aadler: (911)
[personal profile] aadler
 
Eleven years on, I have to say that I wish we had accomplished more.

Iraq and Afghanistan are sliding back into Islamic anarchy, as American will dwindles. (Not that of the soldiers, no, not the people doing the fighting; the loss of determination is almost completely limited to politicians and others who stay safely home.) Egypt and Libya are lost to the Muslim Brotherhood, Syria is sure to be the next on the block, and Iran is right around the corner from nuclear weaponry. Weakness, apathy, and arrogant disregard — all from the White House — have set the stage for another round of terrible wars. And, when they begin, we won’t be ready, because we never are. America always yearns for peace, carries it to an unrealistic extreme, and as a result we always have to catch up to events we might have headed off.

In the time since I joined the Army, I’ve done three theater deployments and a support tour at Guantanamo, along with volunteering for every school and training and extra duty for which I could qualify. It wasn’t enough. I wanted to do more, and I tried to do more, because I knew I hadn’t done enough. And now, just as the need is about to increase, I’m approaching the point of involuntary retirement, and will no longer be allowed to contribute.

Things are about to get bad, and I’m convinced it didn’t have to happen. And, though there are many things that could have been done better, I pretty much blame Obama for the state of things now.

Maybe next time we can elect someone who, instead of focusing on the rise of the oceans, will just do his damn JOB.

Date: 2012-09-12 08:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ozma914.livejournal.com
I believe you're right. A lot of people think he's doing this stuff deliberately, but I think it's mostly incompetence. And worse, the largely ignorant electorate is going to put him back into office, watch and see.

Date: 2012-09-13 04:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lostboy-lj.livejournal.com
I personally believe it’s a malignant combination of incompetence and deliberate intent.

You might be right. It's possible there's a quadrant of my brain that does not want to accept the possibility of a genuine fifth column in the White House. I'm not the sort of person who ignores ugly realities, but the notion that all the bad moves the president's made were actually designed to hurt the nation feels a little too conspiracy-theory for me.

Maybe it's more the case that he misunderstands the nature of the republic (he wouldn't be the first). It's obvious he's read too much Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault, but it's also pretty obvious that he hasn't read enough James Madison, Al Hamilton or Adams (pick an Adams, any Adams). Or, if he read them, he only did so for the chance to apply a postmodern, hard-left critique, and get a pat on the skull from like-minded profs.

It's a common mental deficit these days among college grads - the pretense of having honestly explored and then rejected certain ideas that in reality you were never given a fair accounting of, never intended to seriously consider, and dismissed out of hand. And you can't rule out the Pavlovian feedback loop that goes on in a liberal arts program. Like the rat that gets the pellet when it presses a certain lever, the the student who regurgitates the "correct" reading of various political and social philosophers will go much further, much faster than those who deviate from it.

My guess is President Obama found himself diving deep into that deep end of the ideological pool during his college years, and never had reality (jobs, businesses, military service) to come and slap him in the face later on. He just sort of "ascended" from college to the Senate to the Presidency. He's a president with an interesting background, but no foreground (and, increasingly, no middle ground).

Date: 2012-09-13 05:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ozma914.livejournal.com
Very good analysis. Obama's not stupid, or crazy, or even evil; he's just ideologically mind warped.

Date: 2012-09-13 06:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lostboy-lj.livejournal.com
Thanks, but here's my question: at what point does "mind-warped" become "the status quo"? I think the trend started in the 80's (when left-wing radicals from the 70's became tenured professors), and cranked into full gear in the 90's. By the time generation-X (my generation) was coming into full flower, the radicalism of the 70's had reached an "Aesop's Fables" level of authority in pop culture. For instance, by 1992 the gun-toting, misogynistic, separatist-for-rent who called himself Malcolm X had been transformed into a fair and high-minded civil rights leader, on equal footing with MLK.

That's why I have trouble calling President Obama a "radical." As far as I'm concerned, he's not a radical. His worst ideas represent what approx 25% of the national population considers to be reality -- not a majority, but still a big enough chunk to make you wonder what kind of room you're standing in.
Edited Date: 2012-09-13 06:31 am (UTC)

Date: 2012-09-13 07:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ozma914.livejournal.com
Maybe, then, conservatives will be the "radicals" of the future? Or maybe not, since it seems likely moderates will increasingly become the nation's minority group, politically speaking.

Left wingers becoming tenured professors; that's without a doubt a major event in what's happened to the country. But at this point I'm not so much concerned with how it happened, or what the terms should be, so much as: How do we turn it around? It seems liberals having been doing a pretty good job of institutionalizing their beliefs to the extent that many people think there's no other way to do things. Just think of how all we have to do to be decried as hating racists is to voice an opposing view to any Obama policy, and you can see how far we have to go.

Date: 2012-09-13 01:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lostboy-lj.livejournal.com
Yeah, moderates are being squeezed out by the wingers on both sides right now, which happened the last few times the world economy tanked, too. When the chips are down, history says that people tend to flock to personality cults (like the '08 Obama campaign) and to authoritarians who make sunny promises about the future, and then issue rants against everyone's favorite scapegoats when the world continues to rocket straight to Hell. For instance, in the bottomless debt-pit of Greece, the fastest growing parties are the Nazis and the Communists. Just like the consulate being attacked on 9/11 in Libya, it's sad but entirely predictable.

I guess that's why I think the "why" is important, especially to people who don't seem to have a clue as to how we got here. Is it going to stop the same bad ideas from taking root again somewhere down the line? Well, no, probably not in a free society (the only kind I want to live in). But if enough people know the cause of a problem, I think we'll be able to defend against it better the next time it comes around.

Date: 2012-09-13 06:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lostboy-lj.livejournal.com
Understood.

Funny how those who overtly or not-so-secretly despise religion, seem not to recognize the quasi-religious attributes of their own holy crusades.

Have you ever read Eric Voegelin's "The New Science of Politics"? It's a great book written by a witness to a dark history, and I think it explains a lot of what we are seeing in our current politics.

Date: 2012-09-13 05:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ozma914.livejournal.com
The combination does seem the most likely scenario.

While I'm just as astonished as you are (just as I'm shocked that they can still find 10% of the electorate that likes Congress), I've completely lost faith in the memory of the average voter, or their ability to research or use common sense. After all, they elected him in the first place despite plenty of evidence about what he wanted to do. I honestly think, out of ignorance and apathy, we're going to put him back into office again. Am I being pessimistic? You betcha. I pray I'm wrong.

And if I am wrong ... yeah, Congress has been handing the Executive branch more and more power as time goes by, and Obama thinks we're all children -- I could absolutely see him refusing to give it up.