What was Tina Brown thinking?
Choosing Niall Ferguson’s take-down of President Obama as
Newsweek’s cover article and entitling it: “Hit the Road, Barack” she was
surely trying to say something.
If anything, she is responsible for the title. By calling
out the President of the United States by his first name, she is being dismissive
and disrespectful.
Coming from a mainstream New York media maven, someone who is notably attuned to correct opinion, it is
shocking.
Surely, there’s more to it than the will to create buzz and
sell magazines.
The article’s author is not just a Republican hack. Niall
Ferguson drips credentials: Harvard professor, best-selling author, Hoover
Institute fellow, television star and so on.
Of course, Ferguson is not a Democrat. During the last
election he advised John McCain. He counts among the few academics and
cognoscenti who were not enthralled by Barack Obama in 2008. He has written
numerous articles critiquing the Obama administration over the past years.
But still, his article did not appear on the cover of the
National Review or Weekly Standard.
What was Tina Brown saying with her cover article?
I think that she was saying that it’s safe to go back in the
water. Meaning: it’s now safe to turn away from Barack Obama… and still be
invited to the best cocktail parties.
You might not have thought that all of the free thinkers in
a place like New York need permission to think forbidden thoughts, but, sad to
say, many of them do.
Even I, navigating a social circle that is far narrower than
Brown’s, have noticed a general malaise, a barely articulated disillusion with
President Obama. Everyone knows it; no one dares say it.
Everyone knows that Obama has failed. Some people are afraid
to think it because they do not want to admit that they were conned in 2008.
Others allow themselves to think it but are afraid to express themselves too
openly.
They are awaiting an all-clear signal, a sign that
separating from Obama will not consign them to social oblivion.
In New York in 2008 support for Obama was nearly unanimous.
Obviously, this is not a good thing. George Patton once said:
“If everyone is thinking alike, someone isn’t thinking.”
New York is a very liberal town; it often seems to be
suffering from terminal groupthink. New York is also a media town; it’s a place
where members of the elite media rub shoulders live in an echo chamber.
But, the media is declining. It is certainly not funding the city government. That honor belongs to Wall
Street and the financial services industry.
It mattered to New York that Goldman Sachs bankers lined up
in 2008 to support Barack Obama. It mattered that they would lend him their
credibility.
This year, the same bankers have given most of their money
to Mitt Romney.
Clearly they are smarting from Obama’s demagogic attacks on
Wall Street fat cats. But they also
know, better than most, that the Obama administration has been bad for
business.
That giant sucking sound they've been hearing has been the movement of money from
the private to the public sector. Bankers are struggling to do business under
the artificial constraints imposed by Obamacare and Dodd-Frank Wall Street.
As Wall Street goes, so goes a considerable number of New
York movers and shakers.
Clearly, the New York Times and the New Yorker, reliably
liberal publications, are not going to turn on the man they helped make
president. If they did they would have to repudiate their most cherished
beliefs.
But now that Tina Brown has made it respectable to jettison
Obama, more and more people are going to feel that they can speak openly about
their disappointment.
If they need cogent arguments for their position Brown has
provided them. Few public intellectuals are better at it than Niall Ferguson.
Ferguson begins by saying that Obama has failed to keep his
promises.
No one should have been surprised. Thanks to the media and
academic elites Barack Obama was thrust into a position for which he was
unprepared and unqualified.
In 2008 many intelligent people worked themselves into such a frenzy
about the danger posed by Republicans that they convinced themselves that Obama
would be up to the job of being the President of the United States. Then, they
set about manipulating public opinion into thinking as they did.
Of course, they were grossly unfair to the man himself. Had they any judgment they would have allowed the man to gain experience before thrusting him into the oval
office.
Desperation clouded their judgment. So much so that they
decided that it was more important to make a point than to elect someone who
could function as a president.
Had they wanted to run a liberal Democrat, they could have
found others. Media mavens were entranced and enthralled by Obama because of
the narrative, because he was a great story.
Most intellectuals have been tricked into believing that life
is a narrative. Within that mindset they decided that the best way to solve a
major financial crisis would be to elect someone who would redeem the American
sin of racism.
The question is not whether anyone was thinking clearly. It
is, whether anyone was thinking at all.
Among those who bought the narrative were Obama’s team of economic
advisers. They were among the first to discover that there was no there there.
Ferguson explains:
On
paper it looked like an economics dream team: Larry Summers, Christina Romer,
and Austan Goolsbee, not to mention Peter Orszag, Tim Geithner, and Paul
Volcker. The inside story, however, is that the president was wholly unable to
manage the mighty brains—and egos—he had assembled to advise him.
According
to Ron Suskind’s book Confidence
Men, Summers told Orszag over dinner in May 2009: “You know, Peter,
we’re really home alone ... I mean it. We’re home alone. There’s no adult in
charge. Clinton would never have made these mistakes [of indecisiveness on key
economic issues].” On issue after issue, according to Suskind, Summers
overruled the president. “You can’t just march in and make that argument and
then have him make a decision,” Summers told Orszag, “because he doesn’t know
what he’s deciding.” (I have heard similar things said off the record by key
participants in the president’s interminable “seminar” on Afghanistan policy.)
The problem is, life is not a narrative. It is a game. You should not conduct your life according to a script. You should not aspire to have a
starring role in a drama.
Articulate goals, draw up a plan, set a policy, implement it…
that is the way to live your life, and to run an enterprise.
Ferguson echoes this point when he explains the difference
between the Barack Obama narrative and the Paul Ryan plan.
In his words:
Ryan psychs Obama out. This has been apparent ever since the White
House went on the offensive against Ryan in the spring of last year. And the
reason he psychs him out is that, unlike Obama, Ryan has a plan—as opposed to a
narrative—for this country.
It’s very difficult, if not impossible, to answer a plan
with a narrative.
The choice America is facing in this election is stark.
Ferguson states it clearly:
The
voters now face a stark choice. They can let Barack Obama’s rambling,
solipsistic narrative continue until they find themselves living in some
American version of Europe, with low growth, high unemployment, even higher
debt—and real geopolitical decline.
Or they
can opt for real change: the kind of change that will end four years of
economic underperformance, stop the terrifying accumulation of debt, and
reestablish a secure fiscal foundation for American national security.
8 comments:
I expect that Romney's plan will fail.
However, at least then we will have tried an actual plan and seen it not work.
Then we can thing about it again and try something else.
I agree with you on both counts. Well stated.
I think that people thought that they were pushing the "Magic Button" when they voted for Obama and that he was going to waive his magic wand and make everything happy again.
I'm kind of surprised that former Obama supporters are surprised that his presidency is kind of just sitting there doing nothing.
Well, Brown and Ferguson are (British) outsiders, so have neither the religious commitment to liberalism of New York jews, say, nor the tendency to groupthink of the coastal elites.
If Romney's plan is 'shrink government' and promote enterprise and then it won't fail. That plan never has.
Excellent post, Mr. Schneiderman.
It would seem logical to me that if one is going to deal with and possibly solve a problem one need to develop a plan. One cannot just hope that changes will happen that makes the problem go away.
I like that Ryan has a plan to deal with Medicare because we all know that it is going bankrupt. A plan is at least a place to start in lieu of the benign neglect we have emanating from a significant number of politicians who seem more worried about their jobs that the hard decisions their constituents elected them to make.
I keep trying to understand what laudable accomplishments Obama has to his presidency. It would appear that even the decision on Osama was made by Valerie Jarrett who basically pushed him into it. The ACA is anything but affordable. It is a lawyer's "Dream Act." Green energy is a disaster. In fact Obama has, by his regulations and EPA, tied us even more to the Saudis.
Obama passes off his responsibility to Congressional Democrats who make a mockery of the legislative process. Obama's administration is so corrupt that he has to use Executive Orders to protect the grifters. EO are, in many cases, illegal.
Obama's foreign policy has made the world a more dangerous place and threatens to make China the preeminent power in the world. Is Egypt, Iran, Iraq, et al any more democratic now? We tend to alienate our naturally allies and cozy up with those who wish to destroy us.
Race relations are worse. Unemployment is higher, especially for Blacks and the young. An aside, I keep wondering how long can Blacks be told that a party has their best interests at heart and still wind up with the short end of the stick before they finally figure out something is wrong?
Question. When is the last time one has had a civil discussion with anyone on the Left or anyone who states they are a liberal? Under Obama we have become a country that hates each other instead of one working together to solve our problems.
The flippant responses to questions about those who challenge him should be instructive, but seem to fall on ears that have "hunkered down" from any disagreement. Where is the intellectual foundation for Obama's argumentation? It would appear that significant numbers of us are to STFU and everything will just be fine. I am not sure, but that does not sound like a free country to me nor a person who has taken his responsibility of being President of, ALL, the United States.
A lot of people who voted in '08 to prove they aren't racists will vote in '12 to prove they aren't masochists.
Sanity Inspector I would add that those same people are also afraid to voice their voting tendencies this time around for fear of being viewed as racist still.
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