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Obama’s
Surreal Campaign
by Victor
Davis Hanson
March 22, 2012
As the
election year heats up, we seem not to have noticed the surreal nature
of the
campaign. One would expect Barack Obama to run on his record from 2009
to 2012,
and especially during 2009–10, when he had a solidly Democratic
Congress and
passed his signature Obamacare. But he is not. Instead, we are hearing
only
that the probable opposition nominee, Mitt Romney, will be embarrassed
by the
similarities between Obamacare and his own Romneycare in Massachusetts.
Examine
that logic: Supposedly landmark legislation is now defended not on its
own
merits or popularity, but by a sort of “He did it too”?
During the
2004 campaign, the Kerry camp derided 5.5 percent unemployment as proof
of a
“jobless recovery.” Today 8.3 percent is deemed a sign of a real
rebound. In
2008, when George W. Bush had borrowed $4 trillion over eight years,
the
deficits were termed by candidate Obama as “unpatriotic”; trumping that
total
in just four years is now called much-needed “stimulus.”
The price
of gasoline has more than doubled since January 2009, and the rise is
not over
yet. This summer might still see the price triple in less than four
years. In
the old days of Economics 101, supply and demand had, by general
consensus,
some effect on price. I think the president believes that still, since
he is
pondering another release from the strategic petroleum reserve. Why,
then, is
he asking us to believe that putting off limits vast areas of known oil
and gas
reserves in Alaska, offshore, in the West, and in the Gulf of Mexico
will not
have much effect on gasoline prices? Vast new production of natural gas
on
private lands has helped radically lower natural-gas prices. But
drilling for
new oil is again caricatured as it was in 2008 (when candidate Obama
advised us
instead to inflate our tires and tune up our cars; this time he is
touting
algae), as if newly pumped oil from a freshly discovered field were not
as
efficacious as previously pumped oil from a reserve. In an age when
unemployment is high, the budget deficit obscene, and our trade deficit
at
near-record levels, more US-produced oil — aside from lowering gasoline
prices
— would create jobs, enrich the Treasury, and curtail what we must
borrow
abroad.
I have no
idea what “civility” is supposed to mean today. The more the president
references the need for softer tones, the more we hear of things like
“punish
our enemies.” If a president is to take time out from a bad economy and
a
soon-to-be-nuclear Iran to offer commentary on a radio-show host’s use
of a
slur against a female student, how can his campaign affiliates take a
million
dollars from a humorless comedian who so trumps Rush Limbaugh that his
style of
misogynist attack requires asterisks even to be quoted? During the 2008
campaign the candidate who was called a healer boasted of bringing a
gun to a
knife fight, advised “getting in their faces,” deprecated working-class
voters
as clingers, had a crowd cheering with a middle-finger rub on his face
when
mentioning Hillary Clinton, suggested his grandmother was a “typical
white
person,” and asserted that he could not disown the racist Rev. Jeremiah
Wright,
and so it makes sense that Obama is now praised even as he polarizes.
How can an
energy czar — as the head of a cabinet-level department that was
initially
birthed to lower gas prices — advocate lower gas prices and economy
hybrid cars
when he had previously called for gas prices to match European levels
and
confesses that he neither owns nor drives a car, although his wife has
a BMW?
Or how can a Treasury secretary advocate higher taxes on the upper
income
brackets as a necessary premium for being blessed as an American, when
he
earlier had acted as if compliance with the IRS (which he was soon to
oversee)
were optional rather than mandatory? And how can the top
law-enforcement
officer in the country allege racism when questioned by Congress, while
he
refers to African-Americans as “my people” and alleges that Americans
are
collective “cowards” for not welcoming a conversation on race on his
terms?
In response
to all those questions, we are seeing a campaign apparently framed on
four
general themes: an omnipotent, omnipresent George W. Bush in insidious
fashion
still hampers the Obama administration; a Republican House (why it is
now
Republican is never quite explained) for 15 months has stopped all the
good
things that Obama and a Democratic House would have done; opponents
have not
appreciated the president’s unique postracial symbolism and are often
quite
racist; and anything Obama did was better than not doing it, and his
not doing
other things was better than what he might have done.
Could not
Obama instead galvanize Democrats by running proudly on his record? For
example:
An 8
percent–plus unemployment rate is the new normal, and thus not really
so bad,
given that nearly 50 million are helped by food stamps, and
unemployment
insurance under Obama is generously allotted for two years. Gas prices
of $4
and more a gallon serve our nation’s goal of curbing demand, decreasing
the
carbon footprint, and making viable heavily subsidized green energy.
Much-needed wind and solar industries require massive subsidies, while
the
occasional, or even frequent, bankruptcy of these new companies is the
price to
be paid for investing in a green future.
Illegal
entry into the United States is now an infraction, not a crime, and the
felony-free alien should remain largely exempt from compliance with the
law.
The United States was never really a melting pot, so emphasizing
separateness
in the realm of social justice is natural; unity is found by bringing
together
pragmatic coalitions of different ethnicities, not by trying to ignore
or deny
their innate differences.
Obamacare’s
universal coverage is worth the individual mandate, higher taxes, and
government intrusion into private medical treatment. Americans will
like
federalized health care the more they see it gradually put into
practice.
GM is a
success story, and the subsidized Volt emblemizes the sort of smart car
that
private-public partnerships can produce. The public may prefer the more
profitable GM SUVs, but these were the sorts of cars that guzzled too
much gas
and produced too much carbon, and therefore their disappearance is
better for
all of us.
Serial $1
trillion–plus deficits and $5 trillion in aggregate new debt were
necessary
stimulants and can in time be paid back with higher taxes, which are de
facto
fairer than, and thus far preferable to, spending cuts. An annual
income of
$200,000 was previously underappreciated as a necessary criterion for
separating those Americans who have not paid their fair share from
those who
always have. Wise government tax policy can compensate for the
unfairness of
the market that arbitrarily and inordinately rewards the few at the
expense of
the many.
American
foreign policy is finally embedded within a multilateral framework and
subject
to the approval of a generally sober and judicious international
community —
especially the UN — rather than mere authorization from the US
Congress.
Continual pressure on Israel, in both its domestic and foreign
policies, is
necessary in attempting to achieve peace in the Middle East, given the
longstanding willingness of Israel’s rivals to negotiate their
differences.
All that is
the Obama record. So why not run on it? Who knows, these days he might
thereby
win?
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