Rabbi Steven
Pruzansky
Flashback to Nov 2012
Ronald
Reagan himself could not win an election in today’s America. The most
charitable way of explaining the election results of 2012 is that
Americans voted for the status quo – for the incumbent President and for
a divided Congress. They must enjoy gridlock, partisanship,
incompetence, economic stagnation and avoidance of responsibility. And
fewer people voted. At the time of this writing (election day), with
almost all the votes counted, President Obama has won fewer votes than John McCain won in 2008, and more than ten million off his own 2008 total.
But
as we awake from the nightmare, it is important to eschew the facile
explanations for the Romney defeat that will prevail among the
chattering classes. Romney did not lose because of the effects of
Hurricane Sandy that devastated this area, nor did he lose because he
ran a poor campaign, nor did he lose because the Republicans could have
chosen better candidates, nor did he lose because Obama benefited from a
slight uptick in the economy due to the business cycle. Romney lost
because he didn’t get enough votes to win. That might seem obvious, but
not for the obvious reasons. Romney lost because the conservative
virtues – the traditional American virtues – of liberty, hard work, free
enterprise, private initiative and aspirations to moral greatness – no
longer inspire or animate a majority of the electorate. The notion of
the “Reagan Democrat” is one cliché that should be permanently retired.
Ronald Reagan himself could not win an election in today’s America.
The simplest reason why Romney lost was because it is impossible to compete against free stuff. Every businessman knows this; that is why the “loss leader” or the giveaway is such a powerful marketing tool.
Obama’s
America is one in which free stuff is given away: the adults among the
47,000,000 on food stamps clearly recognized for whom they should vote,
and so they did, by the tens of millions; those who – courtesy of Obama –
receive two full years of unemployment benefits (which, of course, both
disincentivizes looking for work and also motivates people to work off
the books while collecting their windfall) surely know for whom to vote;
so too those who anticipate “free” health care, who expect the
government to pay their mortgages, who look for the government to give
them jobs. The lure of free stuff is irresistible. Imagine two
restaurants side by side. One sells its customers fine cuisine at a
reasonable price, and the other offers a free buffet, all-you-can-eat as
long as supplies last. Few – including me – could resist the attraction
of the free food. Now imagine that the second restaurant stays in
business because the first restaurant is forced to provide it with the
food for the free buffet, and we have the current economy, until, at
least, the first restaurant decides to go out of business. (Then, the
government takes over the provision of free food to its patrons.) The
defining moment of the whole campaign was the revelation (by the amoral
Obama team) of the secretly-recorded video in which Romney acknowledged
the difficulty of winning an election in which “47% of the people” start
off against him because they pay no taxes and just receive money –
“free stuff” – from the government.
Almost
half of the population has no skin in the game – they don’t care about
high taxes, promoting business, or creating jobs, nor do they care that
the money for their free stuff is being borrowed from their children and
from the Chinese. They just want the free stuff that comes their way at
someone else’s expense. In the end, that 47% leaves very little margin
for error for any Republican, and does not bode well for the future. It
is impossible to imagine a conservative candidate winning against such
overwhelming odds. People do vote their pocketbooks. In essence,
the people vote for a Congress who will not raise their taxes, and for a
President who will give them free stuff, never mind who has to pay for
it. That suggests the second reason why Romney lost: the
inescapable conclusion that, as Winston Churchill stated so tartly, “the
best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the
average voter.” Voters – a clear majority – are easily swayed by emotion
and raw populism. Said another way, too many people vote with their
hearts and not their heads. That is why Obama did not have to produce a
second term agenda, or even defend his first-term record. He needed only
to portray Mitt Romney as a rapacious capitalist who throws elderly
women over a cliff, when he is not just snatching away their cancer
medication, while starving the poor and cutting taxes for the rich.
Obama could get away with saying that “Romney wants the rich to play by a
different set of rules” – without ever defining what those different
rules were; with saying that the “rich should pay their fair share” –
without ever defining what a “fair share” is; with saying that Romney
wants the poor, elderly and sick to “fend for themselves” – without even
acknowledging that all these government programs are going bankrupt, their current insolvency only papered over by deficit spending.
How
could Obama get away with such rants to squealing sign-wavers? See
Churchill, above. During his 1956 presidential campaign, a woman called
out to Adlai Stevenson: “Senator, you have the vote of every thinking
person!” Stevenson called back: “That’s not enough, madam, we need a
majority!” Truer words were never spoken. Similarly, Obama (or his
surrogates) could hint to blacks that a Romney victory would lead them
back into chains and proclaim to women that their abortions and birth
control would be taken away. He could appeal to Hispanics that Romney
would have them all arrested and shipped to Mexico (even if they came
from Cuba or Honduras), and unabashedly state that he will not enforce
the current immigration laws. He could espouse the furtherance of the
incestuous relationship between governments and unions – in which
politicians ply the unions with public money, in exchange for which the
unions provide the politicians with votes, in exchange for which the
politicians provide more money and the unions provide more votes, etc.,
even though the money is gone. How could he do and say all these things ?
See Churchill, above. One might reasonably object that not every Obama
supporter could be unintelligent. But they must then rationally explain
how the Obama agenda can be paid for, aside
from racking up multi-trillion dollar deficits. “Taxing the rich” does
not yield even 10% of what is required and does not solve any
discernible problem – so what is the answer, i.e., an intelligent answer?
Obama also knows that the electorate has changed – that whites will soon be a minority in America (they’re already a minority in California)
and that the new immigrants to the U.S. are primarily from the Third
World and do not share the traditional American values that attracted
immigrants in the 19th and 20th centuries. It is a different world, and a
different America. Obama is part of that different America, knows it,
and knows how to tap into it. That is why he won. Obama also proved
again that negative advertising works, invective sells, and harsh
personal attacks succeed. That Romney never engaged in such diatribes
points to his essential goodness as a person; his “negative ads” were
simple facts, never personal abuse – facts about high unemployment,
lower take-home pay, a loss of American power and prestige abroad, a
lack of leadership, etc. As a politician, though, Romney failed
because he did not embrace the devil’s bargain of making unsustainable
promises, and by talking as the adult and not the adolescent.
Obama
has spent the last six years campaigning; even his governance has been
focused on payoffs to his favored interest groups. The permanent
campaign also won again, to the detriment of American life. It turned
out that it was not possible for Romney and Ryan – people of substance,
depth and ideas – to compete with the shallow populism and platitudes of
their opponents. Obama mastered the politics of envy – of class warfare
– never reaching out to Americans as such but to individual groups, and
cobbling together a winning majority from these minority groups.
Conservative ideas failed to take root and states that seemed winnable,
and amenable to traditional American values, have simply disappeared
from the map. If an Obama could not be defeated – with his record and
his vision of America, in which free stuff seduces voters – it is hard
to envision any change in the future.
The
road to Hillary Clinton in 2016 and to a European-socialist economy –
those very economies that are collapsing today in Europe – is paved. A
second cliché that should be retired is that America is a center-right
country. It clearly is not. It is a divided country with peculiar voting
patterns, and an appetite for free stuff. Studies will invariably show
that Republicans in Congress received more total votes than Democrats in
Congress, but that means little. The House of Representatives is not
truly representative of the country. That people would vote for a
Republican Congressmen or Senator and then Obama for President would
tend to reinforce point two above: the empty-headedness of the
electorate. Americans revile Congress but love their individual
Congressmen. Go figure.
The mass media’s complicity in Obama’s re-election cannot be denied.
One example suffices. In 2004, CBS News forged a letter in order to
imply that President Bush did not fulfill his Air National Guard service
during the Vietnam War, all to impugn Bush and impair his re-election
prospects. In 2012, President Obama insisted – famously – during the
second debate that he had stated all along that the Arab attack on the
U.S. Consulate in Benghazi was “terror” (a lie that Romney fumbled and
failed to exploit). Yet, CBS News sat on a tape of an interview with
Obama in which Obama specifically avoided and rejected the claim of
terrorism – on the day after the attack – clinging to the canard about
the video. (This snippet of a “60 Minutes” interview was not revealed –
until two days before the election!) In effect, CBS News fabricated
evidence in order to harm a Republican president, and suppressed
evidence in order to help a Democratic president.
Simply shameful, as was the media’s disregard of any scandal or story that could have jeopardized the Obama re-election.
One
of the more irritating aspects of this campaign was its limited focus,
odd in light of the billions of dollars spent. Only a few states were
contested, a strategy that Romney adopted, and that clearly failed. The
Democrat begins any race with a substantial advantage. The liberal
states – like the bankrupt California and Illinois – and other states
with large concentrations of minority voters as well as an extensive
welfare apparatus, like New York, New Jersey and others – give any
Democratic candidate an almost insurmountable edge in electoral votes.
In
New Jersey, for example, it literally does not pay for a conservative
to vote. It is not worth the fuel expended driving to the polls. As some
economists have pointed generally, and it resonates here even more, the
odds are greater that a voter will be killed in a traffic accident on
his way to the polls than that his vote will make a difference in the
election. It is an irrational act. That most states are uncompetitive
means that people are not amenable to new ideas, or new thinking, or
even having an open mind.
If that does not change, and it is hard to see how it can change, then
the die is cast. America is not what it was, and will never be again.
For
Jews, mostly assimilated anyway and staunch Democrats, the results
demonstrate again that liberalism is their Torah. Almost 70% voted for a
president widely perceived by Israelis and most committed Jews as
hostile to Israel. They voted to secure Obama’s future at America’s
expense and at Israel’s expense – in effect, preferring Obama to
Netanyahu by a wide margin. A dangerous time is ahead. Under present
circumstances, it is inconceivable that the U.S. will take any
aggressive action against Iran and will more likely thwart any Israeli
initiative. That Obama’s top aide Valerie Jarrett (i.e., Iranian-born
Valerie Jarrett) spent last week in Teheran is not a good sign.
The
U.S. will preach the importance of negotiations up until the production
of the first Iranian nuclear weapon – and then state that the world
must learn to live with this new reality.
As
Obama has committed himself to abolishing America’s nuclear arsenal, it
is more likely that that unfortunate circumstance will occur than that
he will succeed in obstructing Iran’s plans. Obama’s victory could
weaken Netanyahu’s re-election prospects, because Israelis live with an
unreasonable – and somewhat pathetic – fear of American opinion and
realize that Obama despises Netanyahu. A Likud defeat – or a diminution
of its margin of victory – is more probable now than yesterday. That
would not be the worst thing. Netanyahu, in fact, has never
distinguished himself by having a strong political or moral backbone,
and would be the first to cave to the American pressure to surrender
more territory to the enemy and acquiesce to a second (or third, if you
count Jordan) Palestinian state. A new U.S. Secretary of State named
John Kerry, for example (he of the Jewish father) would not augur well.
Netanyahu remains the best of markedly poor alternatives. Thus, the
likeliest outcome of the upcoming Israeli elections is a center-left
government that will force itself to make more concessions and weaken
Israel – an Oslo III. But this election should be a wake-up call to
Jews. There is no permanent empire, nor is there is an enduring haven
for Jews anywhere in the exile. The most powerful empires in history all
crumbled – from the Greeks and the Romans to the British and the
Soviets. None of the collapses were easily foreseen, and yet they were
predictable in retrospect. The American empire began to decline in 2007,
and the deterioration has been exacerbated in the last five years. This
election only hastens that decline.
Society is permeated with sloth, greed, envy and materialistic excess.
It has lost its moorings and its moral foundations. The takers
outnumber the givers, and that will only increase in years to come.
Across
the world, America under Bush was feared but not respected. Under
Obama, America is neither feared nor respected. Radical Islam has had a
banner four years under Obama, and its prospects for future growth look
excellent. The “Occupy” riots across this country in the last two years
were mere dress rehearsals for what lies ahead – years of unrest sparked
by the increasing discontent of the unsuccessful who want to seize the
fruits and the bounty of the successful, and do not appreciate the slow
pace of redistribution. Two bright sides: Notwithstanding the election
results, I arose in the morning, went to shul, davened and learned Torah
afterwards. That is our reality, and that trumps all other events. Our
relationship with G-d matters more than our relationship with any
politician, R or D. And, notwithstanding the problems in Israel, it is
time for Jews to go home, to Israel. We have about a decade, perhaps 15
years, to leave with dignity and without stress. Thinking that it will
always be because it always was has been a repetitive and deadly Jewish
mistake. America was always the land from which “positive” aliya came –
Jews leaving on their own, and not fleeing a dire situation. But that
can also change. The increased aliya in the last few years is partly
attributable to young people the high cost of Jewish living in America.
Those costs will only increase in the coming years. We should draw the
appropriate conclusions. If this election proves one thing, it is that
the Old America is gone. And, sad for the world, it is not coming back.Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/opinions/the-decline-and-fall-of-the-american-empire/2012/11/11/0/
http://www.jewishpress.com/indepth/opinions/the-decline-and-fall-of-the-american-empire/2012/11/11/0/
No comments:
Post a Comment