Getting Around to 2016: Obama's America
Everybody makes patterns, builds
narratives. “We tell ourselves stories in order to live,” wrote Joan Didion. We
make sense of—and for—our own lives in doing so.
Also, in doing so, we all make
fiction, partly for aesthetic embellishment, partly from misapprehensions,
misperceptions, partly from plain errors in facts, forgotten memories. Anybody
who has read biography or autobiography is unsurprised by this news.
To digress a bit: when certain
kinds of mental illness strike, the story an ill person constructs may seem
entirely logical, to a point. And if you were to say to a person in the midst
of a paranoid episode, “But that doesn’t make sense because . . .,” the person
might pause, caught momentarily by the correctness of your logic or your facts.
However, it doesn’t take long for
such a person to find an even larger, more inclusive, more frightening narrative
that now encompasses the original story. And that new, more frightening
narrative might even include you, the one who tried to be “sensible.” You might
be seen as an unwitting agent of the “forces beyond our control.”
Such a state of mind may truly be a
living nightmare. It’s The Blob of storytelling, growing larger and more
powerful as it consumes objections.
Mental illness aside (I think),
there is a particular sort of storytelling that I have seen all during my
academic career: constructing “truth” out of little.
F.O. Matthiessen, a
twentieth-century literary critic, famously spun an exquisite paragraph about
how Herman Melville employed the phrase “soiled fish of the sea” to explore the
irony of “dirty” creatures being constantly washed in the depths of the ocean.
The trouble is that “soiled” was a misprint; the phrase should have been
“coiled fish.”
In other words, working with false
information, even great, well-intentioned scholars find ways to make error seem
important, and more importantly, seem true.
So can scientists, theologians, and
politicians. Especially if their data—their facts—are seen through the eyes of
pre-existing ideology.
Now we all are likely to see what
we want to see. Again, unsurprising news. A car salesman who believes his SUV
is best, a mother who believes her child is superlative, an academic who has
spent his life fine-tuning his theories as he gathers more and more information—all
these folks are subject to error in their “storytelling.”
Case in point: I heard many people
argue that the Freudian psychological pressure on President George W. Bush was
three-fold, resulting in the Iraq War: (a) he wanted to prove he was as good as
or better than his father, President George Herbert Walker Bush; (b) he wanted to “finish” the job on Saddam
Hussein that his father had not; and (c) he wanted to “get” the Iraqis who had
threatened his father’s life.
Personally, I never really bought
this theory, though it has its appeal. I focused on the neo-cons who surrounded
and advised him. But that’s me.
All this leads, I hope, to a simple
point I wanted to make about Professor Dinesh D’Souza, whose theories about
President Barack Hussein Obama are based on his belief that President Obama is
profoundly indebted, almost subservient, to his Marxist/Communist Kenyan
father.
The recent movie 2016: Obama’s America made from
D’Souza’s book The Roots of Obama’s Rage
has the patina of scholarly method and logic, but, like those shaky Freudian
readings of Bush 43, this narrative is a fictionalization of Obama’s “rage” over
colonialism/imperialism, first of all, and of intellectual and political
“influences” that work, in D’Souza’s mind as if human beings were absolutely
determined (have we all seen Gattica?). D’Souza’s movie is a laughably flawed,
pseudo-academic exercise in ideology.
Now, are there threads of
“socialist/Marxist” philosophy in modern American politics, as well as the
academy? You bet. But threads do not make a “whole cloth” of
Socialism/Communism(!) in modern America, nor in President Obama.
Really. Let’s think: Tim Geithner
and Leon Panetta, socialists out to destroy our American way of life?
Obamacare, which employs the medical insurance industry WAY more than any
liberal such as myself would prefer?
President Obama, by all objective
analysts, has held to a pragmatic political center, more like President William
Jefferson Clinton than, let’s say, as some have claimed, Stalin or Hitler.
Really?
Another digression: if President
Obama is “extreme,” what must we call those who announce that they will do
everything they can to “make him a one-term President”? Not legislate. Not
compromise. Not even read history. Real history.
And what must we call a community
of “opposition” that includes, not simply people who disagree in this
pluralistic country with free speech and guns, but who are willing to talk
openly about secession, about taking up arms against the United Nations forces
who will no doubt storm our shores and seize our property to satisfy this
“rage” in Our (yes) President. And what about the desperate tenor of the times,
the regression to open racism—“lynching the chair,” or openly hanging the
President in effigy, or advocating in the name of Christianity for the death
penalty for rebellious children, or assassinating doctors who perform
abortions, or shooting at Democratic headquarters in Colorado, or yelling “You
lie!” during a State of the Union address, or any number of actions that
threaten physical violence. What about that tone? That “America”?
I promised someone I love that I
would go see D’Souza’s movie, as an entrée to talking about real details,
real facts. So I went. Willingly paid money I wish I had not had to send to
that cause. What I found was a model by which to teach students how not to “do
scholarship.” And certainly not a model for “critical thinking.”
Hard-core ideology is always a set
of blinders. Used honorably, it can help us to focus, gain depth, exclude
irrelevancies. But it can also become an end in itself; then what suffers is
accurate representation, dispassionate (NOT passionless) analysis, civility,
and—for want of a better word—the truth.
Oh, and America the Beautiful, the
Truly Beautiful.