By Lisa Fabrizio on 11.5.08 @ 6:05AM
Not much, it turns out, not for lack of not trying.
So what does it all mean? As I write this on Tuesday, the
presidential election is, despite media cheerleading, still in
doubt. But by the time you read this, the outcome may or may not
be known. What is known is that this has been an almost surreal
contest.
We started out nearly two years ago with a bevy of candidates and
issues that no longer seem important; at least to the general
public. The War in Iraq and the sacrifices made by our gallant
military there, are in the rear-view mirrors of most Americans as
is the War on Terror in general. It seems that this election
hinges on a more mundane topic: their pocketbooks.
And this leads us to the main reason why Obama would be the
victor: most American voters will get behind the guy who promises
them the most "stuff." Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his machine
were the champs of giveaways and his New Deal initiatives sounded
the early death knell for rugged individualism. In hard times --
and there were none harder than during the real Depression --
people will give up some liberty in exchange for what they
perceive to be financial security.
If Barack Obama wins, many think this will mark a touchstone of
liberal ascendancy; but will this be true? It might be if Obama
had ever clearly annunciated a typical liberal agenda, but to my
eyes, he has not. Sure, we have his past record to scrutinize, a
job typically performed in the past by an unbiased press, but
this has not been done satisfactorily. How do I know? Two leading
anchormen -- PBS's Charlie Rose and NBC's Tom Brokaw -- told
me so:
ROSE: I don't know what Barack Obama's worldview is.
BROKAW: No, I don't, either.
ROSE: I don't know how he really sees where China is.
BROKAW: We don't know a lot about Barack Obama and the universe
of his thinking about foreign policy.
ROSE: I don't really know. And do we know anything about the
people who are advising him?
BROKAW: Yeah, it's an interesting question.
ROSE: He is principally known through his autobiography and
through very aspirational (sic) speeches.
BROKAW: Two of them! I don't know what books he's read.
ROSE: What do we know about the heroes of Barack Obama?
BROKAW: There's a lot about him we don't know.
That two major "journalists" can admit, one week before a
presidential election, that they don't know the "world view" of
one of the candidates, should and would be shocking at any other
time in our history. Sadly, we are where we are, and the media
are what they are: nothing more than ideologically driven
partisans bent on suppressing what they do know and not bothering
to discover what they don't want the country to know.
We are also aware that many are speculating on the racial
implications of an Obama loss but not much on those of his
victory. Now, no one accused America of racism in denying Al Gore
and John Kerry the White House, but should McCain pull off the
win, this will undoubtedly be the theme of much protest and
probably violence. Yet inexplicably, the fact that a demographic
group that votes almost entirely as a block based on skin color
will most likely be ignored.
And we painfully know that most liberals are even now dancing on
the grave of the right wing of the Republican Party. But if
Barack Obama manages to win the White House, it will not mean
that the conservative movement is dead; anymore than the liberal
agenda disappeared after demoralizing defeats at the hands of
Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. Let us never forget the 1994
mid-terms.
Probably the most bittersweet lesson of this election cycle is
that the hypocrisy of the liberal media has been exposed as never
before. And it shows in their declining value; the New York
Times' stock is almost at junk status. What we don't know is
if disillusionment with the media will translate into a decrease
in their influence and an increase in voters' desire to
circumvent them on their way to the truth. Stay tuned to find
out.