DoubleThink online is holding a symposium on the legacy of Reagan
in the age of Obama this week, and they couldn't kick it off with
a more
thoughtful, clear-eyed piece than the one by the always
brilliant James Poulos. Here's a bite:
Reagan’s legacy is a rough draft for Obama’s largely to
the extent that the American people want it to be. And
they want it to be to the extent that they want—now, more than
ever—clarity, optimism, and a renewed sense of dynamism and
entrepreneurship! Note: a sense of a thing is not that
thing [emphasis added]. But often we want both to
have the thing and the reflective feeling of
experiencing it—what use is dynamism if we
can’t feel ourselves being dynamic?
Consider, however, that this attitude can encourage us
therapeutically to live in denial. Just how
little real freedom, we might ask subtly, do
we actually need to retain an inspiring-enoughsense
of freedom?
Indeed, we frenetic Americans—now, more than ever—know
that we must surrender and outsource many of our daily
activities in order to ensure that daily life isn’t a raw deal.
Who has time, as Obama’s nominees can attest, to do their own
taxes? Who has time to raise their own children? Who has time
to do the petty, slow work of local citizenship? We shore up
our fragments of faith with the audacity of ‘senses of’: faith
in the sense of civic-mindedness that persists when we are not
doing civic-minded things; faith in the sense of parenthood
that persists when we are not parenting; faith in the sense of
citizenship that persists when we elect and celebrate leaders
who promise that a sense is enough because attitude, just as we
needed to hear, is the one needful thing.
Real American| 2.6.09 @ 1:23PM
Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing.