The scapegoat strategy
By Charles Krauthammer,
What do you do if you can’t run on your record — on 9 percent unemployment, stagnant growth and ruinous deficits
as far as the eye can see? How to run when you are asked whether Americans are better
off than they were four years ago and you are compelled to answer no?
Play the outsider. Declare yourself the underdog. Denounce
Washington as if the electorate hasn’t noticed that you’ve been in charge of it
for nearly three years.
But above all: Find villains.
President Obama first tried finding excuses, blaming America’s
dismal condition on Japanese supply-chain interruptions, the Arab Spring,
European debt and various acts of God.
Didn’t work. Sounds plaintive, defensive. Lacks fight, which is what
Obama’s base lusts for above all.
Hence Obama’s new strategy: Don’t whine, blame. Attack. Indict. Accuse.
Who? The rich — and their Republican protectors — for wrecking America.
In Obama’s telling, it’s the refusal of the rich to “pay their fair share”
that jeopardizes Medicare. If millionaires don’t pony up, schools will crumble.
Oil-drilling tax breaks are costing teachers their jobs. Corporate loopholes
will gut medical research.
It’s crude. It’s Manichaean. And the left loves it. As a matter of math and
logic, however, it’s ridiculous. Obama’s most coveted tax hike — an extra 3 to
4.6 percent for millionaires and billionaires (weirdly defined as individuals
making more than $200,000) — would have reduced last year’s deficit (at the very
most) from $1.29 trillion to $1.21 trillion. Nearly a rounding error. The
oil-drilling breaks cover less than half a day’s federal spending. You could
collect Obama’s favorite tax loophole — depreciation for
corporate jets — for 100 years and it wouldn’t cover one month of Medicare,
whose insolvency is a function of increased longevity, expensive new technology
and wasteful defensive medicine caused by an insane malpractice system.
After three years, Obama’s self-proclaimed transformative social policies
have yielded a desperately weak economy. What to do? Take the low road:
Plutocrats are bleeding the country, and I shall rescue you from them.
Problem is, this kind of populist demagoguery is more than intellectually
dishonest. It’s dangerous. Obama is opening a Pandora’s box. Popular resentment,
easily stoked, is less easily controlled, especially when the basest of
instincts are granted legitimacy by the nation’s leader.
Exhibit A. On Tuesday, the Democratic-controlled Senate passed punitive
legislation over China’s currency. If not stopped by House Speaker John Boehner,
it might have led to a trade war — a 21st-century Smoot-Hawley. Obama knows
this. He has shown no appetite for a reckless tariff war. But he set the tone. Once
you start hunting for villains, they can be found anywhere, particularly if they
are conveniently foreign.
Exhibit B. Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin rails against Bank of
America for announcing a $5-a-month debit card fee. Obama echoes the opprobrium
with fine denunciations of banks and their hidden fees
— except that this $5 fee is not hidden. It’s perfectly transparent.
Yet here is a leading Democratic senator advocating a run on a major (and
troubled) bank — after two presidents and two Congresses sunk billions of
taxpayer dollars to save failing banks. Not because they were deserving or
virtuous but because they are necessary. Without banks, there is no lending.
Without lending, there is no business. Without business, there are no
jobs.
Exhibit C. To the villainy-of-the-rich theme emanating from Washington, a
child is born: Occupy Wall Street. Starbucks-sipping, Levi’s-clad, iPhone-clutching
protesters denounce corporate America even as they weep for Steve Jobs,
corporate titan, billionaire eight times over.
These indignant indolents saddled with their $50,000 student loans and
English degrees have decided that their lack of gainful employment is rooted in
the malice of the millionaires on whose homes they are now marching — to the
applause of Democrats suffering acute Tea Party envy and now salivating at the
energy these big-government anarchists will presumably give their cause.
Except that the real Tea Party actually had a program — less government,
less regulation, less taxation, less debt. What’s the Occupy Wall Street
program? Eat the rich.
And then what? Haven’t gotten that far.
No postprandial plans. But no matter. After all, this is not about programs
or policies. This is about scapegoating, a failed administration trying to save
itself by blaming our troubles — and its failures — on class enemies, turning
general discontent into rage against a malign few.
From the Senate to the streets, it’s working. Obama is too intelligent not
to know what he started. But so long as it gives him a shot at reelection, he
shows no sign of caring.
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