Where Did `We' Go?          By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists\
/thomaslfriedman/index.html?inline=nyt-per>   Published: September 29,
2009
I hate to write about this, but I have actually been to this play before
and it is really disturbing.

I was in Israel interviewing Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
just before he was assassinated in 1995. We had a beer in
his office. He needed one. I remember the ugly mood in Israel
then — a mood in which extreme right-wing settlers and
politicians were doing all they could to delegitimize Rabin,
who was committed to trading land for peace as part of the
Oslo accords.

They questioned his authority. They accused him of treason.
They created pictures depicting him as a Nazi SS officer,
and they shouted death threats at rallies. His political
opponents winked at it all.

And in so doing they created a poisonous political environment
that was interpreted by one right-wing Jewish nationalist as a
license to kill Rabin — he must have heard, "God will be on
your side" — and so he did.

Others have already remarked on this analogy, but I want to add my voice
because the parallels to Israel then and America today turn my stomach:
I have no problem with any of the substantive criticism of President
Obama from the right or left.


But something very dangerous is happening. Criticism from the far right
has begun tipping over into delegitimation and creating the same kind of
climate here that existed in Israel on the eve of the Rabin
assassination.

What kind of madness is it that someone would create a poll on Facebook
asking respondents, "Should Obama be killed?" The choices were:
"No, Maybe, Yes, and Yes if he cuts my health care." The Secret
Service is now investigating. I hope they put the jerk in jail and throw
away the key because this is exactly what was being done to Rabin.

Even if you are not worried that someone might draw from these vitriolic
attacks a license to try to hurt the president, you have to be worried
about what is happening to American politics more broadly.

Our leaders, even the president, can no longer utter the word
"we" with a straight face. There is no more "we" in
American politics at a time when "we" have these huge problems
— the deficit, the recession, health care, climate change and wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan — that "we" can only manage, let
alone fix, if there is a collective "we" at work.

Sometimes I wonder whether George H.W. Bush, president "41,"
will be remembered as our last "legitimate" president. The right
impeached Bill Clinton and hounded him from Day 1 with the bogus
Whitewater "scandal." George W. Bush was elected under a cloud
because of the Florida voting mess, and his critics on the left never
let him forget it.

And Mr. Obama is now having his legitimacy attacked by a concerted
campaign from the right fringe. They are using everything from smears
that he is a closet "socialist" to calling him a "liar"
in the middle of a joint session of Congress to fabricating doubts about
his birth in America and whether he is even a citizen. And these attacks
are not just coming from the fringe. Now they come from Lou Dobbs on CNN
and from members of the House of Representatives.

Again, hack away at the man's policies and even his character all
you want. I know politics is a tough business. But if we destroy the
legitimacy of another president to lead or to pull the country together
for what most Americans want most right now — nation-building at
home — we are in serious trouble. We can't go 24 years without a
legitimate president — not without being swamped by the problems
that we will end up postponing because we can't address them
rationally.

The American political system was, as the saying goes, "designed by
geniuses so it could be run by idiots." But a cocktail of political
and technological trends have converged in the last decade that are
making it possible for the idiots of all political stripes to overwhelm
and paralyze the genius of our system.

Those factors are: the wild excess of money in politics; the
gerrymandering of political districts, making them permanently
Republican or Democratic and erasing the political middle; a 24/7 cable
news cycle that makes all politics a daily battle of tactics that
overwhelm strategic thinking; and a blogosphere that at its best
enriches our debates, adding new checks on the establishment, and at its
worst coarsens our debates to a whole new level, giving a new power to
anonymous slanderers to send lies around the world.


Finally, on top of it all, we now have a permanent presidential campaign
that encourages all partisanship, all the time among our leading
politicians.

I would argue that together these changes add up to a difference of
degree that is a difference in kind — a different kind of American
political scene that makes me wonder whether we can seriously discuss
serious issues any longer and make decisions on the basis of the
national interest.

We can't change this overnight, but what we can change, and must
change, is people crossing the line between criticizing the president
and tacitly encouraging the unthinkable and the unforgivable.


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/30/opinion/30friedman.html?_r=1&ref=opini\
on









Reply via email to