By George Neumayr on 11.19.04 @ 12:06AM
The shabbiness of the Clinton era was showcased yesterday in appropriate Woodstock slop.
God sent his rain down on the just and unjust at Bill Clinton's
presidential library opening on Thursday -- a celebration of his
"glorified house trailer," as Clinton put it, quoting a British
publication's description of the architectural monstrosity next to
the Arkansas river. Looking unwell and spent from his heart
surgery, Clinton spoke of "red and blue" coming together, though
there was little red apart from the color of ponchos in the
audience at what looked like a rained-out U2 concert. It was an
event held in the South but it might as well have been held in
Hollywood. The press regarded it as a moment of great American
majesty, but it smacked of the depressing cultural shabbiness that
Clinton's Fleetwood Mac inauguration augured. The 1970s America
that Clinton's events always epitomize is so devoid of
distinctively American high culture that it has to outsource
cultural performances to foreign rockers like Bono.
The press purred over the proceedings, though strangely the
Clinton News Network and pro-Clinton gabbers on MSNBC felt safe
enough to come out and acknowledge that Clinton as president had
the morals of a strip club owner. "A rascally dog," Hillary Rosen
on MSNBC called him. What happened to the left's agnosticism about
attacks on Clinton's character? The infidelity charges against him
were "uncorroborated," "baloney," "unbelievable," they used to say.
Gennifer Flowers and all the others were lying connivers, they
assured the American people. The right called him a "rascally dog"
and they cried foul. Now they call him a rascally dog and pat
themselves on the back for honesty that comes about 14 years too
late.
Clinton is even calling his conduct "public" now. Well, not
quite. In an interview with Peter Jennings, he says that it was
"public-personal." "I made a terrible public-personal mistake, but
I paid for it, many times over," he blubbered angrily. "No other
president ever had to endure someone like Ken Starr inviting
innocent people, because they wouldn't lie, in a systematic way,
and having respectable news outlets treat them like they were
serious, and parroting everything they leaked. No one ever had to
try to save people from ethnic cleansing in the Balkans, and people
in Haiti from a military dictator that was murdering them, and all
the other problems I dealt with, while every day, an entire
apparatus was devoted to destroying him."
Herod Antipas is still attacking John the Baptist. Clinton's
only real legacy was on display at the library opening: he
succeeded so well in normalizing scandal and lawbreaking that he
can still receive a gaudy reception at a library opening. Many
historians will wonder: What erosion occurred in American culture
under liberalism that made it possible for a thoroughly disgraced
president, a disbarred lawyer, and de facto felon to be so lavishly
honored just years after a historic impeachment?
Not so long ago, after Clinton granted pardons to one of the
most wanted fugitives in the world, people were calling him a
pathological grifter, but all is forgotten in the age of celebrity,
even as Clinton's pathological lying resumes in interviews like the
one with Jennings where also he says "there's not any example of
where I ever disgraced this country publicly. And in spite of it
all, you don't have any example where I ever lied to the American
people about my job, where I ever let the American people down, and
I had more support from the world, and world leaders, and people
around the world, when I quit than when I started."
Clinton had plenty of "the world" on hand at Thursday's
ceremony, ready to congratulate him for his noble retirement plan
to fight sexually transmitted diseases in Africa. Clinton's solace
in the opinion of the "world" is one more illustration of the
Democrats' blue-state crisis: the less support they find in
America, the more they seek comfort in the approval of the world.
And what does the "world" mean? It means the decadent elite they
fraternize with at global events that invariably make the problems
of the world worse. Democrats use the phrase "the world" with a
reverence that would make one think they were referring to the
Trinity. They just take it for granted that the world, however they
define it, is right and ordinary Americans are wrong, and then
wonder why they can't win national elections.
Clinton's final observation at the ceremony was curious. He
basically said conservatism "draws lines" and liberalism crosses
them, and that's the glory of liberalism. He prided himself on
knocking down "barriers." He draws esteem from knowing that
illegitimate children can now answer the question, "What does your
Mom do for a living?" thanks to his many employment
initiatives.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Hollywood, Law, Military, Africa, Conservatism