.

On the Taboo of Race

The landmark consequences of electing the first African-American President dominated the news cycle for the last 24-hours. But just as importantly, we have forgotten that we have chosen the most hard left candidate since Henry Wallace assumed the Vice Presidency, in a transparent fashion without fraud or deception. That marks a landmark shift in American attitudes, like it or not. And no one reported on that anomaly, or on the fact that Obama was the first northern liberal to be elected since JFK—or even the first senator to make it since JFK (and LBJ via the Vice Presidency).

On matters of race, at some point the country will evolve beyond the current narrative of the last day that runs something like—‘You redeemed yourself by voting for Barack, and now we can all say we are truly Americans’. The problem with that understandable sentiment is a number of its corollaries: ‘Unless you support European socialist solutions offered by a charismatic African-American candidate, then you confirm America as a quasi-racist nation.’ And this thought: African-Americans voted for a black candidate at a 95% rate; Hispanics at perhaps 75%; yet the country was judged as free of racial tribalism on the basis of whether whites voted for a black candidate far to the left of any Democratic nominee during the last three decades in pluralities greater than they did for past white Democratic candidates like Gore or Kerry. And they did!

It will be interesting when the first Hispanic candidate wins to see whether Mexican-American citizens en masse reaffirm the country to be finally fulfilling its promise—and what would be the reaction of African-Americans and Asians to such ethnic solidarity.

This solidarity may be a natural reaction, but something is still puzzling about hours of television showing African-American ecstasy based on apparent racial pride rather than glee that someone of Obama’s views was elected—all often editorialized by teary-eyed objective journalists. A person from Mars who watched this post-election celebration, might study the popular reaction to the Obama victory and become puzzled: “Aren’t people now saying pretty much what Michelle Obama said twice, and to great criticism, during the campaign: that the emergence of Barack Obama was occasion for many to have pride in their country for the first time?”

Be careful Barack

When off the teleprompter, natural exuberance takes over. The day before the election, Obama was praising his late grandmother and I heard him say that his grandmother, born in 1922, had witnessed both world wars (including 1914-1918?). In his acceptance speech, Obama mentioned that he might not achieve all his aims in “one term”—so we are talking about dynasties of two terms before even assuming office? We remember likewise he kept saying we are only going back to the Clinton tax hikes (up to 40% on top brackets), while omitting the 15.3% FICA and Medicare taxes once the caps are to be eliminated. And we remember that he kept saying he was going to pay for (a trillion dollars worth of) entitlements in large part by “ending that war” (which even by his figures was running at about $100 billion or so now a year (we would need to be in Iraq another 10 years to waste enough that would have gone to new social programs?))

Second Stimulus

After running up the annual deficit to a near half-a-trillion dollars in stimuli rebates and bailouts, now we are to send checks out again for subsidies for food, housing, and power? And how to pay for it? And the consequences of looking for others to channel money to be redistributed? At some point, there should be some overarching exegesis to explain all this. Something like: ‘Compensation is arbitrary and not based on either fairness or logic. So government is necessary to make the needed corrections and to redistribute in the way a flawed market cannot.’ At least then we could learn the logic involved.

Internal Struggles

We are going to witness a gargantuan struggle among the Obama camp in the next 90 days. On the one hand, the following argument will be advanced:

“Look, Barack, we have a historical opportunity with the Congress, the honeymoon, voter momentum, and your communicative brilliance. Carpe diem!”

“Liberals will never have such a window again, so let’s move full blast with Axlerod, Emanuel, and the Chicago Boys before they know what hit them: make lots of hard-left appointments for agency heads, executive branch controllers and cabinet posts; restore the fairness doctrine and get talk radio out of the picture as it was pre-1987; empower unions with an end to secret elections; move on de facto amnesty and keep the borders porous, given how the continually replenished illegal alien community, with periodic amnesties, evolves into Democratic constituencies in key states; go for BOTH tax increases on income up to 40% and ending the FICA caps so you can get another 15.3%. That way we can pay for some of these new programs. Try to create a national health care system akin to Canada’s. Don’t just go for the agenda, but for structural changes that will make it almost impossible for conservatives to win again. Now with incumbency, restore campaign financing in all its manifestations, lest some Republican gets smart and emulates our money-raising strategies. And while we are at it, why not call in Cheney, Rumsfeld and the Bush neocons and charge them with war crimes for Guantanamo and water-boarding?”

Realists will counter:

“Wait! LBJ, Nixon, and others all blew their mandates. Festina lente (‘make haste slowly’). Remember the Clintonian 1993-4 debacle with gays in the military, Hillarycare, Les Aspen at Defense (cf. his no armor in Somalia decision), Travelgate, etc, so we don’t need more hubris that means calling in another Dick Morris and triangulation to save the Obama presidency. Either raise income tax or lift FICA caps, but don’t do both unless you want to gut, not shear, the sheep. Throw the loonies looking for jobs under the bus where they can join Ayers, Wright, Khalidi, etc. Adopt the Petraeus withdrawal plan, but claim it was really the “Obama” plan all along. Turn over the cabinet to Larry Summers and Robert Rubin types and a few Republican-lites like Chuck Hagel.”

So we will see who wins—or whether Obama votes “present,” and the sides go to and fro, back and forth ad nauseam. Beware, we will hear soon a Reaganesque “Let Obama be Obama!”—if we knew exactly what that would mean?

Sarah Palin

There was something bothersome about the treatment of Sarah Palin. Her final campaign appearances and interviews showed calm, poise and competence. Her charm galvanized the base. And yet the hard Left on day one reduced her to a Neanderthal creationist. The DC-NY Republican grandees demonized her as a cancerous bimbo who spoke in a patois and represented a culture that was an anathema. Now after heroic campaign work, she returns to Alaska with leaks that she was a diva, appeared in a bathrobe, and threw things, as failed strategists grasp at scapegoats for their lapses. I hope she completes her term, runs for Senate, and comes back to DC to haunt her critics. Long after 2008, we shall remember that an Atlantic Mazagine blogger for days on end trafficked in rumors that her own daughter delivered her mother’s Down Syndrome child. That smear says it all.

Good/Bad John McCain

Let me understand the current media analysis of John McCain: 2000—“Old” John McCain runs against the more conservative George Bush and loses, so he’s declared principled and good; mid-2008—“new” John McCain runs against a messianic Barack Obama and could win, so he’s ruthless, quasi-racist, and bad; late 2008—“new-old” John McCain loses against Obama and makes a typically gracious speech, so suddenly he’s the new ‘old’ John McCain again?

Creepy People

We, of course, wish to be liked abroad. But there are reasons why in many cases we are not. That is, many governments welcome authoritarians. They prefer tribal, religious, and racial chauvinism compared to our diverse plurality. They like class hierarchies and resent our mobility. They prefer statism, are anti-democratic, and have contempt for consumer capitalism. So why would we wish governments currently composed of radical Palestinians, Iranians, Venezuelans, North Koreans, Syrians, or Russians to like or admire us? While we would wish not to gratuitously excite their ire, their empathy toward us should make us worried not relieved. Who cares whether the royal House of Saud is happy over the election, or those in the Iranian parliament or the activists of Hezbollah?

Campaign casualties

1. No one will again trust the media to report objectively a general election. Turn on NBC or CNN or read the front page of the NY Times, and you will expect an editorial for the more liberal candidate without pretense of objectivity.
2. Public financing is over as a bipartisan tradition. The Democrats may try to resurrect it, once as incumbents they see advantages in limiting fund raising, but no one will ever again believe the mantra of big money + big politics = sleaze
3. Colin Powell. Now a tragic figure. His endorsement of Obama came too late to appear principled (at a time of Obama’s soaring ratings rather than, say, in mid-September when McCain was ahead). And when he had nicer public things to say of the crooked Ted Stevens than he did the principled hero John McCain, one remembered that his former subordinate Mr. Armitage once apparently knew that Mr. Libby had been charged with a crime that was not a crime, and if it were, Mr. Armitage himself had privately admitted that he was the culpable party. Surely Armitage should have been fired or at least reprimanded by Mr. Powell.
4. Obamacons. The timing and rationale for conservatives jumping for Obama became suspect not because of their decision per se, but because it came late, and was often without an explanation of why Obama’s tax or spending plan, or foreign policy, or proposed new entitlements were superior to John McCain’s.
They will be orphaned since there are too many more liberal in line ahead of them to enjoy Obama’s graces, and they burned their bridges with their former conservative supporters. Had any of them simply said in March, “I am for Obama since I think he is a superior candidate to Clinton, Giuliani, Romney and McCain because his preference for a European-model is to be welcomed”, I think they would seem mavericks and issue-orientated thinkers rather than opportunistic.
5. Beltway Republicans. When the conservative party spends wildly, runs up deficits and justifies them by citing percentages of GDP rather than apologies for trillions borrowed, gives us the likes of the criminally-minded such as Cunningham, Abramoff, and Stevens, the morally dubious like Craig and Foley, and the sycophantic like a Scott McClellan or FEMA’s “Brownie” and the other incompents in high-profile administration jobs, then don’t they naturally lose?
Fiscal restraint.

The promises of bailouts and fiscal reprieves from the two candidates were like two Roman emperors outbidding each other for the services of the Praetorian Guard in order to become coronated. Not a word where the borrowing would ultimately come from, how it would be paid back, or how the indebted incurred their obligations in the first place.

As a self-interested columnist, I would hope Obama reassumes his natural hard-left position of his 1996-2005 period that would provide both plentiful column topics and prove counterproductive to his I fear scary agenda. But as an American, I surely hope he doesn’t, and so wish him personally well, and success as a possible centrist commander-in-chief that advances American interests.

Interesting times…


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: obamatransitionfile; vdh; victordavishanson
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1 posted on 11/07/2008 5:14:33 AM PST by SJackson
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To: SJackson

01-20-2013


2 posted on 11/07/2008 5:15:34 AM PST by Perdogg (01-20-2013)
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To: SJackson
There should be no conservative counterparts of Bill Maher, Michael Moore, or Al Franken.

Or Cindy Sheehan! Maybe we should rent out a BIG plot of land in downtown Chicago and pay President-elect a warm welcome during his August breaks EVERY year. Think that would be allowed in CHICAGO during an Obama Administration? Think again.

Any wagers on the amount of time that passes after inauguration before the first Supreme Court Justice steps down?
3 posted on 11/07/2008 5:21:13 AM PST by Eagle of Liberty (This nation must not die on our watch.)
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To: SJackson
he waged a successful and often brilliant...campaign

I am exceedingly tired of this canard.

4 posted on 11/07/2008 5:21:30 AM PST by tbpiper
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To: SJackson

I agree with Coulter. Obama should be accorded the same level of respect that the left accorded Bush.


5 posted on 11/07/2008 5:22:27 AM PST by nonliberal (Graduate: Curtis E. LeMay School of International Relations)
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To: SJackson

Obamacons
They sounded like vacuous ditzes.
oh! Obama is so inspiring. oh! he surely can’t be thaaaat bad. oh oh ohhhhhhbama!!!!


6 posted on 11/07/2008 5:22:29 AM PST by ari-freedom (So this is how Liberty dies... with thunderous applause)
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To: SJackson

Obama is the worst president in history, presiding over the worst economy in 500 years. Impeach Obama!


7 posted on 11/07/2008 5:22:35 AM PST by Lucas McCain
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To: SJackson

The stock market has dropped 5%/day since he won the election.


8 posted on 11/07/2008 5:24:45 AM PST by HereInTheHeartland (Flush Obama/Biden in 2008!!!!)
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To: SJackson

I could see the past 4 years how well dems played chess and cheated and republicans were on defensive, always defensive. For starters you act like you want Obama to succeed, he won fair and square election and ran a great campaign, honestly, but had the media and Republicans to help him. Next you poll test EVERYTHING dems propose and see if there is a way to re-sell it as terrible (I am assuming it’s liberal crap.) You pick which battles to fight. You go on talk radio, FNC , maybe even the Obama networks and bring the worst bills down by holding them up and doing a PR. Eventually the public will just assume everything is crap. Pelosi/Dole(93) playbook. With GWB gone, everything changes, cheer up folks, form political resistance, eventually we will love going door to door again before an election it will be FUN again, with Obama in, GWB out.


9 posted on 11/07/2008 5:25:18 AM PST by sickoflibs ( Where were McCain's moderates and illegals on election day?)
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To: SJackson

Beltway Republicans
the sad thing is that they weren’t mushy moderates. They were conservatives!


10 posted on 11/07/2008 5:25:18 AM PST by ari-freedom (So this is how Liberty dies... with thunderous applause)
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To: SJackson

Someone elsewhere mentioned that Obama’s election has now changed freedom of speech.

That is, the “n” word is no longer forbidden invective, it is now political speech, and thus constitutionally protected. Because it no longer means someone with dark skin, but people who are “like” Obama and support Obama.

Obama supporters are labeled with the “n” word. And since 97% of black Americans voted for Obama, they should now expect to be called the “n” word as well, with the exception of black conservative Republican Americans, for whom the “n” word remains an invective.

To be fair, anyone, no matter their race, who are Obama supporters, can be described by the “n” word. Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Joe Biden, Jesse Jackson, Bill Richardson, Rahm Emmanuel, etc.


11 posted on 11/07/2008 5:26:25 AM PST by yefragetuwrabrumuy
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To: SJackson

“I detect a sense of apprehension that no Democrats would wish conservatives to treat Obama as they did Bush for eight years.”

That’s it in a nutshell.


12 posted on 11/07/2008 5:27:46 AM PST by Old Grumpy
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To: sickoflibs

yes, the left can’t run against Bush anymore. That takes away most of their energy. It will feel like a major let down after all the parties are over.


13 posted on 11/07/2008 5:28:49 AM PST by ari-freedom (So this is how Liberty dies... with thunderous applause)
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To: Old Grumpy

yeah but will conservatives be able to out-Alinsky the Alinsky’s?


14 posted on 11/07/2008 5:30:26 AM PST by ari-freedom (So this is how Liberty dies... with thunderous applause)
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To: SJackson

Conservatives pretending we’re “above it all” has really worked out well for us hasnt it?

I will treat him the same way Bush was treated.

Pitchfork/Torch ‘09


15 posted on 11/07/2008 5:33:41 AM PST by DwFry (Baby Boomers Killed Western Civilization!)
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To: sickoflibs

We on the ground can do our part by writing letters to the editors. This may not seem like much, but if we can get two to four letters printed in our local newspapers on a weekly basis it will seem voluminous.
When criticizing Obama in public we should couch it such as and I thought he was going to be different,” or ‘he’s just another politician,’ ‘there’s not much difference between him and Bush.’ We can’t think that who we speak to is as politically acute as we are, speak in terms of demoralizing and devastating generalties.

We cannot depend upon our senators and congressmen to get down and dirty.


16 posted on 11/07/2008 5:35:06 AM PST by LeavingNewYork
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To: SJackson

I watched in disgust the liberals complimenting Bush...Beckel was doing the same thing as Begala. After his speech they are calling him a “class act.” Huh? In 8 years they haven’t even called him by his title or anything else of respect. Just “W”...or “Bush” (with contempt in the voice).

Their rhetoric is already soaring - this the headline on yahoo right now: Will Obama have to adjust pledge to pull U.S. troops from Iraq?

Adjust his pledge? Hope he adjusts his pledge and leaves my taxes alone.


17 posted on 11/07/2008 5:35:25 AM PST by jilliane
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To: DwFry
I will treat him the same way Bush was treated.

I will be there with you. No more playing nicey-nicey. Most of our side has either simply chosen to ignore or is completely blinded to the fact that in this game, sometimes you gotta get your hands dirty.
18 posted on 11/07/2008 5:39:36 AM PST by Eagle of Liberty (This nation must not die on our watch.)
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To: Lucas McCain

Where’s zero’s pie? How long is he gonna bake my pie? How much longer should the American people be patient for their piece of pie?

I will repeat this over and over, oh say about Feb. March...


19 posted on 11/07/2008 5:40:03 AM PST by tpanther (All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. Edmund Burke)
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To: LeavingNewYork

You and I are thinking strategically and that is what we need. I love your ideas. In the beginning we say it’s the same as GWB because that will sell (even to me LOL in some case) , but for really crappy stuff we say “That’s the same as Jimmy Carter’ or anyone that sells (poll test everything, every word). BC is probably not a good one to use because right now BC looks brilliant compared to GWB to most people.


20 posted on 11/07/2008 5:42:22 AM PST by sickoflibs ( Where were McCain's moderates and illegals on election day?)
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