Is Obamism Correctable?

Here and abroad, the Obama administration damages whatever it touches.

By Victor Davis Hanson — NATIONAL REVIEW

The next president and Congress will inherit what President Obama left behind. Whether Democrat or Republican, the president will have no choice other than to try to undo much of what Obama has wrought. But can he or she?

THE MIDDLE EAST
The policy of “leading from behind” and the crudity of “We came, we saw, he [Qaddafi] died” have left a human tragedy in Libya. Backing the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt was an inexplicable choice, and it almost ruined the country. The United States did not need to hound and jail an innocent video maker in order to concoct a myth to cover up the culpable lax security in Benghazi. Yemen was strangely declared a model of our anti-terrorism efforts — just weeks before it ignited into another Somalia or Congo. ISIS was airily written off as a jayvee bunch as it spread beyond Syria and Iraq. There is little need to do a detailed comparison of Iraq now and Iraq in February 2009 (when it was soon to be the administration’s “greatest achievement,” a “stable” and “self-reliant” nation); the mess in between is attributable to Obama’s use of the aftermath of the Iraq War for pre-election positioning.

Ordering Assad to flee while ignoring the violence in Syria and proclaiming a faux red line has now tragically led to a million refugees in Europe (and another 4 million in the neighborhood) and more than 200,000 dead. Israel is now considered not an ally, not even a neutral, but apparently a hostile state worthy of more presidential invective than is Iran. We have few if any reliable friends any more in the Gulf. Iran will become a nuclear power. The only mystery over how that will happen is whether Obama was inept or whether he deliberately sought to make the theocracy some sort of a strategic power and U.S. ally. The Middle East over the next decade may see three or four additional new nuclear powers. The Russia of kleptocrat Vladimir Putin is seen in the region as a better friend than is the U.S. — and certainly a far more dangerous enemy to provoke.

There is no easy cure for all this; it will take years just to sort out the mess.

THE LAW
There will be a temptation for a reform president to use the lawless means that Obama has bequeathed — executive orders to unconstitutionally bypass Congress; arbitrary suspension or simple non-enforcement of laws, depending on where we are in the national election cycle; exemption of party loyalists from legal accountability — to achieve the noble aim of restoring legality. But such short-cuts to reform would be a terrible mistake.

It would be quite illegal to ignore emissions standards the way Obama has ignored the Defense of Marriage Act; or to reduce, by fiat, the EPA to the present toothless status of ICE; or to allow a new sort of “sanctuary city” to refuse to marry gays, in the manner of San Francisco’s refusing to hand over illegal immigrants; or to arbitrarily remove particular owls and newts from the protection of the Endangered Species Act as Obama has picked and chosen which elements of the Affordable Care Act at any particular time he considered legally non-binding. Payback is very tempting, but eight more years of it would ensure that we would become another Zimbabwe or Venezuela. Instead, the next president must, as never before, obey both the spirit and the very letter of the law to restore to us what Obama has almost destroyed.

RACE
Polls and pundits agree that racial relations are now at their worst since the riots of the 1970s. Barack Obama in the 2008 campaign blew long and hard the dog whistle of racial polarization: clingers, the not-to-be-disowned Rev. Jeremiah Wright, typical white person, bring a gun to a knife fight, get in their faces. He has never stopped since. The president kept at it when he intervened in the Skip Gates farce, or editorialized about skin color in the ongoing and volatile Trayvon Martin case, or institutionalized the lies of Ferguson that begat the “Hands up; don’t shoot” mythology — and the tragedies that followed. The message was always that race is still a barrier to success in America and that, logically, only fealty to the Obama administration could improve things for people of color.

Obama did not phone the family of Kate Steinle — murdered as a direct result of sanctuary-city practices approved by his administration — or the families of police officers slain as a result of the hate speech generated by the Black Lives Matter movement. But he has also largely ignored nearly 7,000 blacks whose lives have been taken by other blacks. In some sense, Obama proved a captive of his own political matrix. The Obama election strategy — successful in 2008 and 2012, a failure in 2010 and 2014 — was predicated on upping the polarizing rhetoric, extending social services, and embracing hip popular culture to achieve historic minority voter turnout and unprecedented block-voting patterns.

But in the blowback, the liberal Congress and many of the Democratic state legislatures were wiped out, and the country has been split apart. Obama’s legacy to the Democratic party is the loss of the white working classes, and the permanent need to achieve massive minority turnout and absolute liberal fealty at the polls. To do that will probably require institutionalized open borders, habitual racial haranguing, and the courting of the Al Sharptons of the race industry. Whether Obama knew that such racial voting would not be completely transferrable to his Democratic successors, while the hostility it engendered most certainly would be, remains a mystery. But that paradox raises what is perhaps the central issue of his presidency: whether he was a short-sighted incompetent naïf or a mean-spirited and narcissistic nihilist. Or both?

The next president should take a hiatus from our racial obsessions, and simply try treating Americans as if their race or ethnic background were irrelevant.

DEBT
We will reach $20 trillion in debt on Obama’s watch. He ran on the issue of national debt, blasting George W. Bush for using a “Bank of China” credit card “by his lonesome” to bankrupt the country. Indeed, a penny-pinching Senator Obama had voted to shut down the government rather than raise the debt ceiling. But as president, Obama may well accrue more debt than all previous presidents combined. His legacy will be that he made George W. Bush’s budgetary indulgence look sober and judicious compared with his own. Only the Federal Reserve’s near-zero interest rates for seven years — along with the low energy prices that came despite, not because of, his efforts — have saved Obama, and staved off the stagnation of having well over 90 million able-bodied Americans permanently out of the work force. When interest rates climb to 4 or 5 percent, the next president will face a budgetary crisis, augmented by Obama’s failure to address entitlement spending. We are in for rough times; whether Obama will get out ahead of the reckoning is unknown.

In other areas, the Obama agenda is falling of its own weight. Obamacare is becoming irrelevant, because of both noncompliance and soaring costs. As the poor discover that even with subsidies they have to pony up considerable deductibles and copays, and must actually pay some premiums, they increasingly head for the free clinics or back to the emergency rooms. Even Democrats will not rue too much the spontaneous unwinding of Obamacare, given that much of the public is doing its best to ignore it.

The restoration of defense spending will follow the Carter-to-Reagan pattern, albeit more slowly given the specter of unsustainable national debt. The next president will address the tax code, and the solution won’t be Bernie Sanders’s dream of a 90 percent income-tax rate. Even Joe Biden cannot run on Obama’s stellar economic record — pretending that the middle class has been in ascendance since 2009, extolling the advantages of more debt, or proclaiming the necessity of even stricter environmental regulations or more subsidies to Solyndra-like green companies.

There is not much of an idea any longer of investigative journalism. The press for the last seven years has largely chosen to become a Ministry of Truth. One reason why Donald Trump soars is that, after the press’s canonization of Obama, the public relishes Trump’s contempt for the media — and the latter have now lost the moral credibility to critique any candidate on the grounds of dishonesty, hypocrisy, narcissism, mendacity, or polarization of the electorate.

The tragic mess of 2009–2016 is ending, and soon the cleanup will begin — accompanied by stupefaction as to just how much will have to be thrown away.

— NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the author, most recently, of The Savior Generals.

September 16, 2015 | 9 Comments »

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9 Comments / 9 Comments

  1. The real question is: what were his intentions and goals. Whatever he did has undermined the US and the western democracies. If these were his goals then he succeeded!

    Negotiate
    : to discuss something formally in order to make an agreement
    : to agree on (something) by formally discussing it
    : to get over, through, or around (something) successfully

    An agreement does NOT require TRUST!!!

    The next US President has the means to wipe out all of the Iran nuke infrastructures!

  2. “Truth in America is a reviled pariah. Commonly accepted facts are usually fiction, and the common wisdom is invariably wrong.”

    I do not know what you mean, so I will presume that you are making an observation and NOT stating your opinion. That assumption makes it easier for me to respond.

    Truth should be known as “truth-seeking” because it is a process, not a state. We always reach the moment of “put-up or shut-up” when some action is required, but that decision should not be mistaken for the truth. In a trial from the perspective of the jury, a person is not guilty or innocent but in a superposition of guilty and innocent. Then the moment comes when the judge says he needs a verdict. “Guilty”, the jury decides and from that moment on the person is guilty according to the law. However, we cannot say that that is the truth. All we can say is that the jury did its best.

    More important to both our general views is that lying is not, nor has it ever been, the opposite of the truth. Lying is an attempt to subvert the process of truth-seeking. Once anyone says lying is OK in order to promote his goals, like Alinsky, Lenin, Obama, he has interfered with truth-seeking. That is the end of the road – literally. Denying the existence of the truth is merely a convenience for a dictator. My mom would say, “just do it because I said so!” At least she had my best interests at heart. Politicos have their best interests at heart, not mine.

  3. Sooner or later, though, push will come to shove between the Judiciary and the Executive. Either there will be dead judges or jailed executive branch members.

    Must it be either/or?

    Truth, if it is anything at all, must be exhaustive.

    Truth in America is a pariah. Commonly accepted facts are usually fiction, and the common wisdom is invariably wrong.

    By the way, the above explanation is why Yom Kippur works. By design, we are all alone for one day without interruptions and are required by tradition to judge ourselves. The results are sometimes quite surprising. We did not know or understand and all of a sudden it is clear if we dredge up enough memory bits.

    Well stated. Introspection is essential.

  4. @ babushka:

    Yes, yes, of course. But if some peasant who goes to trial points out his differential treatment from a member of the royalty, some judges will reflect their inner corruption and others will be sickened by the distinction between classes. It will be a matter of luck. Sooner or later, though, push will come to shove between the Judiciary and the Executive. Either there will be dead judges or jailed executive branch members.

    I hope for jailed executive branch members. There is a limit to corruption. I will explain (briefly). The nature of memory is that it is exhaustive, maybe even eidetic. If we sit quietly, each of us can remember the names of all our elementary school teachers. The truth in average people, therefore, is always present, but we choose to recall only those memories that will most likely preserve our miserable, useless lives. Truth, if it is anything at all, must be exhaustive. Sometimes the rules (memes) we use force us to recall more of what we experienced on a particular occasion. That is when corruption starts to lose its traction. Our brains are designed to resolve inconsistencies. We cannot live with too much dissonance, so we resolve it. Judges do that as a profession. We will get our chance at justice, but no one can predict exactly when or how that will happen.

    By the way, the above explanation is why Yom Kippur works. By design, we are all alone for one day without interruptions and are required by tradition to judge ourselves. The results are sometimes quite surprising. We did not know or understand and all of a sudden it is clear if we dredge up enough memory bits.

  5. There is and always has been another brake on the activities of politicians. It is called incarceration. If a politician breaks the law in a way that is very similar to a thief, traitor, or murderer, he can be removed from society.

    That presupposes the criminal justice system is not morally compromised, and there is no evidence to support such a premise. Hillary is still at liberty even after having publicly acknowledged violating federal law. In America, punishment is almost exclusively reserved for the peasants.

  6. Profit, political power, and ideology all dictate the direction of government policy. However, it has always self-restraint that reined in politicians’ self-interest. That has changed. When the meme about “by whatever means necessary” is floating about in front of everyone as an acceptable or understandable position, it is impossible to put the horse back in the barn. If someone is going to be an idiot by yielding power to anyone else, they will be swallowed up by the sink hole implied in “by whatever means necessary.” Law was supposed to mediate conflicts, but ignoring the law is merely an expression of “by whatever means necessary” and so is now OK. Our carefully fostered set of checks and balances is almost history. We still use the words, but they are being hollowed out.

    There is and always has been another brake on the activities of politicians. It is called incarceration. If a politician breaks the law in a way that is very similar to a thief, traitor, or murderer, he can be removed from society. When the meme “If you did the crime, you can do the time,” again gains favor, then we may be able to turn things around at least a small bit. Starting with Hillary might be an idea.

  7. Obama is correctable, but the corporate interests that enabled Obama’s malfeasance are incorrigible. It was the Fortune 500 that demanded the GOP passively collaborate via the Corker Amendment on the Iran capitulation. It is the Chamber of Commerce that is now gearing up to eliminate Republican presidential insurgents to clear the path for a RINO who will maintain the corrupt status quo. Obama will belatedly disappear, but his Wall Street puppet masters will retain control of America.

  8. Only Mrs. Palin and Mr. Trump may have what it takes to reverse course over the long haul.

    In contrast…
    We must address the same set of issues here.
    We have been driven down the precipice since Oslo.
    Sham after sham have destroyed the very fiber of our people
    Importation and arming of Arafat.
    Abandoning critical Land of ours.
    Abandoning Temple Mount.
    Effecting Pogroms against Jews.
    Destruction of Jewish holdings.
    Gestapo like “administrative detentions”.
    Freeze of Jewish construction.
    And worse to come yet…
    Who is going to smash the traps in place?
    Who is going to reverse course.