Hoping Against Hope
by John Liechty
by
John Liechty
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"Hope
is necessary in every condition," said Samuel Johnson. Most
people would agree. It hardly seems sensible to contradict the man
who termed patriotism "the last refuge of a scoundrel"
and a tavern chair "the throne of human felicity." Yet
throughout my life I have felt generally wary towards hope and have
often doubted its wisdom, and even sometimes its necessity.
This "negative"
attitude can in part be blamed on Albert Camus’ The
Myth of Sisyphus, which I found compelling as a teenager.
Camus talked about learning to live "without appeal" –
hope was a distracter, a dilutor, a sop, distorting any clear comprehension
of reality. Camus was not advocating despair – he was simply convinced
that hope was illusory, and therefore inadvisable. Not only was
hope a waste of time, it was an instrument of avoidable cruelty,
"the worst of evils" according to Nietzsche, "for
it prolongs the torments of man."
I still think
Camus’ notions make good sense, and still treasure the opening lines
of Woody Allen’s parody, My
Speech to the Graduates, which begins: "More than at
any other time in history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path
leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other, to total extinction.
Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly." I always
feel peculiarly at ease reading those words. There are worse things
to do with existential angst than laugh.
As someone
constitutionally disposed to Camus’ absurdity of hope and Woody
Allen’s farcicality of hope, I was predictably Not Hopeful when
I opened Barack Obama’s The
Audacity of Hope this summer. I assumed it would court the
warm, fuzzy, nausea-inducing sentiments of the politician venturing
to speak "from the heart." But Obama’s book does not turn
one’s stomach or even raise one’s hackles unduly. Proposed solutions
to problems can sometimes sound sketchy, improbable, too good to
be true. And Obama is a bit too willing to praise and defend military
intervention. While critical of the current Iraq War, he seems charmed
by the last one, and expresses no misgivings about the war in Afghanistan.
Support for military "solutions" may be the standard tune
in American politics, but it is disappointing to hear Obama swell
the chorus so readily.
All in all
though, The Audacity of Hope is written by a man who sounds
articulate, capable, intelligent, conscientious, considerate, and
genuinely committed to a politics beyond the narrow interests of
himself or his party. Americans ought to feel, if not hopeful, at
least grateful that Barack Obama is in the running.
"He who
despairs over an event is a coward, but he who holds hope for the
human condition is a fool," Camus wrote in The
Rebel. Obama is neither a coward nor a fool – and I don’t
think Gore Vidal’s shrewd one-liner has been lost on him: "It
is not too wise ever to be too optimistic when it comes to the human
race." Obama’s brand of hope is not stupid or blind… yet. It
seems to fall within the healthy scope of Dr. Johnson’s "necessary."
However, let
us recall that it is the nature of politics to turn vital things
impotent and necessary things pointless. Politics is the mill that
grinds spirit to letter. Hope’s a pleasant enough starter but if
it’s all Obama’s got cooking, better tighten your belt. As Francis
Bacon observed, "Hope is a good breakfast, but it is a bad
supper." Or as the wonderfully pragmatic Ben Franklin put it,
"He that lives upon hope will die fasting." A hungry public
feels drawn to hope, but it will take more than cotton candy to
fill our stomachs.
Anyway, it’s
down to Obama or McCain. Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose
correctly.
August
20, 2008
John
Liechty [send him mail]
currently teaches in Muscat, Oman.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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