Feed on Posts or Comments 31 July 2010

2008 Election & Conservatives & Culture wars Richard Falknor on 21 Jul 2008 09:13 am

Will Obama Bring the “End of Politics?”

Last week we wrote about the trans-political nature (”Obama as Regenerative Healer”) here and some innovative aspects (”A Better Ground War”) here of the Obama presidential campaign.

This Saturday Roger Kimball expanded here on what he calls “Obama, charisma, and the end of politics as we know it”:

“Yesterday, reflecting on Obama’s call for ‘civilian national security force that’s just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded’ as the United States military, I quoted Hannah Arendt’s observation that ‘a mixture of gullibility and cynicism’ as a reliable feature of totalitarian movements, with the quota of cynicism increasing as one ascended from the ran[k] and file to the leadership of the movement.

The swooning intoxication of the press as it contemplates the spectacle of Obama in Europe–its anticipation of a Beatlemania-sort of populist publicity blitz–reminds me of something else Arendt discusses in The Origins of Totalitarianism, namely ‘the temporary alliance between the mob and the elite.’ Arendt has many pertinent things to say about the effects of this alliance, and perhaps I will come back to her analysis in a later post. For now, let me simply quote what she has to say about the reason for the superiority of totalitarian propaganda:

‘The fundamental reason for the superiority of totalitarian propaganda of the propaganda of other parties and movements is that its content, for the members of the movement at any rate, is no longer an objective issue about which people may have opinions, but has become as real and untouchable an element in their lives as the rules of arithmetic.’

That is, the propaganda, the image, the ideology, is beyond criticism because it is accepted not as a description of a political platform but a charismatic performance whose goal is not expression of limited policies but a sort of magical unity. In such cases, hesitation is evidence of faithlessness while criticism assumes the lineaments of heresy.” (Underscoring Forum’s throughout.)

Mr. Kimball properly asks “whether most Americans wish to see their political institutions transformed into props for such pre-critical, mystical posturing.”

Our response is that even a very bad vision trumps no competing, constant, coherent, optimistic vision in a campaign such as this. Simply highlighting the Illinois senator’s policy inconsistencies or factual errors won’t do the job for Our Team by itself.


															
				
				
				

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