The
End of a Long-Winded Era?
by
Ryan McMaken
After
being sworn in, the new President George Bush gave a refreshingly
short speech that lasted a mere 14 minutes. Later in the day he
gave another address inside the Capitol building which lasted less
than 10 minutes. After the Age of Clinton, such succinct speeches
are certainly unexpected. Let’s hope it is indicative of future
addresses by the new president.
In
contrast to Bush, the exiting president Clinton could scarcely refrain
from droning on and on during his last week in office. He ruined
prime time television with a farewell address earlier in the week,
and on Saturday treated himself to a wide array of radio addresses
and self-congratulatory speeches. While egotistical nonsense can
be expected from most presidents, Clinton, in prime form, has managed
to take it to a trashy new level. By the time he left office, rambling
speeches were the norm from the president. We could always depend
on a two-hour long laundry list of government favors Clinton was
planning to dole out to various interest groups. Knowing that he
would rarely actually deliver on, (and thus not pay for), anything
he talked about, Clinton felt free to go on and on about all the
great he was going to do or had supposedly already done and give
himself a big pat on the back.
There
was never enough exposure for Clinton and his pathological need
for attention. If he himself wasn’t rambling on about something
or other, one of his minions was chit-chatting with the starry-eyes
press about their latest cosmic battle with the dastardly Republicans.
The
press, caught up in their own paternalistic arrogance, was always
hungry for more government heroics and never missed a chance to
fill the airwaves with dozens of talking heads analyzing and reanalyzing
every aspect of the day’s news as if every word uttered by Clinton
or one his bureaucrats signified a great historic event in the history
of public policy. Formal Clinton speeches like a state-of-the-union
speech were especially stimulating for the press because it offered
the networks two hours of material to rehash into the wee morning
hours.
After
the Bush inaugural speech, all the pundits could do was sit around
with a deer-in the-headlights look on their faces and comment on
how short the speech was. It must be difficult for the modern journalist
to comprehend a president that does not want to meddle in every
aspect of human life. The media thrived on the Clinton model for
governance. Under Clinton an endless flow of regulations, political
wrangling, scandals, and military expeditions helped fill the demands
of the 24-hour news services. The Clinton White House never missed
an opportunity to get in a few more sound bytes.
With
the rise of the short-winded Bush, the media simply doesn’t know
what to do with itself. One can only discuss a fourteen-minute speech
for so many hours. In lieu of words from Bush himself, the media
might be able to satisfy itself with comments from members of Bush’s
staff, but none of those people are talking either. It has been
reported that Bush has made it clear to his staff that leaks to
the press are an act of disloyalty. Bush’s staff is so tight-lipped,
in fact, that recently, Tim Russert and Tom Brokaw openly fretted
about the amount of information being leaked from the Bush staff.
It seems that mum’s the word down at the Bush White House.
This
must be absolute torture for the pundit classes who can barely imagine
a world where politics doesn’t flood the airwaves every minute of
the day and pseudo-intellectual journalists discuss various ways
to tell other people how to live.
Maybe,
just maybe, Bush will be one of those presidents who feels that
the federal government has better things to do than to tax, regulate,
and sue every American who doesn’t get on board with whatever moral
crusade the government happens to be on at any given time. If that
is so, America just may get a nice break from the cacophonous chatter
of the endless parade of journalists, intellectuals, and politicians
who have filled the airwaves for eight long years.
January
22, 2001
Ryan
McMaken lives in Denver, Colorado. He edits the Western
Mercury.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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McMaken Archives
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