http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/254342/obama-co-growing-fast-victor-d
avis-hanson

 

December 3, 2010 4:00 A.M.

Obama & Co., Growing Up Fast 
Obama and his EU counterparts are learning that high-minded adolescence
makes for bad governance. But it's an expensive lesson.

Old laws predicated on human nature cannot so easily be discarded - even by
utopians who think they have the power to cool the planet and stop the
rising seas. Borrowed money really has to be paid back. Governments cannot
operate without confidentiality. Nations perish if they cannot protect
themselves from existential threats. Watching a therapeutic Barack Obama
grow up and learn these tragic lessons is as enlightening as it is sometimes
scary.

When they are out of power, modern leftists advocate massive government
spending and large deficits. They applaud when Republicans and conservatives
sometimes prove as profligate as any big-government liberal. But when
invested with the responsibility of governance, they come to understand that
Keynesian "stimulus" must eventually cede to the same unhappy logic as the
private household's indebtedness.

Maxing out credit cards does not exempt one from having to pay off the
balance. Low or nonexistent interest on debt does not mean the principal
vanishes. We are reminded that debt is real with the ongoing meltdown of the
European Union, as a bloated public sector from the Atlantic to the Aegean
demands that someone, somewhere cover its debts.

Here in America the same fiscal rules have not disappeared. In California,
Governor-elect Jerry Brown will have few choices in January 2011. Since he
cannot raise taxes much in a state that already has the nation's highest
income and sales taxes, he can only find a way to cut expenditures. He must
then either finesse such reductions with a sort of green philosophy of
"small is better" or plead that his reactionary predecessor gave him, a
compassionate liberal, no choice. Either way, the creditors and bondholders
must be paid. Even Barack Obama, after spending $1.3 trillion more this year
than the government took in, now seeks to save a few billion dollars by
freezing federal wages. 

In short, from Sacramento to Athens the world is reminded that obligations,
despite in-vogue euphemisms like "stimulus" and "Keynesian," really do have
to be met. There is an iron law that transcends politics and limits the
application of fiscal liberalism: Print more money and money becomes less
valuable; default just once and all future credit is lost or intolerably
expensive.

In a similar way, the WikiLeaks mess reminds us of the adolescence of
crusading freelance leakers and their enablers. This time the disclosures
are not morality tales about Vietnam or Guantanamo. They concern a tough
Hillary Clinton urging her State Department subordinates to spy on United
Nations personnel. Barack Obama is not seen calling for the planet to cool,
but is shown as so desperate to keep his promise to shut down Guantanamo
that he is reduced, in tawdry fashion, to horse-trading photo-ops with the
leader of any small country willing to take a detainee or two off his hands.
In other words, those who once sermonized about the morality of leaking the
Pentagon Papers and details of U.S. policy in the war on terror are now
seeing that a let-it-all-hang-out transparency can be nihilistic rather than
liberating. Will Hollywood now follow Rendition, Redacted, and In the Valley
of Elah with a hagiographic treatment of WikiLeaks?

Likewise, the notion that "civil liberties" were sacrificed in the effort to
stop Islamist terrorism increasingly is shown to be a liberal talking point,
not a serious criticism of responsible wartime government. Barack Obama
conceded that argument when he flipped on every pre-presidential critique he
had made of George W. Bush's protocols. At one time or another, Obama, as
law professor, state legislator, senator, and presidential candidate, had
ridiculed the Patriot Act, wiretaps, renditions, military tribunals, the
Iraq War, Predator strikes, and Guantanamo.

He ended up as president embracing them all, and even expanding some. I
think he was quite confident that his liberal base, outraged by Bush's
supposed trashing of constitutional protections, would not much mind his
own, inasmuch as civil-libertarian nitpicking was privately acknowledged as
being as much of an advantage for outsiders as it was a liability for
insiders. We live in an era, after all, where principled lawyer Howard Koh
went from berating the U.S. for its use of renditions to now writing briefs
empowering the U.S. government, for national-security reasons, to obliterate
suspected terrorists in foreign countries by remote control. Surely one
lesson is that when out of power one is not responsible for Americans' being
murdered, and thus has the leeway to call for a sort of cosmic justice in a
way one cannot when in power.

We have also come full circle with radical Islam. Critics found it easy to
charge that the U.S. had unduly polarized the Islamic world. We know that
narrative: Both past and recent sins of American foreign policy had
tragically radicalized some Muslims. And because the United States was
culpable for much of the hatred shown us by Islamists, so too that antipathy
could be mitigated by unilateral outreach, reset diplomacy, and atonement
through both the pathos of grand apology and the bathos of bowing and
kowtowing.

So under a new charismatic, postnational President Obama, we tried the
Al-Arabiya interview, the Cairo speech, the embarrassing euphemisms like
"overseas contingency operations" and "man-made disasters," the description
of Mr. Abdulmutallab as "allegedly" a terrorist, the promises to shut down
Guantanamo and try KSM in a civilian court, the Ground Zero-mosque
chest-thumping, the embarrassing NASA Islamic-outreach mission, the John
Brennan outbursts against the Bush administration, the General Casey remorse
over the fact that Major Hasan's mass murdering might imperil army diversity
programs - and all the other nostrums that did little to convince the
would-be Christmas bomber, the would-be Times Square bomber, the would-be
subway bombers, and the would-be Portland bomber to pause, appreciate our
good intentions, and so desist.

The WikiLeaks disclosures suggest that the Pakistanis in 2009 did not warm
to such outreach. The Saudis did not suddenly clamp down on their funding of
al-Qaeda. Syria was not won over. Iran did not think a new friend in
Washington made the acquisition of nuclear weapons superfluous. The Arab
world is more eager that we should show reckless abandon in taking out
Iranian nukes than it is pleased when we calmly pressure Israel into
granting concessions  to the Palestinians. At best, these suspect nations
were indifferent to our new magnanimity; at worst they interpreted it as
waffling to be exploited rather than good intentions to be appreciated.

Finally, when we strip off the thin veneer of good-times talk about the
European Union's being a cohesive community, and about a European continent
of soft-power caring, we are left in the present recession with ancient
squabbling nations, nationalist zeal, divisive cultures, differing
religions, and antithetical customs - and, soon, the old remedies of
diplomacy and alliances. Europeans chafe far more when their elites berate
them as Neanderthals who were not up to their utopian dream than they do
when their regional and national differences are honestly acknowledged and
their disagreements recognized and dealt with diplomatically by sovereign
nations with sovereign agendas.

What are we to make of this great history lesson of the last two years? 

Behind the recent news of massive debt, looming defaults, WikiLeaks, the
administration's about-face in the war on terror, and the implosion of the
European Union is a reminder that progressivism, at least as it operates
today, is a sort of high-minded adolescence, as sophisticated in
faculty-lounge repartee as it is near-suicidal in its actual implementation.

 



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