I rode home from the airport in a taxi a few minutes ago. My driver, as is almost always the case in Minnesota, was an African immigrant. No sooner had I gotten into the cab than he began talking about the speech and railing against Bush on the theory that the President is anti-immigrant. I patiently tried to explain that President Bush is in trouble because he is not just pro-immigrant, but pro-illegal immigrant. I explained that he has argued for a guest worker program and a path to citizenship, and has said repeatedly that it would be impossible to deport all the illegals.
My cab driver was completely disoriented by this. I could tell he didn't believe it. Like nearly all African cab drivers, he listens to public radio all day long. Twenty minutes with me wasn't enough to overcome years of liberal indoctrination. He simply wasn't able to absorb the idea that President Bush might not be a racist who hates immigrants. I'm sure he'd forgotten everything I said by the time he left my driveway.
Informal, Unscientific Poll. Is this:
A) Complete horseshit?
B) Utter bullshit?
C) Evidence that this was the driver's first day on the job, as no one working for tips would ever pick up John Hinderocket and imagine a good anti-Bush rant would snag 20%?
D) Evidence that the driver was extremely savvy, recognized immediately that nothing whatsoever would pry a decent tip loose from Mr. Powerline, and proceeded to make his trip as uncomfortable as possible?
So Hiney was damn near inconsolable after Bush's speech, until he read the "most grown-up of American political commentators":
When you look back at all these leaders' job ratings in office, you find an interesting thing. The transformational Thatcher and Reagan had negative to neutral job ratings during most of their longer years in power. Thatcher's peaked upward after the Falklands victory; Reagan peaked from his re-election until the Iran-Contra scandal broke two years later. Their divisiveness, the stark alternative they presented with the policies and conventional wisdom of the past -- all these held down their job ratings.
In contrast, Blair and Clinton for most of their years in office had quite high job ratings. Blair's ratings for his first eight years were probably the highest in British history. Clinton, after he got over his lurch to the left in 1993-94, also enjoyed high job ratings, especially when he was threatened with impeachment. The center-left alternative, by accepting most of the Thatcher and Reagan programs, was relatively uncontroversial, determinedly consensus-minded, widely acceptable to the left, center-left and much of the center-right segments of the electorate.
Thus, the crunchy, confrontational right was in its years in power not so widely popular as the soggy, consensus-minded center-left. Yet surely history will regard Thatcher and Reagan as more consequential leaders than Blair and Clinton.
Warmer than the bartender's smile at the airport Hilton when a grown man orders a Daquiri, Banana, frozen, (and then explains that he ordered it that way because that's how the cash register is set up) isn't it? So is this:
A) Total horseshit?
B) Near-total horseshit?
C) Remarkably horseshit-esque?
Did anyone else notice that the second paragraph seemed to declare war on itself about halfway through?
I'd like to be able to share the whole story with you, perhaps including some impressive four-color graph work, but that would require paying real currency to George Gallup when my religious convictions tell me I should be able to glean his field for free. So let's just point this out: Clinton and Reagan had roughly equal approval numbers over all. Clinton's tanked a year quicker than Reagan's (with Clinton's "lurch left"); they both remained fairly neutral until their second terms. Reagan dropped 20 points with Iran/Contra; Clinton zoomed when the Lewinsky scandal broke. So, sorry, no, America's most grown-up political commentator is doing what grown-ups frequently do: he's lying through his teeth. Just the sort of bedtime tale they prefer on the Line of Power:
Barone applies these lessons to today's political landscape:
It is in this context that we should consider George W. Bush's current poor job ratings. For all the high ratings for center-left leaders, it remains true in America and Britain that the policies of the right are more acceptable than the policies of the left -- and are capable of beating the center-left, too.
It is in the nature of things that the right, while sharply defining the issues and winning most serious arguments, should also stir more bitter opposition than the soothing, consensus-minded center-left. All the more so because Old Media in this country, more than in Britain, is dominated by a left that incessantly peppers the right with ridicule and criticism, while it lavishes the center-left with celebration and praise.
Even so, we continue to live in the world of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, as we once lived in the world of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
As I say, a needed dose of far-sighted optimism on a dark day.
And that, my friends, is how you win most serious arguments. Hold 'em with yourself.
In parting, here's today's retro-Barone poll reading moment. My wife tells me all her kids are crazy for these:
It looks like Bush is headed toward the bright sunlit upland of public approval that Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan enjoyed in the first two years of their second terms.
(Townhall, December 6, 2004)
I took my meds today, but my brain still hurts from reading your synopsis of this. The breaking point happened with this sentence: "My driver, as is almost always the case in Minnesota, was an African immigrant."
ReplyDeleteIf I am correctly remembering my lessons in critical reading from Miss Senkowski in eighth grade this sentence should read: "I am a bloody racist."
Then, when I reached "The president is in trouble because he loves them colored folks" (Original text: "I patiently tried to explain that President Bush is in trouble because he is not just pro-immigrant, but pro-illegal immigrant.") I realized that there isn't a safe level of amphetamine that I could take to get my brain working today.
This lack of insight in the original poster is astonishing.
Like all African cab drivers, he listens to public radio all day long. Twenty minutes with me wasn't enough to overcome years of liberal indoctrination. [my emphasis]
ReplyDeleteAnd what a surprise, Hindraker failed to convince him that Bush, just like Hindraker, isn't a racist, and that everything Powerloon said was worth remembering.
Also, I love the wingnut tenet that public radio = liberal indoctrination. Since public radio entities like NPR go out of their way to objectively report the news, and do a pretty good job of it, the knee-jerk Powerloon view that only right-wing conservative spin is objective reality proves that facts really do have a liberal bias. (It's sad that lately, as a cowed reaction to right-wing charges of liberal bias, NPR serves up a plethora of CATO, American Heritage, AEI, etc. propagandists for editorials or panelists on talk shows, with little or tepid liberal opposition.)
For both questions I choose A, complete and total horseshit. Will this be on the final?
I'd like to go with "D" for question one, but that would seem to imply that the Powertool in question is readily identifiable, and I doubt even Dan rather could pick him out of a line up.
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile, of all the things I loathe about Dubya, racism isn't one of them. He regards all people who aren't his friends equally: they aren't real live humans. To him, any non-millionaire of any color is just a prop.
That said, there's a vast difference between being "pro immigrant" and "pro criminal corporation". He is definitely the latter. The whole point of his immigration policies is to make life easier on the people who would employ illegal workers because they're cheaper and make less trouble.
Tell me how *that's* pro-immigrant, let alone pro-illegal immigrant.
In conclusion, Hindrocket is an ignorant, cruel racist.
Come on. You make this stuff up, right?
ReplyDeleteI'm a huge fan of op-ed pieces that feature the right-thinking (I use "right" figuratively and literally here) must patiently explain to some poor, deluded and most importantly, unnamed and unidentifiable, dupe of the Liberal Media fool the error of his ways and how the Preznit only has their best interests at heart, etc. etc., so just shut up and do your low-paying menial job, you dusky subhuman.
ReplyDeleteI mean, everyone understands that these "regular joes" are completely made up by lazy pundits, right?
On a recent trip to Myrtle Beach, SC, I saw some "regular joes" in action at a Carraba's pseudo-Italian chain restaurant. Beefy middle aged golfing bubbas, reeking of cigar smoke; the joint was jumpin' with 'em. The group of them seated next to us were hassling their young black male waiter over pronunciations of the entree offerings. I watched the wiater smile, and eventually get the fukcers to make their orders. After the waiter left, they called him a n----r. Ugly pieces of worthless crap. One of them made a suggestive remark to my sister in law about her ass as we passed by to get to the restroom.
ReplyDeleteWould that they could be Indoctrinated by public radio. More likely they've been swolled up by their local hatemongering stations.
Isabelita: if it makes you feel better, imagine what the waiter did to their food before serving it. Never, never, NEVER piss off soembody who A) handles your food b) cuts your hair c) fixes your car or d) does your taxes....
ReplyDeletewoodrowfan: absolutely right, those joes got some extra lobster sauce on their entrees.
ReplyDeleteAs far as the correct answer - if it's not G) Fucking All of The Above, then its not multiple choice but an essay question, in which case the answer is:
Complete, unadultrated, total, entire, absolute, unreserved, utter, out and out horse, bear, moose, lion, cow, cat, dog, elephant, wolf, sheep, porcupine, platypus and kangaroo shit.