Obama
Upstages Guy Fawkes
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
DIGG THIS
The fifth of
November was Guy Fawkes Day. The fourth was Obama's day. Most Americans,
especially the left-liberals, have been too busy thinking about
Obama to care about Guy Fawkes.
Do you remember,
lefties, the movie V
for Vendetta? What a great moment in our romance that was.
We
libertarians loved the movie. You loved it too.
The
film was representative of our whole eight-year fling. We libertarians,
you progressives, united against the common enemy – our ancient
enemy – the corporatist, militarized, theocratic police state. You’ve
always had a subversive streak and Bush brought out the best in
you.
November 5th
should be the day we remember the radical ideas in that movie, and
of Guy Fawkes Day: "The people should not be afraid of the
government. The government should be afraid of the people."
So terrible
has been Bush that you began wondering if the true hero in the drama
of social struggle was, in fact, the omnipotent politician, as you’ve
been tempted to believe for the last century; or, rather, the opponent
of tyranny. Maybe those who opposed government, those who both Clinton
and Bush told you to fear, had a point all this time.
But then you
met Obama. Boy, did he switch things around for you. So well tempered,
soft-spoken, seemingly humble and mentally sound.
All the incredibly
scary features of the Bush regime – the secrecy, the spying, the
lying, the aggressive, presidential wars – are in the Obama catalog.
He promises more of the same. He lied about the FISA bill, voted
for it after he vowed that he wouldn’t.
And now he
is going to be our president. "Our commander in chief,"
as Joe Biden says.
Yet all those
frightening Bush policies that Obama will continue do not seem to
matter to most of the left anymore. The right still wants war and
the water-board. But it seems that the economy has overcome everything
else as an issue, and Obama’s socialism was so sweetly tempting
to virtually the entire American left, and now that they have it
they are once again content with the federal government.
It is not so
much that government should be afraid of the people, after all.
And certainly, government in itself is not something so fearful
that it should be strictly limited. The more timeless leftist truth,
as relearned from Obama, is that the people ought to be afraid of
bad Republican government, and instead embrace good, democratic
government, one that promises change, hope, a higher minimum wage,
more "green" jobs, energy independence, fair trade, much
more stringent financial regulation, foreclosure freezes, wealth
redistribution, economic justice, national health care, an end to
climate change, a civilian national security force, a bigger military,
victory in the war on terror, foreign aid and U.S.-enforced international
peace.
To be fair,
some on the left intend to put pressure on Obama to end the war
and civil liberties erosions. And what if he doesn’t? The right
has had people trying their darnedest to get Republicans to cut
government and that hasn’t worked.
Indeed, now
the mainstream left has more or less forgotten the antiwar movement.
Once Obama takes power, most of them will embrace the military state.
Most of them did during Clinton. Most of their liberal parents did
under Johnson, too.
While I’m making
post-election predictions, I will say that the conservatives will
only get worse. Many on the right will pretend to care about free
enterprise as a high principle, but I actually find such hypocrisy
obnoxious. Meanwhile, they will always be questioning Obama’s patriotism,
demanding that he perpetuate the war on terror properly. No wavering.
Had McCain
won, he would have had the possibility (although not the likelihood)
of taming things down. Now all the pressure will be on Obama to
show he has the strength to lead the world’s one indispensable nation,
as his foreign policy adviser Madeleine Albright calls it. He will
have to bomb. He will have to kill. He is surrounded by others who
want him to.
The irony is,
the Democrats might end up being less socialistic than the Republicans.
Americans will be more on the lookout for big government from them.
On the other hand, Obama now has a solidly Democratic Congress.
So the chances of another New Deal are not negligible.
As for civil
liberties, Obama has still been somewhat better on torture and executive
detention. But again, he will have to show how tough he is. We are
in for a ride.
I could be
wrong. Obama could turn out less bad than I expect. But he will
not be good. He could not be even if he wanted to be. He was elected
despite having moved to the right on war and surveillance, because
Americans wanted a Democrat to centrally plan the economy. There
are more libertarians than ever, but the popular ideology at the
moment is nevertheless very pro-state.
But there will
be a silver lining. Obama will be quite educational to some on the
left. He is everything many of them have wanted in a president,
but at least some will be very disappointed. The freedom movement
got some folks from the right because of Bush. Our ranks will grow,
eventually, when Obamania is seen as just another name for imperial
wars, state capitalism and police brutality.
When it happens,
we libertarians will be waiting with open arms. We can watch V
again and reminisce.
November
6, 2008
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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