This article is from TOS Vol.
4, No. 3. The full contents of the issue are listed
here.
Obama’s Atomic Bomb:
The Ideological Clarity of the Democratic Agenda
John David Lewis
Over the summer of 2009, Americans witnessed something quite
extraordinary: Thousands of citizens not usually involved in
politics gathered in public protest and energetically confronted
government officials about the policies of an administration
they had elected just a few months earlier.
Polls suggest that many Americans share the protesters’
views. Voters’ opinions about Obama’s performance as president
generally have reversed since February. The Rasmussen poll
indicates that as of August 23, 41 percent strongly disapproved
of his performance, and only 27 percent strongly approved.1
Concerning health-care reform—a central goal of the
administration—a large majority of voters opposed a “public
option,” feared the government more than the insurance
companies, and disagreed with Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi
that the companies are “villains.” Just 19 percent of Americans
rated American health care overall as poor; 48 percent rated it
as good or excellent.2
Such figures indicate a trend of declining support for the
agenda of the Obama administration and its congressional
supporters. If this trend continues, there is a possibility of
serious Democratic losses in the 2010 mid-term elections.
The growing opposition to the policies of Democratic leaders
is not a partisan issue; registered Democratic voters are
challenging Democratic officials at raucous public meetings.
So-called “Blue Dogs”—Democratic representatives who are either
fiscally conservative on some issues or were elected in
conservative districts—are taking issue with the party
leadership. Many of these representatives face a stark choice:
to buck their leaders and vote as their constituents wish, or to
follow their leaders and face the wrath of angry voters.
But the most startling phenomenon has been the tea parties,
in which hundreds of thousands of Americans have assembled under
their own impetus, wearing T-shirts that read “Don’t Tread On
Me” and carrying signs advocating liberty and opposing
dictatorship. Speakers at these events have denounced
politicians of both parties who have supported increases in
government power and spending. Many of the protesters have begun
to recognize and advocate a principle—the principle of
individual rights—and a corollary of that principle, that the
proper purpose of government is to secure these rights, not to
control its citizens’ lives.
The response of the Democratic leadership has been one of
paternalistic desperation. On August 3, a White House operative
asked Americans to inform the administration about the opinions
of other citizens: “If you get an email or see something on the
web about health insurance reform that seems fishy, send it to
flag@whitehouse.gov.”3
Rather than accept that many Americans understand the essence of
these plans and oppose them, the Democratic National Committee
accused the opposition of “inciting angry mobs of a small number
of rabid right wing extremists funded by K Street Lobbyists.”4
The president himself lashed out: “I don’t want the folks who
created the mess to do a lot of talking. I want them to just get
out of the way so we can clean up the mess!”5
The split between the politicians and the American citizens
has seldom been so starkly displayed as when the Democrats
accused senior citizens carrying hand-lettered signs of being a
“mob” in the pay of organized groups. In contrast to these
independent citizens, organized union members, loyal to the
Democratic leadership, rode to public town meetings on buses,
distributed manufactured signs, and shut the doors on opponents.
Meanwhile, many elected officials canceled meetings with their
constituents, unwilling to face protesters who have read and
understood the legislation better than they have.
Despite such attempts to smear the protesters and shut them
out of public meetings, the protests continue to enjoy strong
popular support. The Obama administration’s plan for a radical
overhaul of the U.S. economy is facing principled, grassroots
opposition across the nation.
Why are these protests happening now?
The answer is not that President Obama has put America on a
new course, away from capitalism and toward statism. America has
been on that path for three generations, courtesy of both
political parties. The administration of George W. Bush, for
instance, greatly expanded government power. President Bush
doubled the national budget, doubled the deficit, added a digit
to the national debt, signed the largest entitlement bill since
the 1960s, ordered his cabinet to cooperate in regulating carbon
dioxide as a “pollutant,” signed Sarbanes-Oxley, distributed
economic “stimulus” checks, asked for $700 billion as business
handouts, and never vetoed a spending bill. Where were the
protesters then? If Americans were agitated primarily by the
trend toward statism, what stopped thousands of them from rising
up and venting their anger at these actions? The truck toward
statism is only part of the reason for the reaction against
Obama. What is the rest of the explanation?
The answer begins with Bush’s party affiliation: He is a
Republican. This title carries the appearance of
long-standing, fundamental support for the free market and for
capitalism. Although no Republican in three generations has
defended capitalism in a principled way, Republican rhetoric
continues to use pro-capitalist language, mainly to oppose
Democrats. Ronald Reagan’s assertion that “government is the
problem” continues to resonate among supporters of the free
market. However, few Republicans have been willing to face the
inescapable fact that the federal budget and debt grew
exponentially under both Reagan and his Republican successor,
George H.W. Bush. Republican lip service to the free market has
muddied the waters and continues to make it difficult for people
to see that Republicans were, in fact, throttling freedom under
a maze of growing federal controls. Hence there was no uprising
against Republicans or their policies.
Following eight years of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush
appeared to offer the best hope to regain that alleged
free-market, low-tax legacy. Once again, most people did not see
that the free-market image of this Republican was a mirage that
bore no relation to his actions. This image gained power when
Bush was touted as an alternative to his leftist Democratic
challengers. This contrast of images obscured the fundamental
differences between Bush’s policies and a truly pro-capitalist
position. This obfuscation—instigated by the Republicans—deeply
confused many honest Americans about the nature of his policies,
and caused enormous harm to their understanding of both
capitalism and conservatism. This split between appearance and
reality—between the image of a pro-freedom Republican and the
reality of a welfare-state Republican—made it difficult for
people to recognize that no candidate in either party was
willing to defend capitalism. As a result, any real discussion
of capitalism—properly understood as a truly free market, in
which individual rights are protected by the government—was
obliterated from public discourse.
Bush fostered his undeserved free-market image with tax cuts
that accompanied huge increases in spending and led to enormous
deficits. He also appeared to oppose business regulations, even
as he approved thousands of pages of new controls (e.g.,
Sarbanes-Oxley and the steel tariffs). His selective repeal of
some rules (such as parts of the Glass-Steagall Act) contributed
to the image of a free-market administration that had
“deregulated” the economy. He promoted the expansion of huge
federally-sponsored entities such as the Federal National
Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), the Government National
Mortgage Association (Ginny Mae), and the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) because he wanted to appear
compassionate to people who “needed” loans. When the market
imploded, Bush proposed hundreds of billions in federal aid,
saying “I’ve abandoned free-market principles to save the free
market system.”6
The visible result was an exploding welfare state in which
capitalism was blamed for massive deficits, for rising
health-care prices, for the collapse of Wall Street, for the
cost of the Iraq war, and for every other bad consequence of
Bush’s policies. The more fundamental, unseen result was a
confused American public—a public confused about the very
meaning of the free market, liberty, and individual rights, and
about what a proper defense of those values would mean.
“Capitalism has failed” became the mantra of the left: “We tried
it under Bush, and look what happened.”
In his systematic treatment of the philosophy of Objectivism,
Leonard Peikoff wrote that “[p]recisely because of their
pretense,” conservatives “are the main source of political
confusion in the public mind; they give people the illusion of
an electoral alternative without the fact. Thus the statist
drift proceeds unchecked and unchallenged.”7
George W. Bush is the quintessential example of this point.
Enter Barack Obama, whom no one confuses with a friend of
industry, capitalism, or national self-defense, but who stood as
an alternative to four more years of Bush-like policies under
John McCain.
As the leader of the Democrats—the party that carries an
historical reputation for expanding government power, higher
taxes, and limitless spending—Obama reasserted and rejuvenated
his party’s traditional commitment to the statist course. This
commitment permeates his speeches. He regards businessmen not as
valuable producers, but as conniving parasites who must be
placed under comprehensive government controls, including a
“czar” to approve executive pay. He expressed this desire in an
angry rant against financial managers who received contracted
bonuses.8
Obama regards doctors not as lifesavers, but as predators
willing to sacrifice their patients to needless operations in
order to get money.9
He regards the police who respond to reports of a burglary as
cops who act “stupidly,” before the relevant facts are clear. He
regards overseas regimes that have pledged to continue to attack
the United States as deserving of apology. Meanwhile, he wants
to prosecute American intelligence officers who used “harsh”
interrogation techniques against enemies who have killed
Americans. Obama and his administration are overtly and publicly
committed to an ideologically radical leftist agenda.
Obama’s choice of advisors has helped to define his
antibusiness agenda. He hired, for instance, John Holdren as his
director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy. Holdren
has expressed his views of industry in print since the 1970s:
“A massive campaign must be launched to restore a high-quality
environment in North America and to de-develop the United
States.”10
Such views are consistent with a range of policies planned by
the administration, from stringent business regulations being
drafted by the Congress and Obama’s economic czars, to
cap-and-trade legislation intended to strangle industry, to
unremitting attempts to place the medical industry under
comprehensive government control.
Such views permeate Obama’s rhetoric, which connects him in
many people’s minds to the most radical (i.e., consistent)
advocates of democratic socialism. Despite his attempts to
appear moderate, the basic nature of his administration—its
essential identity, purpose, and worldview—is becoming crystal
clear. He is a leftist and a socialist on principle,
who vilifies the free market, apologizes for his country before
murderous foreign dictators, and finds salvation in ever-growing
government power. Not all Americans see him this way, but the
number is growing with his every word and deed.11
Obama, of course, does not intend to be clear about his
socialist identity. He is trying to come across as a
“reasonable,” moderate “centrist.” But his attempts to appeal to
moderate voters are angering the hard left and alienating the
independents. Meanwhile, an increasing number of astute American
voters on the right are largely unmoved.12
Many people are seeing him as a skilled orator who is trying to
save his agenda.
The same charge could have been leveled against Bush, but
there is a big difference between the two men. Whereas Bush’s
image as a free-market capitalist was a mirage, Obama’s image as
a radical leftist is accurate. Obama’s great vulnerability is
that a silent majority of American voters will see this, and
will recognize that he does not share either their values or
their vision of what America was and should be. Although only a
minority of Americans has joined in the vocal protests, many
more are silently stewing over Obama’s agenda. As one writer put
it, “It is not, in the end, the demonstrators in those town hall
meetings or the agitation of his political enemies that Mr.
Obama should fear. It is the judgment of those Americans who
have been sitting quietly in their homes, listening to him.”13
This is the clarity that Obama has brought to the American
political scene. To see a president’s clear and principled
commitment to an ideology—any ideology—is precisely
what America has needed for decades. This sight has helped many
people understand the issues at a more fundamental level than
they ever have. Obama and his congressional allies have
unwittingly launched a grass-roots movement that is actively
questioning the role of government in our lives. Although a
large portion of the protesters remains confused about the
principles at stake, an increasing number are gaining clarity.
They are coming to see the Democratic proposals for health-care
“reform,” for instance, not as a matter of new programs backed
by good intentions, but as an attack on individual rights and an
effort to impose a dictatorship—as signs at tea parties attest.
And many are beginning to see that the Republicans as well have
been guilty of such attacks.
Clarity is the first step toward understanding, and
understanding is the prerequisite to rational evaluation. For
three generations now, America has needed a blunt confrontation
with the policies that have been leading the nation toward
dictatorship and into bankruptcy. Such confrontations were
stillborn in 1940, 1964, and 1980 because in each case
Republicans failed to stand up, on principle, for capitalism,
liberty, and individual rights. Republicans repeatedly collapsed
into the quicksand of compromise and accepted the welfare state
principles of their opponents while arguing about the “proper”
amount of government coercion they would enact. The trend toward
statism continued, because the incremental steps accepted by
Republicans obscured the stark difference between America’s
founding vision and its statist future.
Obama has given active-minded Americans a close-up view of
this future. His vision—a government bureaucracy to administer
medicine, an environmental agency to shackle industry, and the
institutional mechanisms for bringing the government into the
most intimate details of our lives—is where we have been headed
for decades. But until now this destination has been hidden by
the smoke and mirrors of rhetorical obfuscation. Obama’s
strident efforts to impose this agenda are enabling people to
see that future with clarity.
But even this does not fully explain why the protests have
erupted now. Obama has energized the opposition because his plan
is not some abstract utopia to be found in the distant future.
He wants it now. He has asked Congress to pass both
health-care and environmental legislation this year, and
Congress has produced the bills. At a rally in August, he
restated this pledge: “I promise you, we will pass [health-care]
reform by the end of this year.”14
By putting forth firm dates when these measures are to become
law—by saying that more than one-third of the U.S. economy could
be under direct federal control as early as next month—he
has motivated a large segment of the American electorate to
stand up against these plans. Millions of Americans are deeply
disturbed not only by Obama’s particular aims, but also by his
ideological framework. Many are coming to see the issues, even
if imperfectly, in terms of dictatorship versus individual
rights.
Republicans should have brought forward a positive,
principled alternative to the statist trend years ago. They
failed. Obama has now done the job for them. He has presented
the stark alternative from the other side, by specifying and
demanding a comprehensive agenda that carries no pretense of
individual liberty. He has created an alarming sense of urgency
by demanding that this agenda be made into law now.
Many Americans are now able to see Obama’s plans as an
assault on the founding principles of this nation. In addition,
many Americans realize that time is running out—that the future
is here, today. These two factors are energizing otherwise
nonpolitical Americans to literally rally around the flag, to
confront their elected representatives, and to turn against the
administration in droves.
Military history provides an illuminating parallel to Obama’s
explosive effect on American political life. By 1945, Japan had
lost the war with America—but Japanese leaders evaded that fact
and refused to make the decision needed to end the war. When the
United States issued its demand for surrender (“the alternative
is prompt and utter destruction”) and dropped two atomic bombs,
the Japanese could no longer evade the facts or postpone the
decision. The shock of the bombs made Japan’s alternative clear:
to continue the war until they were burned into the bedrock, or
to change the nation’s course. Had the Americans not forced the
Japanese to confront that alternative and that deadline, the
Japanese leadership could have reacted incrementally to events
and manipulated the population in order to keep its power. Had
it done so, Japan might have remained on the path of war past
the point where reform was possible. The bombs forced the
Japanese to make a life or death decision now.
Obama has dropped the equivalent of an atomic bomb into the
American political arena. Many Americans are now shocked at the
scale and speed of the coercion being unleashed. The Democratic
economic policies, the cap-and-trade bill, and the health-care
proposals are similar to what Bush had supported, and to what
John McCain had promised. But the Obama administration and the
Democratic leadership are openly unabashed in their reverence
for greater government power, and this has strengthened the
shockwaves rolling across America
The Democrats—shocked in their own way by the public response
to their transparency—spent the late summer trying to obfuscate
these issues. They have portrayed the protesters as
“un-American,” the Republicans as obstructionist, and themselves
as reasonable. Such attempts are further isolating the Democrats
from millions of Americans, many of whom are beginning to see
that the Democrats rather than the protesters are opposed to
America’s founding principles. Unlike the atomic bombs dropped
on Japan—which turned Japan away from dictatorship and toward
freedom and individual rights—Obama’s bomb is intended to move
America more quickly into authoritarian rule, and ultimately
into dictatorship. Rather than acquiesce to the ultimatum,
however, many Americans are standing against it.
The protests and the polls are clear: Americans have, by and
large, rejected the radical leftist agenda. But the issue is not
yet closed. The Democrats have one last resource—one secret
weapon—with which they can save their plans while avoiding
political suicide in the next election. That weapon is the
Republicans.
If the Republicans compromise—if they accept
federally-mandated health insurance in the guise of a “co-op” or
the like, or a cap-and-trade bill that is marginally less
draconian than the Democratic version—they will have once again
capitulated to their opponents, abandoned liberty, and ruined
the opportunity to redirect this nation toward its founding
moral principle: individual rights, protected under a
constitution in a free republic.
President Obama has made the issue of freedom versus statism
clear, and has forced an immediate decision on the American
people and their representatives. His most astute opponents are
correct to see his plans as attacks on their individual rights.
But many people remain confused about the nature of the threat
because they lack an understanding of the principles needed to
grasp the cause and meaning of the trend toward statism and to
reverse that trend. Those principles begin with the rights
enshrined in the Declaration of Independence, and with the
founding purpose of our government: “to secure these rights.” To
grasp the meaning of this seminal statement, we must
understand that the right to life does not mean the right to
coerce others into providing us with the needs of life. It means
the right to live our lives free of such coercions.
The essence of the capitalist system is freedom:
each man’s freedom to pursue his own goals, to pursue his own
happiness, to keep the material products of his efforts, and to
deal voluntarily with others. But to reestablish and maintain
their freedom, Americans must assert, with full knowledge of the
principles at stake, that they have a right to life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and that the only proper
moral purpose of government is to secure these rights. Now is
the time for all good men to come to the aid, not of their
party, but of their country’s founding principles, by
understanding those principles and guarding them as if their
lives depended on it—because they do.
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Endnotes
1 Rasmussen Reports, August 23, 2009, http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/obama_administration/daily_presidential_tracking_poll.
2 Rasmussen Reports, August 10, 2009, http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/august_2009/on_health_care_51_fear_government_more_than_insurance_companies.
Rasmussen Reports, August 7, 2009, http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/august_2009/25_agree_with_pelosi_that_health_insurers_are_villains.
3 Statement of Linda Douglass, which followed a post by
Macon Philips, “Facts are Stubborn Things,” on the White
House Blog, Tuesday, August 4, 2009, http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/Facts-Are-Stubborn-Things/.
A White House blog statement of August 17, “An Update on
Reality Check,” asked that information from others not be
submitted without permission.
4 Statement from Democratic National Committee
Communications Director Brad Woodhouse on the Republican
Party and Allied Groups’ Mob Rule. DNC Press Office, August
4, 2009. See also DNC video, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtTBkxvBq88.
5 Remarks at a fund-raiser for Virginia gubernatorial
candidate Creigh Deeds, http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/08/07/politics/politicalhotsheet/entry5226148.shtml.
6 CNN Interview, December 17, 2008, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MI53fHNygpI.
7 Leonard Peikoff, Objectivism: The Philosophy of
Ayn Rand (New York: Penguin, 1993), p. 376.
8 Presidential News Conference, February 14, 2009, “I
will not tolerate it as President.”
9 Presidential News Conference, July 22, 2009, “if
they’re looking and you come in and you’ve got a bad sore
throat or your child has a bad sore throat or has repeated
sore throats, the doctor may look at the reimbursement
system and say to himself, ‘You know what? I make a lot more
money if I take this kid’s tonsils out.’”
10 Paul R. Ehrlich, Anne H. Ehrlich, and John P. Holdren,
“Human Ecology: Problems and Solutions” (San Francisco: W.
H. Freeman & Co, 1973), pp. 278–79.
11 Rasmussen Reports, July 31, 2009, 76 percent of
Americans see Obama as a liberal, and 48 percent as very
liberal—another trend that has increased over the past six
months, http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/obama_administration/july_2009/48_say_obama_is_very_liberal.
12 For heckling of an Obama aide by a leftist,
“progressive” audience, “Valerie Jarrett Heckled and Hissed
at Netroots Nation,” Huffington Post, August 15,
2009, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/08/15/valarie-jarrett-heckled-a_n_260329.html.
13 Dorothy Rabinowitz, “Obama’s Tone-Deaf Health
Campaign,” Wall Street Journal, August 11, 2009, p.
A17.
14 “Obama vows to pass healthcare reform,” Reuters,
August 5, 2009,
http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE56M0HE20090805.
This article was provided from The Objective Standard.
http://www.theobjectivestandard.com/issues/2009-fall/obamas-atomic-bomb.asp