Wednesday, June 23, 2004

THIS 'N THAT

Whirling, not so silently, in space has been taken to a whole new level.  i spent all of yesterday afternoon in an Issues Committee meeting, and then much of last night getting handouts for different events made up and printed out.  of course this group has no money to go to Staples and use a color copier, so we volunteers are using our printers to churn out color copies of stuff.  Things really cranked up all of a sudden around here.  we have this Democratic Book Party Friday evening at a place in Dewey Beach called Books and Coffee, to go with the flow of Bill Clinton's bio release - and one of our members has gotten Jim and Sarah Brady as guest speakers for the event!  

On Friday afternoon, thanks to our organization and the Rehoboth Beach Film Festival folks, Michael Moore's movie Fahrenheit 9/11 will be opening here in Lower Slower Delaware at Midway Movies between Lewes and RB for a run of two weeks!  one of only 500 theatres in the country where this is happening.  i thought i'd never get to see it!  we will be handing out Kerry stuff at the movies, and maybe even setting up a voter reg table in the vicinity.  after months and months of bitching and whining, it feels so good to actually be DOING something!

On a different subject entirely, John Scalzi has some interesting thoughts on an anniversary activity for us AOL journalers.  Evidently Journals started in August of last year.  i didn't gear into it until September, but that's hardly an issue.  go read this entry in his journal and see what you think of his ideas.  evidently there's also other thoughts afoot out there in J-land, that i must investigate.  i will do it and report back.  although if you know stuff that i don't please pull me into the loop.

And then, on to yet another subject - this is a column i found in the Washington Post yesterday and really liked.  after all the hooha about Reagan's "optimism" and the way the current campaigns are starting to pick up on this as a refrain, these were refreshing words:

The Trouble With Optimism

By Michael Kinsley
Tuesday, June 22, 2004; Page A17

Everyone agreed during the recent Reaganalia that one of Ronald Reagan's best qualities was optimism. For Reagan's longtime supporters, optimism is a key element in the official hagiography. He lifted the atmosphere of doom and "malaise" perpetrated by his predecessor, Jimmy Carter. For those who did not especially admire the late president when he was alive, this was something nice they could say in all sincerity, instead of or as an introduction to what they really thought of him.

Reagan's death took what was already a festival of optimism in American politics and turned it into an orgy. Optimism has long been on every short list of "quintessentially American" qualities. After Reagan's two sweeping victories, it became a great cliche of political analysis as well: The more optimistic candidate almost always wins. This insight is like those studies showing that the taller presidential candidate almost always wins (the 2004 election will be an interesting test of that one), with the crucial difference that you can't do much about your height. By contrast you can ladle on the optimism all you want. Thanks to Reagan, optimism is considered an essential ingredient of any presidential candidate's public self-presentation. They all say they have it; their opponents accuse them of lacking it. A typical American politician would sooner admit to being a bigamist than a pessimist.

The climactic TV commercial in President Bush's spring saturation bombing campaign against Sen. John Kerry is titled "Pessimism" and begins with Bush declaring, "I'm optimistic about America because I believe in the people of America" -- a sentiment that would work just about as well the other way ("I believe in the people of America because I'm optimistic about America"). The ad then attempts to out Kerry as a pessimist, based on the evidence that he talks about the Great Depression. "One thing's sure," Bush's ad notes. "Pessimism never created a job." Meanwhile, Kerry is running an ad titled "Optimists," asserting that he is as optimistic as the next guy.

Could there be an emptier claim made on behalf of someone hoping to lead the United States of America than to say that he is "optimistic"?

Optimism may well be part of the American character, but it is pretty insufficient as either a campaign promise or a governing principle. If the objective situation calls for optimism, being optimistic isn't much of a trick or a distinction. If the objective situation calls for something closer to pessimism, the last thing we want is some Micawber whistling past the Treasury Department.

It's a bit of a cheat for the incumbent to accuse his opponent of pessimism. By the very nature of elections, the side in power is going to argue that things are going well, and the side in opposition is going to argue that things are going badly. It is awfully convenient for the side in power if the canons of optimism forbid any assertion that things are going badly -- even if they are. That, of course, is the whole idea of Bush's optimism offensive. Kerry has brought up the Great Depression to point out that Bush, as of now, is the first president since then to suffer a net loss of jobs. Bush says the important issue here isn't the loss of jobs, or even the truth of Kerry's statement (which he doesn't challenge) but the very reference itself.

No one starts out as an incumbent. In 1980 even Ronald Reagan saw bleakness and defeat everywhere. The greatest alleged success of Reagan's presidency -- victory in the Cold War -- is widely misrepresented as a triumph of optimism. Even if you credit Reagan for that victory (which I don't), the rhetorical theme of his military buildup was pessimism, not optimism. It wasn't that communism just needed one last push, it was that communism was triumphing throughout the world. Democracy was in peril. The Soviets were on the verge of nuclear superiority. Complacency -- misplaced optimism -- is what the Reaganites accused their critics of.

As recently as the 2000 election, today's President Georgie Sunshine was eager to spread pessimism and gloom. And apparently he remained optimism-deficient until recently. What else can explain the job losses of his first three years as president?

We don't want a president who sees the silver lining in every cloud. We want a president who sees the cloud and dispels it. We want someone who will make the objective situation justify optimism, not someone who is optimistic in any objective situation. If optimism is hard-wired into the American character, it should be especially important to have someone sober at the wheel of the car. Of course, such clear-headedness is a hopeless ideal. But it is odd that politicians of every stripe now promise that their vision will be clouded.

And if forced to choose between a leader whose vision is clouded by optimism and one whose vision is clouded by pessimism, there is a good case that pessimism is the more prudent choice. Another name for pessimism is a tragic sensibility. It is a vivid awareness that things can go wrong, and often have. An optimist thinks he can pop over to Iraq, knock Saddam Hussein off his perch, establish democracy throughout the Middle East and be home in time for dinner. A pessimist knows better

 

 

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Another great article - thank you for posting it!  and thanks for coming by my journal and saying hi today, I appreciate it.  Yes, I've read "Good Omens" a couple of times, and even though it's about the apocalypse, it's not THAT dark, and it's absolutely hilarious and irreverent (I think that may be Terry Pratchett's contribution). I hope you have a good time on your travels!

Anonymous said...

A great column by Kinsley!  I would actually prefer my leaders to have a little optimism, but tempered with a little realism.

Anonymous said...

Sad to say but I won't be able to attend the convention in August. I already planned a short vacation time for Labor Day weekend. If my brother is cooperative, I will be heading to Illinois to spend some time with my nephews. If not, the default is Seattle. I have been promising my friends there that I would come for a visit for three years now. But, who knows. Maybe I'll make it to your area one of these days. I hit Pennsylvania every couple of years. In November, I'm planning on going to Florida and if all works out drive up to North Carolina for a day or two. :-) ---Robbie