By Jim Geraghty
Wednesday, July 18, 2018
Yesterday, President Obama stood in a cricket stadium in
Johannesburg, South Africa, and said a lot of things that could, or should, get
conservatives nodding in agreement. But as he offered a grim assessment of both
modern American politics and the broader geopolitical scene, you had to wonder
when, if ever, he would confront the fact that he had a lot to do with the shaping
of modern American politics and the broader geopolitical scene. He certainly
had more influence on it than you or I did.
Obama pointed out that history’s many horrific systems of
oppression can’t be simplified to a simple narrative of racism: “Whites were
happy to exploit other whites when they could. And by the way, blacks were
often willing to exploit other blacks. And around the globe, the majority of
people lived at subsistence levels, without a say in the politics or economic
forces that determined their lives.”
And he took a shot at identity politics: “You can’t
[change minds] if you insist that those who aren’t like you — because they’re
white, or because they’re male — that somehow there’s no way they can
understand what I’m feeling, that somehow they lack standing to speak on
certain matters.”
Of course … this is the president who made Al Sharpton
his “go-to man on race” and who said Latinos needed to “punish” their
“enemies.” It’s great that Obama realizes that identity politics can be corrosive
to civil society and that they can Balkanize a once-thriving, relatively
harmonious society. It just would have been good to hear this wisdom from a
president instead of an ex-president.
Obama offered a nostalgic look at the close of the
Reagan-Bush era, when a wave of freedom and liberation swept the globe in the
aftermath of the Cold War:
As a law student, I witnessed
[Nelson Mandela] emerge from prison, just a few months, you’ll recall, after
the fall of the Berlin Wall, I felt the same wave of hope that washed through
hearts all around the world.
Do you remember that feeling? It
seemed as if the forces of progress were on the march, that they were
inexorable. Each step he took, you felt this is the moment when the old
structures of violence and repression and ancient hatreds that had so long
stunted people’s lives and confined the human spirit — that all that was
crumbling before our eyes.
For Americans and the rest of the world, life in the ’90s
was better and safer than it was at the beginning of the 1980s — which is why
it is unwise for adults who should know better to say things like, “For the
first time in my adult lifetime, I am really proud of my country” in 2008. Some
might even say comments like that are “strikingly ungracious.” Perhaps “Make
America Great Again” and “American Carnage” are unduly dark and pessimistic
assessments of the country — but they simply echoed the apocalyptic perspective
of Democrats in the latter years of the Bush presidency.
Obama said yesterday, “For once solidly middle-class
families in advanced economies like the United States, these trends have meant
greater economic insecurity, especially for those who don’t have specialized
skills, people who were in manufacturing, people working in factories, people
working on farms.” Had he focused on this more during his presidency, would
Hillary Clinton have lost?
Obama lamented, “In the West, you’ve got far-right
parties that oftentimes are based not just on platforms of protectionism and
closed borders, but also on barely hidden racial nationalism.” Would those
parties have flourished if the Barack Obamas and Angela Merkels of the world
had taken citizens’ demands for border security and carefully scrutinized
immigration more seriously? How much faith was lost in U.S. immigration
controls when the 9/11 hijackers, the Boston Marathon bombers, and the San
Bernardino terrorists entered the country legally?
Is anyone surprised that many Germans bristled when Merkel decided,
unilaterally, to allow in more than 1 million migrants — many of them fleeing
the wars in Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan?
Former United Kingdom prime minister Gordon Brown was
caught on a hot mike calling one of his own supporters a “bigoted woman”
because she lamented people staying on public assistance for too long and asked
where all of the recent immigrants were coming from. If you’re wealthy and powerful,
your life is insulated from a lot of problems in society. Among those problems
is illegal immigration, and because you’re not dealing with any crime, any
overcrowded schools, any language barriers, you see it as harmless, or even as
an economic benefit.
Later in his speech, Obama added, “In the West’s current
debate around immigration, for example, it’s not wrong to insist that national
borders matter; whether you’re a citizen or not is going to matter to a
government, that laws need to be followed; that in the public realm newcomers
should make an effort to adapt to the language and customs of their new home.”
How different would the Obama era look if he had
emphasized that message at every
opportunity?
Obama said progress requires “laws that root out
corruption and ensures fair dealing in business.” Does he think the Clinton
Foundation fits into that vision? How about the former Obama Treasury secretary
Tim Geithner’s tax evasion? How about former congressman Charlie Rangel’s tax
evasion? The six-figure and seven-figure sums of unpaid taxes of Tom Daschle,
Claire McCaskill, or Al Sharpton? Does Obama grasp why the public might
virulently recoil when those who support higher taxes escape serious
consequence for not paying their own?
Obama declared, “It’s not just money that a job provides;
it provides dignity and structure and a sense of place and a sense of purpose.”
Amen, Mr. President! How long have conservatives made this argument in various
welfare-to-work proposals?
Some parts of Obama’s speech were great, such as when he
directly attacked the idea that human rights, freedom, and pluralism were
incompatible with some cultures: “We have to resist the notion that basic human
rights like freedom to dissent, or the right of women to fully participate in
the society, or the right of minorities to equal treatment, or the rights of
people not to be beat up and jailed because of their sexual orientation — we
have to be careful not to say that somehow, well, that doesn’t apply to us,
that those are Western ideas rather than universal imperatives.”
But in that light, a more generous assessment of the Bush
administration’s “freedom agenda” is warranted. It wasn’t naïve or unrealistic
or happy talk; it was principled.
Discussing partisanship and division, Obama said, “Maybe
we can change their minds, but maybe they’ll change ours. And you can’t do this
if you just out of hand disregard what your opponents have to say from the
start.” That’s a great message. But this is the man who responded to GOP
criticism of his stimulus package with, “I won.”
And when Obama complained, “Unfortunately, too much of
politics today seems to reject the very concept of objective truth. People just
make stuff up,” a lot of Americans no doubt heard, “If you like your plan, you
can keep your plan, and if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor”
ringing in our ears. Obamacare was passed with the necessary assistance of a pack
of lies, with its architect gloating about the “stupidity” of the American
voter and boasting that the “lack of transparency is a huge political
advantage.” Obama hates cynical, dishonest politics — up until the moment he
needs it.
Identity politics, cynicism, tolerance of corruption,
hardline partisanship, shameless dishonesty, a shallow obsession with
celebrities, an appetite for utopian slogans instead of serious and realistic
proposals, demagoguery … if all of these forces play bigger roles in American
politics in 2018 than they did in 2008, whose fault is that?
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