Beware the cult of Obama
By Gene Healy
Examiner Columnist | 3/30/09 11:59 PM
You’ve met them. They may be friends of yours,
or family members. You may even be one of them (in which case you’ll hate this
column). I’m referring to those who’ve heard the Call of Obama.
Tucker Carlson compares it to a dog whistle:
Inaudible to most, but irresistible to those who can hear it.
Obama "walks into a room and you want to follow
him somewhere, anywhere," George Clooney gushed to Charlie Rose.
"I’ll collect paper cups off the ground to make
[Obama’s] pathway clear,” Halle Berry recently told the Philadelphia Daily
News, “I’ll do whatever he says.” (Does Michelle know about this?)
Hollywood stars aren’t known for their political
wisdom. More disturbing is how starstruck the mainstream media has become. Hardball
host Chris Matthews isn’t the only one who gets a “thrill” up his leg at the
very thought of our new president.
Last summer, San Francisco Chronicle
columnist Mark Morford wrote that "Many spiritually advanced people I know …
identify Obama as a Lightworker, that rare kind of attuned being who …
can actually help usher in a new way of being on the planet."
The Politico recently ran a 900-word
article entitled "The Power of Obama's Hand," reverentially describing how the
president "uses touch to control and console simultaneously," laying hands on
supporters and opponents alike.
And in February, author Judith Warner used her
New York Times blog to confess that “The other night I dreamt of Barack
Obama. He was taking a shower right when I needed to get into the bathroom to
shave my legs.”
Instead of keeping that information to herself,
Warner “launched an email inquiry,” which revealed that “many women—not too
surprisingly—were dreaming about sex with the president.” Those of us who like
to point out that the Emperor has no clothes now have to worry that when we
do, we may give rise to a new round of lurid cougar fantasies.
Conservatives like to think they're above this
sort of thing. Their attitude is summed up by the subtitle of Jerome Corsi's
recent bestseller: Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the Cult of
Personality.
But any conservative who thinks cultishness is
exclusively a leftist phenomenon ought to take a good long look in the mirror.
Because many of those who decry the "cult of Obama" are the same people who
made a flight-suited action figure hero out of such common clay as George W.
Bush.
Peggy Noonan called Bush's post-9/11 address to
Congress "a God-touched moment and a God-touched speech." Fred Barnes wrote
that "the stage was set for Bush to be God's agent of wrath." National
Review Online ran ads for the Bush "Top Gun" action figure, and an article
about how wonderful it was to have a presidential superhero to complement your
GI Joe collection.
On Hardball, after the "Mission
Accomplished" speech, G. Gordon Liddy got graphic enough to embarrass Judith
Warner: "Here comes George Bush. You know, he's in his flight suit, he's
striding across the deck, and he's wearing his parachute harness.... and it
makes the best of his manly characteristic…. He has just won every woman's
vote in the United States of America!"
Presidential cultishness can be found all across
the political spectrum. It’s a pathology that needs to be rooted out, because
when we swoon over the man who holds the office, we risk making the presidency
far more powerful than it was ever intended to be.
William Hazlitt, the 19th-century English
essayist, argued that man was by nature "a worshipper of idols and a lover of
kings." As savages, Hazlitt wrote, we fashioned “gods of wood and stone and
brass,” but now, thinking ourselves above superstition, “we make kings of
common men, and are proud of our own handiwork.”
But America’s very existence repudiates the idea
that we’re hard-wired for leader-worship. We became a nation by throwing off a
king, and our Founders gave us a Constitution that’s based on the notion that
all men are flawed and none should be trusted with too much power.
Americans, of all people, should recognize how
bizarre and dangerous it is to fawn over professional politicians.
Examiner columnist Gene Healy is a vice
president at the Cato Institute and the author of
The Cult of the Presidency.
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