Obama and the Liberal Paradigm
The sheep are quite capable of looking out for themselves.
Someone tell the Democrats.
Valerie Jarrett, senior adviser to President Barack Obama, recently explained
the White House war on Fox News as an example of "speaking truth to power." Much
of the American political world collapsed in laughter, pointing out that her
boss was president of the United States, the most powerful man on earth. His
every word is news around the world. Fox News is a cable channel rarely watched
by more than a few million people at a time. How could she have so blithely said
something completely out-of-sync with reality?
Simple: She's a liberal.
As a liberal she carries around in her head the liberal paradigm of how the
world works and what needs to be done to make it work better. There's nothing
wrong with that. We all use paradigms to make sense of what we see around us and
couldn't get along without them. Unfortunately, the basic liberal paradigm
hasn't shifted in a hundred years, while the world we live in has changed
utterly since the late 19th century, when modern liberalism was born.
What is that paradigm? The basic premise is that the population is divided
into three groups. By far the largest group consists of ordinary people. They
are good, God fearing and hard working. But they are also often ignorant of
their true self-interest ("What's the matter with Kansas?") and thus easily
misled. They are also politically weak and thus need to be protected from the
second group, which is politically strong.
The second group, far smaller, are the affluent, successful businessmen,
corporate executives and financiers. Capitalists in other words. They are the
establishment and it is the establishment that, by definition, runs the country.
They are, in the liberal paradigm, smart, ruthless and totally self-interested.
They care only about personal gain.
And then there is the third group, those few, those happy few, that band of
brothers, the educated and enlightened liberals, who understand what is really
going on and want to help the members of the first group to live a better and
more satisfying life. Unlike the establishment, which supposedly cares only for
itself, liberals supposedly care for society as a whole and have no personal
self-interest.
Thus the liberal paradigm divides the American body politic into sheep,
wolves, and would-be shepherds. The shepherds must defeat the efforts of the
wolves.
This paradigm, while never wholly accurate and, of course, always
self-serving (as political philosophies tend to be), had a basis in reality in
the late 19th century. Then, industrial capitalism was being born and the rules
needed to ensure that it worked for all, not just the capitalists, were only
beginning to evolve.
A few lived at an incredible level of affluence, such as can be seen in the
summer "cottages" in Newport, R.I., and had disproportionate influence with
government. In 1900 one-third of the Senate were millionaires at a time when a
million dollars made you very, very rich. But millions of Americans lived in
abject poverty, toiling long, dangerous hours as industrial workers or as
sharecroppers in the impoverished South. These millions were indeed ignorant and
weak.
Even as late as 1937, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in his great second
inaugural address, could quite accurately note the fact that he could "see
one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished."
But by that time, liberals had stormed—and taken—the citadel of power.
Between 1896 and 1932, the Republicans had been the majority party in this
country and the conservatism of that day the ruling doctrine. Then, in 1932,
Democrats swept into control of both Congress and the White House. They were now
the establishment, as liberalism became the dominant American political
philosophy, a status it kept for more than 40 years.
A liberal revolution from the top began as the New Deal created a safety net
for American families and reformed the banking and financial systems by greatly
enlarging the government and what it regulated. At the end of World War II,
college education became far more affordable, thanks to the GI Bill and other
measures. The GI Bill also fostered home ownership, which for the first time
became the norm among nonfarm families, giving them significant wealth. The
sheep were becoming capitalists too.
Between 1947 and the mid-1960s, the civil-rights movement overturned
centuries of racial discrimination and greatly narrowed the gap between American
claims of liberty and equality and American reality.
By the 1970s, the percentage of Americans living in poverty had been greatly
reduced and those still below the poverty line were receiving assistance such as
food stamps, housing assistance, and refundable tax credits that lifted most of
them above the line. Race was no longer a barrier to accomplishment. The
majority of American families now lived at a level of affluence and financial
security known only to a few in the early 20th century.
The liberal revolution of the middle third of that century was, in short, one
of the greatest—and most peaceful—political triumphs in history. And because of
it, most of the sheep are now more than able to look out for themselves, having
the means and education to do so. The wolves have been fitted for electric
collars that largely keep them from straying into the wrong fold.
Now if only someone would tell the shepherds about their own success.
Ms. Jarrett still sees herself and her political allies as being on the
outside, speaking truth to power, even when speaking from the Oval Office. The
Congressional Black Caucus still routinely sees a pervasive racism, even though
both the president of the United States and the chairman of the Republican
National Committee are black. The rich are still looked upon by liberals as
enemies of the poor and disadvantaged, even though Mr. Obama not only carried a
majority of voters earning less than $50,000 but also a majority of those
earning over $200,000. He did, in other words, as well among the wolves as he
did among the sheep.
Not only does the liberal paradigm not even come close to agreeing with the
social and economic reality on the ground today, worse, it has largely congealed
into a political religion, especially in the nearly 30 years since Ronald Reagan
shifted the nation's political center of gravity, just as FDR had done 48 years
earlier. Since liberals care about the sheep, all who disagree with liberalism
must not, making them morally inferior if not downright immoral. Thus the
nastiness in American politics is largely on the left. Whatever you think of
Sarah Palin, her treatment in the liberal press was ugliness personified.
The conservatives of today bear little resemblance to those of the 1930s that
cartoonist Peter Arno immortalized heading down to Manhattan's Trans-Lux theater
to hiss newsreels of FDR. They are instead abubble with ideas to reform aspects
of American politics and economics that badly need reform, such as the tax and
legal systems, and the impending entitlements crisis. They want to utilize the
great power of markets to force efficiency, drive down costs, and drive up
yields. But liberals refuse to engage those ideas, simply because they are not
liberal ideas and must, therefore, be wrong if not the latest plot by the wolves
to exploit the sheep.
But in a world where a majority of Americans work at white-collar jobs, have
high-school and college degrees, own their own homes, and hold financial
securities in their own right, the so-called wolves are now a majority. If
liberals don't begin to take that fact into account in formulating policy, the
Obama administration will not only be an unsuccessful liberal administration, it
may well be the last liberal administration.
Mr. Gordon is the author of "Hamilton's Blessing: The Extraordinary
Life and Times of Our National Debt," out in a revised edition by Walker & Co.
early next year.
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