The Great
Peasant Revolt of 2010
by
Charles Krauthammer
TownHall.com
WASHINGTON -- "I am not an ideologue," protested President Obama at a
gathering with Republican House members last week. Perhaps, but he does have a
tenacious commitment to a set of political convictions.
Compare his 2010 State of the Union to his first address to Congress a year
earlier. The consistency is remarkable. In 2009, after passing a $787 billion
(now $862 billion) stimulus package, the largest spending bill in galactic
history, he unveiled a manifesto for fundamentally restructuring the commanding
heights of American society -- health care, education and energy.
A year later, after stunning Democratic setbacks in Virginia, New Jersey and
Massachusetts, Obama gave a stay-the-course State of the Union address (a)
pledging not to walk away from health care reform, (b) seeking to turn college
education increasingly into a federal entitlement, and (c) asking again for
cap-and-trade energy legislation. Plus, of course, another stimulus package,
this time renamed a "jobs bill."
This being a democracy, don't the Democrats see that clinging to this agenda
will march them over a cliff? Don't they understand Massachusetts?
Well, they understand it through a prism of two cherished axioms: (1) The
people are stupid and (2) Republicans are bad. Result? The dim, led by the
malicious, vote incorrectly.
Liberal expressions of disdain for the intelligence and emotional maturity of
the electorate have been, post-Massachusetts, remarkably unguarded. New York
Times columnist Charles Blow chided Obama for not understanding the necessity of
speaking "in the plain words of plain folks," because the people are "suspicious
of complexity." Counseled Blow: "The next time he gives a speech, someone should
tap him on the ankle and say, 'Mr. President, we're down here.'"
A Time magazine blogger was even more blunt about the ankle-dwelling mob,
explaining that we are "a nation of dodos" that is "too dumb to thrive."
Obama joined the parade in the State of the Union address when, with
supercilious modesty, he chided himself "for not explaining it (health care)
more clearly to the American people." The subject, he noted, was "complex." The
subject, it might also be noted, was one to which the master of complexity had
devoted 29 speeches. Perhaps he did not speak slowly enough.
Then there are the emotional deficiencies of the masses. Nearly every
Democratic apologist lamented the people's anger and anxiety, a free-floating
agitation that prevented them from appreciating the beneficence of the social
agenda the Democrats are so determined to foist upon them.
That brings us to Part 2 of the liberal conceit: Liberals act in the public
interest, while conservatives think only of power, elections,
self-aggrandizement and self-interest.
It is an old liberal theme that conservative ideas, being red in tooth and
claw, cannot possibly emerge from any notion of the public good. A 2002 New York
Times obituary for philosopher Robert Nozick explained that the strongly
libertarian implications of Nozick's masterwork, "Anarchy, State, and Utopia,"
"proved comforting to the right, which was grateful for what it embraced as
philosophical justification." The right, you see, is grateful when a bright
intellectual can graft some philosophical rationalization onto its thoroughly
base and self-regarding politics.
This belief in the moral hollowness of conservatism animates the current
liberal mantra that Republican opposition to Obama's social democratic agenda --
which couldn't get through even a Democratic Congress and powered major
Democratic losses in New Jersey, Virginia and Massachusetts -- is nothing but
blind and cynical obstructionism.
By contrast, Democratic opposition to George W. Bush -- from Iraq to Social
Security reform -- constituted (BEG ITAL)dissent(END ITAL). And dissent, we were
told at the time, including by candidate Obama, is "one of the truest
expressions of patriotism."
No more. Today, dissent from the governing orthodoxy is nihilistic malice.
"They made a decision," explained David Axelrod, "they were going to sit it out
and hope that we failed, that the country failed" -- a perfect expression of
liberals' conviction that their aspirations are necessarily the country's, that
their idea of the public good is the public's, that their failure is therefore
the nation's.
Then comes Massachusetts, an election Obama himself helped nationalize, to
shatter this most self-congratulatory of illusions.
For liberals, the observation that "the peasants are revolting" is a pun. For
conservatives, it is cause for uncharacteristic optimism. No matter how far the
ideological pendulum swings in the short term, in the end the bedrock common
sense of the American people will prevail.
The ankle-dwelling populace pushes back. It re-centers. It renormalizes. Even
in Massachusetts.
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