Posted by
TommyO on Sunday, October 26, 2008 9:38:01 PM
From NRO 10/25/08. could not be better said.
The Obama Temptation [Mark R. Levin]
I've
been thinking this for a while so I might as well air it here. I
honestly never thought we'd see such a thing in our country - not yet
anyway - but I sense what's occurring in this election is a
recklessness and abandonment of rationality that has preceded the
voluntary surrender of liberty and security in other places. I can't
help but observe that even some conservatives are caught in the moment
as their attempts at explaining their support for Barack Obama are
unpersuasive and even illogical. And the pull appears to be rather
strong. Ken Adelman, Doug Kmiec, and others, reach for the usual
platitudes in explaining themselves but are utterly incoherent. Even
non-conservatives with significant public policy and real world
experiences, such as Colin Powell and Charles Fried, find Obama
alluring but can't explain themselves in an intelligent way.
There is a cult-like atmosphere around Barack Obama, which his campaign
has carefully and successfully fabricated, which concerns me. The
messiah complex. Fainting audience members at rallies. Special Obama
flags and an Obama presidential seal. A graphic with the portrayal of
the globe and Obama's name on it, which adorns everything from Obama's
plane to his street literature. Young school children singing songs
praising Obama. Teenagers wearing camouflage outfits and marching in
military order chanting Obama's name and the professions he is going to
open to them. An Obama world tour, culminating in a speech in Berlin
where Obama proclaims we are all citizens of the world. I dare say,
this is ominous stuff.
Even the media are drawn to the
allure that is Obama. Yes, the media are liberal. Even so, it is
obvious that this election is different. The media are open and brazen
in their attempts to influence the outcome of this election. I've never
seen anything like it. Virtually all evidence of Obama's past
influences and radicalism — from Jeremiah Wright to William Ayers —
have been raised by non-traditional news sources. The media's role has
been to ignore it as long as possible, then mention it if they must,
and finally dismiss it and those who raise it in the first place. It's
as if the media use the Obama campaign's talking points — its
preposterous assertions that Obama didn't hear Wright from the pulpit
railing about black liberation, whites, Jews, etc., that Obama had no
idea Ayers was a domestic terrorist despite their close political,
social, and working relationship, etc. — to protect Obama from
legitimate and routine scrutiny. And because journalists have also
become commentators, it is hard to miss their almost uniform admiration
for Obama and excitement about an Obama presidency. So in the tank are
the media for Obama that for months we've read news stories and opinion
pieces insisting that if Obama is not elected president it will be due
to white racism. And, of course, while experience is crucial in
assessing Sarah Palin's qualifications for vice president, no such
standard is applied to Obama's qualifications for president. (No longer
is it acceptable to minimize the work of a community organizer.)
Charles Gibson and Katie Couric sought to humiliate Palin. They would
never and have never tried such an approach with Obama.
But
beyond the elites and the media, my greatest concern is whether this
election will show a majority of the voters susceptible to the appeal
of a charismatic demagogue. This may seem a harsh term to some, and no
doubt will to Obama supporters, but it is a perfectly appropriate
characterization. Obama's entire campaign is built on class warfare and
human envy. The "change" he peddles is not new. We've seen it before.
It is change that diminishes individual liberty for the soft
authoritarianism of socialism. It is a populist appeal that disguises
government mandated wealth redistribution as tax cuts for the middle
class, falsely blames capitalism for the social policies and government
corruption (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) that led to the current turmoil
in our financial markets, fuels contempt for commerce and trade by
stigmatizing those who run successful small and large businesses, and
exploits human imperfection as a justification for a massive expansion
of centralized government. Obama's appeal to the middle class is an
appeal to the "the proletariat," as an infamous philosopher once
described it, about which a mythology has been created. Rather than
pursue the American Dream, he insists that the American Dream has
arbitrary limits, limits Obama would set for the rest of us — today
it's $250,000 for businesses and even less for individuals. If the
individual dares to succeed beyond the limits set by Obama, he is
punished for he's now officially "rich." The value of his physical and
intellectual labor must be confiscated in greater amounts for the good
of the proletariat (the middle class). And so it is that the middle
class, the birth-child of capitalism, is both celebrated and enslaved —
for its own good and the greater good. The "hope" Obama represents,
therefore, is not hope at all. It is the misery of his utopianism
imposed on the individual.
Unlike past Democrat presidential
candidates, Obama is a hardened ideologue. He's not interested in
playing around the edges. He seeks "fundamental change," i.e., to
remake society. And if the Democrats control Congress with
super-majorities led by Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, he will get much
of what he demands.
The question is whether enough Americans
understand what's at stake in this election and, if they do, whether
they care. Is the allure of a charismatic demagogue so strong that the
usually sober American people are willing to risk an Obama presidency?
After all, it ensnared Adelman, Kmiec, Powell, Fried, and numerous
others. And while America will certainly survive, it will do so, in
many respects, as a different place.
10/25 09:29 PM