America Unhinged
by Maureen Farrell
www.buzzflash.com
"America has entered one of its periods
of historical madness, but this is the worst I can remember: worse
than McCarthyism, worse than the Bay of Pigs and in the long term
potentially more disastrous than the Vietnam War." John
le Carre
While one would expect Ann Coulter to
write a column entitled "Liberals Unhinged," when New
York Times columnist Nicolas Kristof joined the fray a year or
so ago, such criticism was taken more seriously. Accusing the
left of "dumbing down," he argued that liberals were
falling into a "cesspool of outraged incoherence."
Since then, it's become commonplace to
equate hatred of the president with an inexplicable mental illness.
Charles Krauthammer has observed that "Democrats are seized
with a loathing for President Bush -- a contempt and disdain giving
way to a hatred that is near pathological" while the Weekly
Standard's Christopher Caldwell believes that "Democrats
have been driven into a frenzy of illogic by their dislike of
George W. Bush." Tucker Carlson has taken the conceit even
further. "At least twice over the past few months, we here
on Crossfire have sent urgent warnings to the mental health community
about a certain New York Times columnist, Paul Krugman,"
Carlson recently said. "Krugman hates President Bush so much,
so completely, so obsessively, that he can barely speak. And as
readers of his column know, he long ago lost his ability to think
clearly. This man needs help and he needs it desperately right
away."
[<http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0311/25/cf.00.html>CNN]
Carlson also cited a Boston Globe article
by Alex Beam that infers that Krugman may have developed "a
personality disorder," and is "completely crackers."
Beam points to Krugman's Web site, which, he insists, "is
a nutty, score-settling tote board loaded with paranoid ravings."
Meanwhile, Republican National Committee spokesperson Christine
Iverson has dismissed Krugman's musings as "hate speech,"
saying that "it is obvious that his feelings have clouded
his objectivity and his ability to discuss the issues in a rational
way."
Robert Novak has said that he's never
seen such hatred "in 44 years of campaign watching,"
but truth be told, this righteous anger springs from the right
as well as from the left. In other words, it's not a matter of
liberals taking leave of their senses, or the "unhinging
of the Democratic Party" as Krauthammer calls it -- but of
America herself becoming unhinged.
RNC talking points aside, you may recall
that the same tactics were used before the war in Iraq, when critics
of all political stripes were marginalized as naïve leftist
loons. "If you're an actor who's against the war, you're
suspect," Janeane Garafolo told the Washington Post. "You
must have a weird angle or you just hate George Bush." Meanwhile
headlines like "War And the Fickle Left," and "Wake
Up, Peaceniks!" hid the fact that generals, military experts,
the CIA, veterans groups and conservatives everywhere also opposed
the war. [<http://www.buzzflash.com/contributors/03/01/30_Critics.html>BuzzFlash]
These days, however, propagandists act
as if hatred towards Bush is the unfathomable result of jealousy,
elitist snobbery or mere misunderstanding. "The puzzle is
where this depth of feeling comes from," Krauthammer mused,
forgetting, one supposes, the rabid assaults on another president
a few years back "Whence the anger?," he continued,
answering with the accurate observation, "It begins of course
with the 'stolen' election of 2000 and the perception of Bush's
illegitimacy." Can you imagine the clamor if Bill Clinton
had risen to power under the same circumstances? And if Roger
Clinton had been the governor of a state that oversaw the deliberate
disenfranchisement of thousands of Republicans? It's doubtful
agile wordsmiths like Krauthammer would be setting words like
"stolen" inside quotation marks.
Ironically, the New York Observer's Ron
Rosenbaum, who was among the first to label Bush hatred "the
personification of rabid, self-destructive, paranoid rage,"
[<http://nyobserver.com/pages/story.asp?ID=6624>NY Observer]
expressed some pretty hefty outrage over the Florida debacle,
too. "If you want to know the truth, I blame the Bush campaign
for the death of [Lars Erik] Nelson, one of the best journalists
in America," he wrote. "Nelson saw what was going on
in Florida early on, and he didn't see it with any equanimity:
One of his colleagues at the Daily News called him on the day
of his death, the afternoon of the televised Florida Supreme Court
argument, and recalled Nelson crying out, "I can't believe
they said that!" over some outrageous assertion by the lawyers
for Ms. Harris and Mr. Bush. A few hours later, he was found in
front of his television set, dead of a stroke. No one will convince
me it was unrelated." [<http://www.observer.com/pages/story.asp?ID=3502>NY
Observer]
So, once again, why is Bush hatred such
an enigma? As it now stands, the next election is already suspect,
we're bogged down in a costly unnecessary preemptive war and these
days, it isn't just the loony left and radical right who are warning
that the U.S. Constitution could soon be U.S. History. Saying
that a massive terrorist attack could "unravel the fabric
of our Constitution," Gen. Tommy Franks recently warned that
we would "begin to militarize our country" and lose
what we most cherish, which is the "freedom and liberty we've
seen for a couple of hundred years in this grand experiment that
we call democracy." [<http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/11/20/185048.shtml>Newsmax]
Given that a growing number of terror experts believe that Bush's
policies make such an attack far more likely and Rep. Ron Paul
(R, TX) is saying that "the draft will likely be reinstated,"
hatred is hardly an irrational reaction.
It also doesn't help that while generals
imply that America is one attack away from becoming a police state,
serious inquiries into went wrong on Sept. 11 are purposely blocked
by the White House. Then, too, considering this administration's
unparalleled arrogance and embarrassing treatment of long-held
allies, fair-minded folks would have to agree that there certainly
is a lot to loathe. "The [Bush] administration has dug the
U.S. into a deep hole in Iraq and, more worryingly, in terms of
its relations with the rest of the world," Christopher Layne
wrote in the October 6 issue of American Conservative. "One
thing is certain: unless the call for the United States to exercise
self-imposed grand-strategic restraint is heeded, the rest of
the world will act to impose that constraint on Washington. If
that happens, the Bush administration will not be remembered for
conquering Baghdad but rather for a policy that shattered the
pillars of the international security framework that the United
States established after World War II, galvanized both hard and
soft balancing against U.S. hegemony, and marked the beginning
of the end of America's era of global preponderance. For this,
it must be held accountable." [<http://amconmag.com/10_06_03/cover.html>American
Conservative]
Sorrows of Empire author Chalmers Johnson
extended this concern even further. Brilliantly capturing exactly
what many on both the right and the left find so troubling, he
explained:
"Four sorrows, it seems to me, are
certain to be visited on the United States. Their cumulative effect
guarantees that the U.S. will cease to resemble the country outlined
in the Constitution of 1787. First, there will be a state of perpetual
war, leading to more terrorism against Americans wherever they
may be and a spreading reliance on nuclear weapons among smaller
nations as they try to ward off the imperial juggernaut. Second
is a loss of democracy and Constitutional rights as the presidency
eclipses Congress and is itself transformed from a co-equal 'executive
branch' of government into a military junta. Third is the replacement
of truth by propaganda, disinformation, and the glorification
of war, power, and the military legions. Lastly, there is bankruptcy,
as the United States pours its economic resources into ever more
grandiose military projects and shortchanges the education, health,
and safety of its citizens." [<http://www.presentdanger.org/papers/sorrows2003.html>PresentDanger.org]
While Johnson only addressed three of
the four major threats America faces (i.e. "endless war,
the loss of Constitutional liberties, and financial ruin"),
the propaganda efforts he briefly mentions are becoming clear
to most. By now most Americans realize how deeply we were deceived
during the lead up to war in Iraq. And between the Jessica Lynch
saga and Bush's landing in the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln, most are
pretty savvy about foiled propaganda efforts, too. Laughingly,
however, in the immediate haze of Bush's aircraft carrier landing,
the buzz was that the Democrats were "driven crazy"
by the commander in chief's macho mystique. "The president
has to meet a testosterone standard that appeals to women but
does not offend men," Susan Fields wrote in the Washington
Times. "George W. Bush succeeds with both and that drives
Democrats crazy. They've made fools of themselves with their churlish
criticism of his landing on the deck of the USS Lincoln, but they
can't let it go." [<http://www.buzzflash.com/farrell/03/09/23.html>BuzzFlash]
Though Bush bootlicker Andrew Sullivan
has long since admitted that the aircraft landing was one of the
dumbest political moves ever, Chris Matthews, who, along with
G. Gordon Liddy was accused by Vanity Fair's James Wolcott of
"sprouting rhetorical woodies" over the Top Gun stunt,
swooned like the Pepe Le Pew of punditry. Last week, Matthews
gave a repeat performance, gushing over the sight of Bush in an
Army jacket:
MATTHEWS: That was our commander in chief
speaking to the troops and to the families of those who have lost
in Iraq at Fort Carson, Colorado. Very impressive speech. The
president, the commander in chief in this case, at the top of
his form&
Let me ask Peggy Noonan, what is, as you
see it, the legitimate way to address and to debate a president,
a commander in chief, who appears here, very glowingly, in fact,
almost in uniform, how do you take him on legitimately?
NOONAN: You can take him on legitimately
because it's an election and you're running against him. But that
guy is going to be tough to beat and anyone who thinks otherwise
is really dreamin.'
That guy in the Eisenhower jacket . .
It's not just the way this looks and the way it sounds but . .
That fellow you just saw is optimistic, he's gutsy, he's determined.
He's not going to look small. . .and angry, I think, in contrast
to the Democrats who may be comin' on looking in contrast like
resentful fellows who aren't quite as big."
If this doesn't epitomize "the replacement
of truth by propaganda, disinformation, and the glorification
of war, power, and the military legions," what does? And,
just to make certain that no uncomfortable truths slivered into
the Fort Carson script, reporters were forbidden to talk to the
troops before, during, or after the rally/photo op. [<http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/news_columnists/article/0,1299,DRMN_86_2455047,00.html>Rocky
Mountain News]
Of course, anyone flipping to CNN following
the Matthews/Noonan love fest would have learned that while polls
show that 44% of Americans believe that George W. Bush is a leader
we can trust, another 54% have doubts and reservations. Yet Matthews
wonders if anyone can "legitimately" take Bush on?
But, then again, you might recall that
polls didn't mean much prior to the midterm elections either.
Though Saxby Chambliss hadn't been ahead of Senator Max Cleland
in a single poll, Cox News Service reported that "pollsters
may have goofed" regarding his unexpected win. And as Zogby
reported, "No polls predicted the upset victory in Georgia
of Republican Sonny Perdue over incumbent Democratic Gov. Roy
Barnes." Of course computerized voting machines were used
in Georgia, causing AlterNet's Thom Hartmann to muse, "Either
the system by which democracy exists broke that November evening,
or was hacked, or American voters became suddenly more fickle
than at any time since Truman beat Dewey." [<http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=16474>Alternet]
Pundits explained these GOP upsets, which
occurred in regions where Bush campaigned heavily, as proof of
Bush's popularity, but since exit polls were conveniently unavailable,
it's impossible to know what voters were truly thinking. And even
though we now know that the 2000 election was rigged, propaganda
squads boldly assert that it is simply Bush hatred and paranoia
to wonder if there wasn't some behind the scenes monkey business
in 2002. Given the evidence, it would be crazy not to expect more
of the same in 2004.
Which bring us back to the topic at hand.
While Time's Dec. 1 cover story "Love Him, Hate Him President"
didn't question the sanity of the "hate him" camp, even
some of those arguing that Bush has earned Americans' disdain
seem obliged to wonder if there isn't some deep dark pathology
behind the anger. While making "The Case For Bush Hatred,"
Jonathan Chait asked, "Have Bush haters lost their minds?"
Last January, John le Carre wrote a muchcirculated
piece entitled "The United States Has Gone Mad," but
Chalmers Johnson, believing that the U.S. we love might be gone
forever, deemed le Carre's assertion that "America has entered
one of its periods of historical madness" a tad optimistic.
"If it is just a period of madness, like musth in elephants,
we might get over it," Johnson mused. "The U.S. still
has a strong civil society that could, at least in theory, overcome
the entrenched interests of the armed forces and the military-industrial
complex. I fear, however, that the U.S. has indeed crossed the
Rubicon and that there is no way to restore Constitutional government
short of a revolutionary rehabilitation of American democracy.
Without root and branch reform, Nemesis awaits. She is the goddess
of revenge, the punisher of pride and arrogance, and the United
States is on course for a rendezvous with her."
In other words, America is indeed becoming
unhinged and it's up to "we the people" to find a way
to fix her. If we don't, as crazy as it sounds, our day of reckoning
draws near.
Maureen Farrell is a writer and media
consultant who specializes in helping other writers get television
and radio exposure.
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