The re-energized American experiment
Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone has a nicely written obituary of the McCain/Palin campaign in the current issue. By all means, read the whole thing, but there's one section of the piece that nicely captures how presidential elections have evolved from campaigns about ideas and issues to media driven spectacles geared for the most apathetic voter.
We've
dumbed this process up so much over the years, in fact, that it had
lately become hard to imagine an American presidential election being
anything but an embarrassment to the very word "democracy." By 2004,
that once-cherished ideal of political freedom and self-governance that
millions of young men and women gave their lives to protect as recently
as WWII had been reduced to the level of absurdist comedy. You had a
millionaire Yalie in an army jacket taking on a millionaire Yalie in a
cowboy hat, fighting tooth and nail for the right to be named the man
"middle America most wants to have a beer with" by a gang of Ivy League
journalists — a group of people whose closest previous exposure to
"middle America" was typically either an episode of Cops or a Von Dutch
trucker hat they'd bought for $23 at Urban Outfitters.
... There was certainly no trend that suggested our presidential
elections were bound to return to being great, sweepingly important
contests of ideas. But that's what happened.
Like
millions of Americans, I watched Barack Obama's victory on Election
Night in a state of amazement. The only thing that gave me pause was
the question of what kind of country this remarkable figure was now
inheriting. Some of the luster of Obama's triumph would come off if the
American presidency were no longer the Most Powerful Office in the
World but simply the top job in a hopelessly broken nation suffering an
irreversible decline....
When
Obama took the stage in Grant Park as president-elect, that question
was answered. We pulled off an amazing thing here, delivering on our
society's most ancient promises, in front of a world that still largely
thought of us as the home of Bull Connor's fire hose. This dumbed-down,
degraded election process of ours has, in spite of itself and to my own
extreme astonishment, brilliantly re-energized the American experiment
and restored legitimacy to our status as the world's living symbol of
individual freedom. We feel like ourselves again, and the floundering
economy and our two stagnating wars now seem like mere logistical
problems that will be overcome sooner or later, instead of horrifying
symptoms of inevitable empire-decline.
Things do feel different, don't they?


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