Townhall...
Wanted:
Ideas That Work
By Suzanne Fields
8/19/2011
If
all politics were truly local, Tim
Pawlenty might still be in the race. The former governor of Minnesota
made the
best offer to Iowans, promising to cook their dinner or mow their lawn.
Of
course, there was a catch. The winner of the dinner and a freshly
clipped lawn
had to come up with an example of something specific offered by
President Obama
to solve the economic mess.
It
was a trick question because there
are no examples. The political rhetoric this season has focused so far
on
what’s not there from this administration. Despite his failure to
attract
conservative enthusiasm in Iowa, Pawlenty demonstrated both a serious
side and
a light touch in a time when polarizing trivia make up the substance,
such as
it is, of the “debates.” Most of the rhetoric is little more than a
repetitious
leveling of ideas.
Pawlenty,
in fact, had a lot more to
show than Rep. Michele Bachmann, the winner of the Iowa straw poll.
After all,
he has actually governed a liberal state as a fiscal conservative, and
for two
terms. He ran behind a congresswoman from his own state, and that’s the
way it
can work in the oddly structured early rounds of the Republican
competition.
We’re
living with multitasking
distractions, and the early televised political debates and straw vote
are
trivialities. You can arrive late and not miss much. Gov. Rick Perry of
Texas
figured his day-after rodeo-like presentation would get big attention,
and he
was right.
Iowa
is the first test, but the debate
offered little that’s fresh. We watched, looking for real substance to
take
into 2012, but wound up with mere personality revelations. Newt
Gingrich had a
point when he chided moderator Chris Wallace to put away the “gotcha”
questions, which is what the media do best.
“I’d
love to see the rest of tonight’s
debate asking us about what we would do to lead an America whose
president has
failed to lead, instead of playing Mickey Mouse games,” he said, and
the audience
cheered.
They
loved it because no one was in a
mood to listen to yet another explanation of why certain campaign
workers
defected from one campaign to another, the inside-baseball popcorn and
Cracker
Jacks on which reporters feed. Newt is an idea man, for better and
worse, and
he was trying to present his ideas with a big audience at hand. Chances
are he
won’t have it for long.
Michele
Bachmann, for all of her
admirable passion, is hardly an original thinker. She wins because she
runs on
conservative social issues, but no one expects her to lead with a
challenging
intellect. She’s a niche candidate who fares well before the arguments
get
complicated. She gets attention, but for one-note ideas, which she’ll
never be
required to broaden.
The
big question is: What kind of
ideas is America ready to listen to and act on?
“Bold
ideas are almost passe,” writes
Neal Gabler in The New York Times. Having written a biography of Walt
Disney,
he seems a bit jaded in his suggestion that we’ve been animated,
automated and
webbed-out into either trivial or greedy thinking, limiting ourselves
to ideas
that make money but do not make us think.
“We
are living in an increasingly
post-idea world,” he says. “A world in which big, thought-provoking
ideas that
can’t instantly be monetized are of so little intrinsic value that few
people
are generating them and fewer outlets are disseminating, the Internet
notwithstanding.”
But
that, it seems to me, gets it all
wrong. Americans are wary of his kind of bold ideas, and for good
reason. He
cites Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud and Marshall McLuhan, among others, as
examples
of real thinking. Their ideas have been simplified and deified. Marxism
led to
brutal dictatorships, Freud took away human responsibility for personal
behavior, and McLuhan was used to celebrate the medium as the message.
Gabler
bemoans the impact of social
networks as obstacles to thinking, but he’s looking through the wrong
end of
the telescope. Never have so many people so quickly learned about ideas
that
directly affect them and their futures. Democracy, after all, is based
on
action by informed citizens. The Founding Fathers limited the vote to
those who
owned property, an idea that seemed a good idea at the time, and now
those
without property or even jobs can make their voices heard. The vote is
a great
equalizer, and the debates would be, too, if they were focused on
specifics.
Is
there someone out there who has
those ideas? Send him -- or her -- to me, and I’ll cook the dinner.
Read
it at Townhall
|