edlorah
location: The Recession Will Not Be Televised
listening to: http://www.instantrimshot.com/
registered: 1999.12.27
posts: 3664
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Perceptive article:Palin’s American Exception
By ROGER COHEN
Published: September 25, 2008
Sarah Palin loves the word “exceptional.” At a rally in Nevada the other day, the Republican vice-
presidential candidate said: “We are an exceptional nation.” Then she declared: “America is an
exceptional country.” In case anyone missed that, she added: “You are all exceptional Americans.”I have to hand it to Palin, she may be onto something in her batty way: the election is very much
about American exceptionalism.This is the idea, around since the founding fathers, and elaborated on by Alexis de Tocqueville, that
the United States is a nation unlike any other with a special mission to build the “city upon a hill”
that will serve as liberty’s beacon for mankind.But exceptionalism has taken an ugly twist of late. It’s become the angry refuge of the America that
wants to deny the real state of the world.From an inspirational notion, however flawed in execution, that has buttressed the global spread of
liberty, American exceptionalism has morphed into the fortress of those who see themselves
threatened by “one-worlders” (read Barack Obama) and who believe it’s more important to know
how to dress moose than find Mumbai.That’s Palinism, a philosophy delivered without a passport and with a view (on a clear day) of
Russia.Behind Palinism lies anger. It’s been growing as America’s relative decline has become more
manifest in falling incomes, imploding markets, massive debt and rising new centers of wealth and
power from Shanghai to Dubai.The damn-the-world, God-chose-us rage of that America has sharpened as U.S. exceptionalism
has become harder to square with the 21st-century world’s interconnectedness. How exceptional
can you be when every major problem you face, from terrorism to nuclear proliferation to gas
prices, requires joint action?Very exceptional, insists Palin, and so does John McCain by choosing her. (He has said: “I do believe
in American exceptionalism. We are the only nation I know that really is deeply concerned about
adhering to the principle that all of us are created equal.”)America is distinct. Its habits and attitudes with respect to religion, patriotism, voting and the
death penalty, for example, differ from much of the rest of the developed world. It is more
ideological than other countries, believing still in its manifest destiny. At its noblest, it inspires still.But, let’s face it, from Baghdad to Bear Stearns the last eight years have been a lesson in the price
of exceptionalism run amok.To persist with a philosophy grounded in America’s separateness, rather than its connectedness,
would be devastating at a time when the country faces two wars, a financial collapse unseen since
1929, commodity inflation, a huge transfer of resources to the Middle East, and the imperative to
develop new sources of energy.Enough is enough.The basic shift from the cold war to the new world is from MAD (mutual assured destruction) to
MAC (mutual assured connectedness). Technology trumps politics. Still, Bush and Cheney have
demonstrated that politics still matter.Which brings us to the first debate — still scheduled for Friday — between Obama and McCain on
foreign policy. It will pit the former’s universalism against the latter’s exceptionalism.I’m going to try to make this simple. On the Democratic side you have a guy whose campaign has
been based on the Internet, who believes America may have something to learn from other
countries (like universal health care) and who’s unafraid in 2008 to say he’s a “proud citizen of the
United States and a fellow citizen of the world.”On the Republican side, you have a guy who, in 2008, is just discovering the Net and Google and
whose No. 2 is a woman who got a passport last year and believes she understands Russia because
Alaska is closer to Siberia than Alabama.If I were Obama, I’d put it this way: “Senator McCain, the world you claim to understand is the world
of yesterday. A new century demands new thinking. Our country cannot be made fundamentally
secure by a man who thought our economy was fundamentally sound.”American exceptionalism, taken to extremes, leaves you without the allies you need (Iraq), without
the influence you want (Iran) and without any notion of risk (Wall Street). The only exceptionalism
that resonates, as Obama put it to me last year, is one “based on our Constitution, our principles,
our values and our ideals.”In a superb recent piece on the declining global influence of the Supreme Court, my colleague Adam
Liptak quoted an article by Steven Calabresi, a law professor at Northwestern: “Like it or not,
Americans really are a special people with a special ideology that sets us apart from all other
peoples.”Palinism has its intellectual roots. But it’s dangerous for a country in need of realism not rage. I’m
sure Henry Kissinger tried to instill Realpolitik in the governor of Alaska this week, but the angry
exceptionalism that is Palinism is not in the reason game.
–--
"It was done only for political reasons only anyway. "
"It was done only for political reasons only anyway. "
E
edlorah
(view)
Perceptive article:Palin’s American Exception
By ROGER COHEN
Published: September 25, 2008
Sarah Palin loves the word “exceptional.” At a rally in Nevada the other day, the Republican vice-
presidential candidate said: “We are an exceptional nation.” Then she declared: “America is an
exceptional country.” In case anyone missed that, she added: “You are all exceptional Americans.”I have to hand it to Palin, she may be onto something in her batty way: the election is very much
about American exceptionalism.This is the idea, around since the founding fathers, and elaborated on by Alexis de Tocqueville, that
the United States is a nation unlike any other with a special mission to build the “city upon a hill”
that will serve as liberty’s beacon for mankind.But exceptionalism has taken an ugly twist of late. It’s become the angry refuge of the America that
wants to deny the real state of the world.From an inspirational notion, however flawed in execution, that has buttressed the global spread of
liberty, American exceptionalism has morphed into the fortress of those who see themselves
threatened by “one-worlders” (read Barack Obama) and who believe it’s more important to know
how to dress moose than find Mumbai.That’s Palinism, a philosophy delivered without a passport and with a view (on a clear day) of
Russia.Behind Palinism lies anger. It’s been growing as America’s relative decline has become more
manifest in falling incomes, imploding markets, massive debt and rising new centers of wealth and
power from Shanghai to Dubai.The damn-the-world, God-chose-us rage of that America has sharpened as U.S. exceptionalism
has become harder to square with the 21st-century world’s interconnectedness. How exceptional
can you be when every major problem you face, from terrorism to nuclear proliferation to gas
prices, requires joint action?Very exceptional, insists Palin, and so does John McCain by choosing her. (He has said: “I do believe
in American exceptionalism. We are the only nation I know that really is deeply concerned about
adhering to the principle that all of us are created equal.”)America is distinct. Its habits and attitudes with respect to religion, patriotism, voting and the
death penalty, for example, differ from much of the rest of the developed world. It is more
ideological than other countries, believing still in its manifest destiny. At its noblest, it inspires still.But, let’s face it, from Baghdad to Bear Stearns the last eight years have been a lesson in the price
of exceptionalism run amok.To persist with a philosophy grounded in America’s separateness, rather than its connectedness,
would be devastating at a time when the country faces two wars, a financial collapse unseen since
1929, commodity inflation, a huge transfer of resources to the Middle East, and the imperative to
develop new sources of energy.Enough is enough.The basic shift from the cold war to the new world is from MAD (mutual assured destruction) to
MAC (mutual assured connectedness). Technology trumps politics. Still, Bush and Cheney have
demonstrated that politics still matter.Which brings us to the first debate — still scheduled for Friday — between Obama and McCain on
foreign policy. It will pit the former’s universalism against the latter’s exceptionalism.I’m going to try to make this simple. On the Democratic side you have a guy whose campaign has
been based on the Internet, who believes America may have something to learn from other
countries (like universal health care) and who’s unafraid in 2008 to say he’s a “proud citizen of the
United States and a fellow citizen of the world.”On the Republican side, you have a guy who, in 2008, is just discovering the Net and Google and
whose No. 2 is a woman who got a passport last year and believes she understands Russia because
Alaska is closer to Siberia than Alabama.If I were Obama, I’d put it this way: “Senator McCain, the world you claim to understand is the world
of yesterday. A new century demands new thinking. Our country cannot be made fundamentally
secure by a man who thought our economy was fundamentally sound.”American exceptionalism, taken to extremes, leaves you without the allies you need (Iraq), without
the influence you want (Iran) and without any notion of risk (Wall Street). The only exceptionalism
that resonates, as Obama put it to me last year, is one “based on our Constitution, our principles,
our values and our ideals.”In a superb recent piece on the declining global influence of the Supreme Court, my colleague Adam
Liptak quoted an article by Steven Calabresi, a law professor at Northwestern: “Like it or not,
Americans really are a special people with a special ideology that sets us apart from all other
peoples.”Palinism has its intellectual roots. But it’s dangerous for a country in need of realism not rage. I’m
sure Henry Kissinger tried to instill Realpolitik in the governor of Alaska this week, but the angry
exceptionalism that is Palinism is not in the reason game.
–--
"It was done only for political reasons only anyway. "
"It was done only for political reasons only anyway. "
