By Quin Hillyer on 3.5.10 @ 6:09AM
How Obama undermines our balanced system.
There is something way off balance in the character of
Barack Obama. Something in the realm of zealotry, with a touch of
megalomania, and perhaps an authoritarian impulse too. He
combines Alinskyite
tactics and
outlook with an air of self-assumed moral
superiority in a way that fails to respect the usual, small 'r'
republican limits on American presidents. All presidents, of
course, think at some level that they know best about policy
choices. But almost none of them (Woodrow Wilson perhaps
excepted) were so willing to disdain, in pursuit of such radical
policy upheavals, such intense and overwhelming public opinion as
has been evident in the current health takeover attempt.
Grandiose plans are one thing. Most presidents fall prey to
them. It's another thing entirely, though, to refuse to accept
the ordinary republican restraints on implementing grandiosities
without public support, and furthermore to do so by A)
bending
existing
rules; B) directly
violating multiple personal pledges; C)
ignoring constitutional limits; D) directly lying; and E)
demanding that other politicians sacrifice their own political
careers.
A little humility would be nice. So would a sense that he
answers to the public rather than to some self-proclaimed (and
self-determined) imperative of history and/or call of destiny.
What Obama seems to fail to understand is that his own, overblown
self-assurance and self-mythologizing is actually hampering his
own goals. One need not stretch too far to observe that one of
the factors adding to public opposition to Obamacare is a growing
public disquietude about the lack of responsiveness, the
authoritarian certitude, and the zealous near-fanaticism of the
government that would run the new health-rationing system --
all character traits as embodied by the president
himself.
As Obama ignores public opinion while pushing for
full-fledged Obamacare in one fell swoop, and as he insists that
he knows best and that the public is too ill-informed to know
what is good for it, he directly -- as the very symbol of the
state -- reminds the public of what they distrust about
government in the first place and of why they don't want
government interfering in a realm as personal as health care.
These feelings are especially fierce because Obama is trying not
to change something with which most Americans are dissatisfied,
but instead to change (and arguably take away) a system in which
some
four-fifths of the public remains
generally satisfied with their own personal level of
care.
For most Americans, Obama doesn't seem to be giving them
something they don't have, but instead to be taking away
something they already value.
Worse, he and the increasingly unpopular Harry Reid and
Nancy Pelosi are doing it while hectoring the public, insulting
(at least by implication) the public by belittling the public's
understanding of the issue, and treating opposition as if it is
guided by evil motives rather than sincere concerns.
Passage of this health overhaul/takeover under these
circumstances would be frightening. The harm it would do the
political system would be almost as great as the harm it would
cause the health system. The American republic was designed to
give a minority a way to slow down major changes buoyed by
popular passions. It was not designed to give a minority the
power to implement major changes against popular passions.
The Obamites are doing the latter. They are turning
American
checks and balances on their heads. They
are using temporary parliamentary advantages for a permanent
power grab. The Obamites are dictating to Americans rather than
representing them. Revolutionizing, not just evolving. Ruling,
not serving.
And it's not just on health care. They work against public
opinion on matters of criminal justice, terrorist treatment, race
preferences, bank bailouts and corporate takeovers, overall
spending, domestic welfare requirements, fossil fuel development,
missile defenses, advocacy of American interests (and pride!)
abroad, and on the whole panoply of oft-unstated attitudes that
cohere as American exceptionalism.
This is not the way the system is supposed to work. This is
not the American government we grew up with. This is not the
national ethos that we love.
Yet Obama pushes on, perfectly cognizant of what he's
doing, intentionally upending the American Way. This is a form of
mania -- megalo- or otherwise. And, by any and all legitimate
means, it must be stopped.