Sunday, January 25, 2009

WTF (the good kind)

Not that I have any readers left, but I just have to say, what is happening right now politically is remarkable. I don't mean all the "historic" stuff (as opposed that which is not historic, or a part of history). Maybe our expectations have just been lowered or maybe, despite paying attention when we were younger, we were not able to understand what Clinton was really doing. Either way, this past week stuff has been getting done, and it's good stuff: ending torture, increasing transparency, closing financial loopholes, increasing emission standards, and thinking about nationalizing the banks. These are things that I've been dreaming and obsessing about for the last few years, and now it seems so effortless.

It also seems that people don't know how to react. It is an undiscussed fact that people on the left are more wary of the government, particularly big government, than the small-government conservatives who have given us not only the biggest, most wasteful government in the history of the planet but also a fairly extensive police-state apparatus, all in the name of freedom. This means that the left is instinctively hyper-reacting to everything Obama does, such as this so-called "jack bauer" exception. They may be right to do so, but I'm increasingly confident that Obama is 'one of us', but more politically skilled. We'll see.

And on the right, well, it's pretty funny. Some are trying to silicon valley their way out of the contemporary situation. There is also the unintentional comedy of David Frum, he of the American We Have No Clue What We're Talking About Institute, trying to reorganize the right via blog. If you start reading these and other similar websites, it's clear that they don't know what hit them and don't understand how to live in a world where their scare-tactic racial politics (eg crime/drugs/terror, the "southern strategy," civilizational wars, "economic responsibility," etc) no longer work. When David Brooks says that Palin "is a fatal cancer to the Republican party," he is just afraid of what they've created since 1964.

Since fear always has a place in politics, Sarah and the Palins (the Republicans) will be back. There can be no myth of the permanent majority (plus, in a working democracy what would that even mean?). Still, the way in which Bush and friends have almost systematically discredited every single Republican idea and moreover managed to link the Republican brand to incompetence and political divisiveness in a generation of diverse voters cannot be underestimated. I also don't want to start sounding like the 22% group in talking about how the President is such a great man that everyone likes. But it's been a while since reading the news was the good part of my day.

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