Monday, February 11, 2008

A troubling politics of hatred...


An excerpt from Paul Krugman's op-ed piece in todays New York Times, "Hate Springs Eternal":
The bitterness of the fight for the Democratic nomination is, on the face of it, bizarre. Both candidates still standing are smart and appealing. Both have progressive agendas (although I believe that Hillary Clinton is more serious about achieving universal health care, and that Barack Obama has staked out positions that will undermine his own efforts). Both have broad support among the party’s grass roots and are favorably viewed by Democratic voters.

Supporters of each candidate should have no trouble rallying behind the other if he or she gets the nod.

Why, then, is there so much venom out there?

I won’t try for fake evenhandedness here: most of the venom I see is coming from supporters of Mr. Obama, who want their hero or nobody. I’m not the first to point out that the Obama campaign seems dangerously close to becoming a cult of personality. We’ve already had that from the Bush administration — remember Operation Flight Suit? We really don’t want to go there again.

What’s particularly saddening is the way many Obama supporters seem happy with the application of “Clinton rules” — the term a number of observers use for the way pundits and some news organizations treat any action or statement by the Clintons, no matter how innocuous, as proof of evil intent.

The prime example of Clinton rules in the 1990s was the way the press covered Whitewater. A small, failed land deal became the basis of a multiyear, multimillion-dollar investigation, which never found any evidence of wrongdoing on the Clintons’ part, yet the “scandal” became a symbol of the Clinton administration’s alleged corruption.

During the current campaign, Mrs. Clinton’s entirely reasonable remark that it took L.B.J.’s political courage and skills to bring Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream to fruition was cast as some kind of outrageous denigration of Dr. King.

And the latest prominent example came when David Shuster of MSNBC, after pointing out that Chelsea Clinton was working for her mother’s campaign — as adult children of presidential aspirants often do — asked, “doesn’t it seem like Chelsea’s sort of being pimped out in some weird sort of way?” Mr. Shuster has been suspended, but as the Clinton campaign rightly points out, his remark was part of a broader pattern at the network.

I call it Clinton rules, but it’s a pattern that goes well beyond the Clintons. For example, Al Gore was subjected to Clinton rules during the 2000 campaign: anything he said, and some things he didn’t say (no, he never claimed to have invented the Internet), was held up as proof of his alleged character flaws.

For now, Clinton rules are working in Mr. Obama’s favor. But his supporters should not take comfort in that fact.

For one thing, Mrs. Clinton may yet be the nominee — and if Obama supporters care about anything beyond hero worship, they should want to see her win in November.

For another, if history is any guide, if Mr. Obama wins the nomination, he will quickly find himself being subjected to Clinton rules. Democrats always do.

But most of all, progressives should realize that [this] is not the country we want to be. Racism, misogyny and character assassination are all ways of distracting voters from the issues, and people who care about the issues have a shared interest in making the politics of hatred unacceptable.
I should note that just this past week I had so-called "progressive" pro-Obama friends citing Republican/conservative rhetoric (just as the Obama campaign has been doing) and conservative writers (is Peggy Noonan, a speech writer for Reagan and Bush Sr., really a progressive?) in order to question Clinton's healthcare plan and campaign. Who really sold out to corporate special interests here though? The one with the plan closer to universal healthcare (i.e. Clinton) or the one further away (i.e. Obama)?

Perhaps Barack's "high road" isn't so high after all though. Perhaps he's the one doing the real "bamboozling" in these elections. I can only hope that Obama's supporters have the intelligence and humility to admit to his imperfections, otherwise their movement of "change" will continue to look to me to be incredibly hypocritical and superficial just like almost everything else in politics, but perhaps even more so precisely because of their continuous claims not to be so.

UPDATE: I just came across two entertaining and interesting blogposts by Stanley Fish, "All You Need Is Hate" and "A Calumny a Day To Keep Hillary Away". He too is writing about the strange phenomena of Hillary hatred that seems to permeate this country, quipping that "Compared to this, the Swift Boat campaign against John Kerry was a model of objectivity" and "If she answers questions aggressively, she is shrill. If she moderates her tone, she’s just play-acting. If she cries, she’s faking. If she doesn’t, she’s too masculine. If she dresses conservatively, she’s dowdy. If she doesn’t, she’s inappropriately provocative." The second article, a follow-up to the first, is especially funny.

3 comments:

steven said...

i don't consider myself a hateful obama supporter; i just happen to like obama a lot more than hillary; whether there is a lot of difference, in the end, i don't know. we don't know what the congress will shape up to look like, and what will actually be accomplished.

and also, consider this...i am originally a paul/kucinich supporter, and many kucinich fans have gone to the obama camp; hardly blind-zombie followers who can't find his faults.

on a completely philosophical level, i do think a black man in the white house is more meaningful and proactive in terms of attempting to heal a shoddy history and giving hope to minorities in this country, whom desperately need role models that don't refer to women as "hoes."

Chris said...

Yeah, I definitely don't want anyone to think I'm suggesting all Obama supporters carry this strange hatred and bias against Hillary. But I'm curious, why don't you yourself like Hillary as much?

And as for your philosophical point, I think the situation is a little more complex than you suggest. Yes, white women had a great advantage over Afican Americans for a long time, but black men had a right to vote in the United States long before any women did. Perhaps we should look at the advancement of women in tiers. Yes, there still isn't equality between different skin colors, but within those different races there also isn't equality between different genders. Whatever color you are, I think one could make the case that if you're a male you still tend to have an advantage in life over females of the same skin color. There's a reason that 95-97% of senior managers in United States biggest corporations are men. We still have an incredibly hard time seeing women (of any race) in positions of power, harder I tend to think than seeing black (or any other race) men in positions of power. Nevertheless, these are just some ideas to counter yours. They're not definitive or conclusive. I don't want to deny the significance of both race and gender as serious issues to be overcome in our country. Both types of candidates would be meaningful and proactive in distinct ways, which makes them hard to compare on this level in my opinion, unless someone can unearth some more research on these issues. One more caveat I will add though, is that I think Barrack is having a much easier time bringing the race issue into his campaign as a unitive force (something he was hesitant to even bring up early on), whereas Hillary would likely be strongly questioned by people if she tried to emphasize her femininity, whatever that might mean to her. Am I wrong in this perception?

By the way, in all of this by no means am I defending Hillary Clinton as some perfect choice for the presidency. She's definitely been a corporate sellout in the past (just as Bill was frequently in the 90s, as well as many other Democrats). But Barrack still doesn't look that different from her to me (in some ways he's better, in others worse, but overall they seem about the same), and the way in which many of his supporters are so often blind to his foibles and his own calculating and power politicking still disturbs me.

steven said...

oh, well yeah, i mean, really dumb people can sit there and go "yayyyy, changggge!", but it is rhetoric for voters who apparently know nothing about politics.

especially since the same people who are voting for change now will be voting for change again in 4 years, and again, and again, and again.

i'm certainly supporting obama for the primaries, but after that, it's wide open for me.