NP Rank:
Camille Paglia's Latest: Too Late for Obama to Turn It Around?
Some gems from Camille Paglia's latest Salon.com essay, which I have summarized and added numbers to the points:
Too late for Obama to turn it around?
By Camille Paglia
Sep. 09, 2009
1) Dissident Democrats found their voices, and by late August even the liberal lemmings of the mainstream media, from CBS to CNN, had dramatically altered their tone of reportage, from priggish disdain of the town hall insurgency to frank admission of serious problems in the healthcare bills as well as of Obama's declining national support.
But this tonic dose of truth-telling may be too little too late.
As Roy and others here have already said, trust is a key component of being a leader. Treating the dissidents with disrespect, something that occurred regularly here as well, alienates further.
2) The media warhorses failed to speak out when they should have -- from week one after the inauguration, when Obama went flat as a rug in letting Congress pass that obscenely bloated stimulus package. Had more Democrats protested, the administration would have felt less arrogantly emboldened to jam through a cap-and-trade bill whose costs have made it virtually impossible for an alarmed public to accept the gargantuan expenses of national healthcare reform.
Why did he let Nancy Pelosi write the stimulus bill? Shouldn't a stimulus bill put out a lot of money fast? This one spends a lot, but it spreads it over a three year period. ?
3) By foolishly trying to reduce all objections to healthcare reform to the malevolence of obstructionist Republicans, Democrats have managed to destroy the national coalition that elected Obama and that is unlikely to be repaired.
If Obama fails to win reelection, let the blame be first laid at the door of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, who at a pivotal point threw gasoline on the flames by comparing angry American citizens to Nazis.
Why did it take so long for Democrats to realize that this year's tea party and town hall uprisings were a genuine barometer of widespread public discontent and not simply a staged scenario by kooks and conspirators?
This is the central question. If you can't admit to having to correct your stance, your error grows.
4) First of all, too many political analysts still think that network and cable TV chat shows are the central forums of national debate. But the truly transformative political energy is coming from talk radio and the Web -- both of which Democrat-sponsored proposals have threatened to stifle, in defiance of freedom of speech guarantees in the Bill of Rights.
I rarely watch TV anymore except for cooking shows, history and science documentaries, old movies and football. Hence I was blissfully free from the retching overkill that followed the deaths of Michael Jackson and Ted Kennedy -- I never saw a single minute of any of it.
It was on talk radio, which I have resumed monitoring around the clock because of the healthcare fiasco, that I heard the passionate voices of callers coming directly from the town hall meetings. Hence I was alerted to the depth and intensity of national sentiment long before others who were simply watching staged, manipulated TV shows.
The people are real. Astroturf? She is right. You are out of touch the same way Bush was over the immigration bill or the Dubai Ports deal if you think that the people are not real.
5) Why has the Democratic Party become so arrogantly detached from ordinary Americans?
Though they claim to speak for the poor and dispossessed, Democrats have increasingly become the party of an upper-middle-class professional elite, top-heavy with journalists, academics and lawyers (one reason for the hypocritical absence of tort reform in the healthcare bills).
Weirdly, given their worship of highly individualistic, secularized self-actualization, such professionals are as a whole amazingly credulous these days about big-government solutions to every social problem. They see no danger in expanding government authority and intrusive, wasteful bureaucracy. This is, I submit, a stunning turn away from the anti-authority and anti-establishment principles of authentic 1960s leftism.
Elitists' worst aspect is a narcissism that empowers them to override all others. That is what you see.
6) How has "liberty" become the inspirational code word of conservatives rather than liberals?
A prominent example is radio host Mark Levin's book "Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto," which was No. 1 on the New York Times bestseller list for nearly three months without receiving major reviews, including in the Times. I always thought that the Democratic Party is the freedom party -- but I must be living in the nostalgic past.
I was asking myself this the other day. How can it be that the NYT is afraid to write a review of a book that they may only partly agree with?
7) But affluent middle-class Democrats now seem to be complacently servile toward authority and automatically believe everything party leaders tell them. Why?
Is it because the new professional class is a glossy product of generically institutionalized learning? Independent thought and logical analysis of argument are no longer taught. Elite education in the U.S. has become a frenetic assembly line of competitive college application to schools where ideological brainwashing is so pandemic that it's invisible.
The top schools, from the Ivy League on down, promote "critical thinking," which sounds good but is in fact just a style of rote regurgitation of hackneyed approved terms ("racism, sexism, homophobia") when confronted with any social issue. The Democratic brain has been marinating so long in those clichés that it's positively pickled.
Throughout this fractious summer, I was dismayed not just at the self-defeating silence of Democrats at the gaping holes or evasions in the healthcare bills but also at the fogginess or insipidity of articles and Op-Eds about the controversy emanating from liberal mainstream media and Web sources.
She really gets this one right.
8) By a proportion of something like 10-to-1, negative articles by conservatives were vastly more detailed, specific and practical about the proposals than were supportive articles by Democrats, which often made gestures rather than arguments and brimmed with emotion and sneers.
There was a glaring inability in most Democratic commentary to think ahead and forecast what would or could be the actual snarled consequences -- in terms of delays, denial of services, errors, miscommunications and gross invasions of privacy -- of a massive single-payer overhaul of the healthcare system in a nation as large and populous as ours. It was as if Democrats live in a utopian dream world, divorced from the daily demands and realities of organization and management.
If the left is an incoherent shambles in the U.S., it's partly because the visionaries lost their bearings on drugs, and only the myopic apparatchiks and feather-preening bourgeois liberals are left. (I addressed the drugs cataclysm in "Cults and Cosmic Consciousness: Religious Vision in the American 1960s" in the Winter 2003 issue of Arion.)
Having said all that about the failures of my own party, I am not about to let Republicans off the hook. What a backbiting mess the GOP is!
It lacks even one credible voice of traditional moral values on the national stage and is addicted to sonorous pieties of pharisaical emptiness.
The same here at NowPublic. What makes the cost go up and what in the healthcare bill will make that stop?
Have you heard any concrete answers here?
9) Which brings us to Afghanistan: Let's get the hell out!
While I vociferously opposed the incursion into Iraq, I was always strongly in favor of bombing the mountains of Afghanistan to smithereens in our search for Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida training camps. But committing our land forces to a long, open-ended mission to reshape the political future of that country has been a fool's errand from the start. Every invader has been frustrated and eventually defeated by that maze-like mountain terrain, from Alexander the Great to the Soviet Union. In a larger sense, outsiders will never be able to fix the fate of the roiling peoples of the Near East and Greater Middle East, who have been disputing territorial borderlines and slaughtering each other for 5,000 years.
Crowd Power
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Roy C
Vancouver, Washington, United States
Recommendations (32)
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albertacowpoke
Canada -
Rory Cripps
New Port Richey, Florida, United States -
Roy C
Vancouver, Washington, United States
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Hugh Askew
Omaha, Nebraska, United States -
jazzyzazzy
Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom -
djermano
Somewherein, China -
Rhonda J Mangus
North Tonawanda, New York, United States -
Barry Artiste
Vancouver, Canada










Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (9)
at 16:07 on September 9th, 2009
Wow! Great story QueensHart! It appears that you and Camille Paglia share many of the same views! Who would have thought that? LOL!
at 18:01 on September 9th, 2009
Thank you very much Rory! She is definitely a favorite of mine. I was introduced to her work in Art School. One may not agree with all she says but never be bored by her language skills and political awareness.
at 19:58 on September 9th, 2009
Good story QH
at 02:18 on September 10th, 2009
Thanks Barry
at 07:14 on September 10th, 2009
Well if Obama is going to turn it around.....he needs to swallow a bunch of lies... Frankly this is just an ordinary guy...with no miracles or boldness. He will be as big a disappoinment as George Bush. We only voted for him so we didn't have to look at Bush's mug any longer.....to find that Obama is nothing but Bush in disguise. This is no circus...its a calamity and shame.
Rev. Jermano
at 14:35 on October 15th, 2009
Give the "lady" her due, she hit that one out of the park - and it wasn't a softball.
Very good post.
at 15:44 on October 15th, 2009
Thank You very much for your excellent observation! : )
at 23:08 on October 15th, 2009
One notices most, the obvious lack of detractors.
Perchance they sleep, to scheme, but inspiration, ever the coward, flees............
at 03:58 on October 16th, 2009
Cowards are those who hide behind guns and kill the innocent people while they sleep... tis the American dream is it not?
Rev.