
Glenn Reynolds has two posts on the top of Instapundit this morning that remind me of why I could never be a politician - one about Iraq and one about the environment. I could say that was because “I cannot tell a lie,” but that would be … a lie. It’s because I’m not good enough an actor. My real thoughts and feelings pop out too easily.
I don’t regret this for a second. I wouldn’t want to be a politician. I want to stick with my own opinions, thank you. And my own self. The need for political victory not only distorts what you think and feel, it distorts it to such a degree that you probably no longer remember what you thought and felt in the first place. You have become a creature of your own prevarications. You are … someone new.
That politicians are often inauthentic human beings is not exactly news, but it has been exacerbated in our times by their high visibility . They are forced to give their opinions on virtually all matters in a non-stop all-news cycle. These opinions are in turn crafted to appeal to constituencies (often the “base” in primaries, then the “center” in the general election) much in the manner products are crafted for consumers. They are, in essence, phony - and we the consumers (the voters) know it. How could we not? Yet we - with the media as the all-too-willing promoter - participate in this charade.
Frequently I too play this game on here, but recently I have found it more nauseating than usual. An example is just below - a disconnect in the man I am supporting at this moment - Rudy Giuliani - between what he says and what I suspect he really thinks.
Of course the Democrats are far worse in that regard these days. Thus those initial links to Instapundit above. On the issue of Iraq, I cannot imagine a more inauthentic human being than Harry Reid (second place: Nancy Pelosi). I wonder what he would say were he to read the linked post by Omar Fadhil, an actual Iraqi - and then have to confront Omar directly, person-to-person. I can’t imagine Reid’s reaction because I don’t think, after all this, he really has one - other than I want to get elected. In fact the entire Modern Liberal position (whatever that is) on the War on Terror is mired in contradiction, governed solely by an interest in political victory at a time when our children’s futures weigh in the balance. Indeed, Silvestre Reyes, dopey as he is, may be the poster boy for Modern Liberalism - all attitude and no knowledge.
Similarly, on the environmental issue, we have Democrats embracing Al Gore as their scientific guru (how silly is that) while their richer constituents rush to buy carbon offsets, which at first seemed to be a harmless Ponzi scheme, but now appear to be worse.
Is this a fallacy of democracy (as in “Two Cheers for…”)? Perhaps. But democracy is all we’ve got. And I also suspect it’s our only hope. But it puts a helluva responsibility on us citizens, cutting through the non-stop haze to find to find the real person behind the inauthenticity. That is the challenge of the long election of 2008.





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6 Comments
1. Terrye:I understand that these people just want to get elected, but at times they actively encourage stupidity. For instance I can remember Democrats and the media talking about Saddam and AlQaida back before Bush came to office and no one was pretending they were harmless, or innocent or misunderstood or not connected to each other in any way. The thing I find amazing is the willingness to revise history and just plain lie.
Today we hear Democrats tell how Bush mislead them. Puhleaze, if anything it was the other way around.
Apr 28, 2007 - 1:11 pm 2. ShoreMark:“…no one was pretending they were harmless, or innocent or misunderstood…”
Terrye, Yes, maybe they were making important sounding noises back then, but the reality is they were pretending there was no threat as witnessed by lack of action behind the empty rhetoric.
They got “religion” after 9/11, but only because they knew they had to, now it’s back to that status quo — i.e. they still cannot see the threat and frightenly enough, they represent the thoughts of too many…
Apr 28, 2007 - 9:09 pm 3. Roger:Sorry to all who have not been able to post comments. Our MoveableType-TypePAd nightmare is now over… I hope.
Apr 29, 2007 - 8:31 pm 4. Captain Hate:Everybody that believed those “carbon offset” solutions please raise your hands.
Anybody?
Apr 30, 2007 - 7:25 am 5. LarryD:“Carbon offsets” more resemble papal indulgences. That fact that they do nothing to actually reduce CO2 emissions is no surprise, that was never one of their real purposes, high on the list of which is making the buyer feel good about themselves.
I’ve hear that the Freon “disposal” is a similar scam, all that Freon is collected, trucked to a central disposal site, which … vents it into the atmosphere.
Apr 30, 2007 - 7:51 am 6. MarkD:No, LarryD,
There is actual science that proves Freon damages the ozone layer. It is not vented into the atmosphere by any responsible recyclers. It is recovered for reuse where possible.
Your point about CO2 offsets is exactly right. They are twenty-first century papal indulgences for sinners/suckers.
The fad of indulging children’s self-esteen has now reached its inevitable conclusion. Facts are optional, attitude is everything to a significant part of the populace.
Apr 30, 2007 - 8:25 am