MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
By every measure, the 2008 election has riveted the interest of
American voters more than any in recent memory. In the short run,
greater participation has to be a good thing for the democratic
process. But in the long run, a better functioning democracy depends at
least as much on the wisdom of the electorate as on the wisdom of the
elected. On the eve of choosing a new government, it seems relevant to
ask what lessons voters will have memorized from this and previous
election cycles.
This campaign has been as polarizing as any.
Despite the potential for a landslide that could turn some blue states
red and extend Democratic dominance from an Obama presidency to a
veto-proof Senate majority, the electorate remains deeply divided along
fault lines of party affiliation, culture, war and national security,
social and economic principles, race and gender. To some extent, these
divides are inevitable, as inherent in our politics as issues and
interest groups. Yet there is also little doubt that our divides have
reached canyon-like proportions this year, due in no small part to
media repetition of some extraordinarily divisive accusations--even by
the standards of a presidential race.
American politics has
always been rough and unruly. Yet even stalwart Republicans such as
Colin Powell and Christopher Buckley have endorsed Barack Obama in part
because of the McCain campaign's increasingly overheated rhetoric. The
open wounds in American politics now throb with the McCain campaign's
disingenuous charges that Obama is anti-American, a closet terrorist
sympathizer and a Socialist. It must be said that Obama has levelled
some charges against McCain that are equally inaccurate, but none that
are of equal repugnance and destructiveness to our politics.
Our
news media has too seldom countered the lies of our politicians with
exposure to the truth. Much of the public, for instance, still wrongly
believes--perhaps willfully--that Obama is a Muslim or that McCain is
pro-choice. No wonder recent polls paint a portrait of a schizoid
electorate. On the one hand, the vast majority of voters want a change
from the Bush policies that have left the country mired in two long
wars, horrific deficits and deepening economic woes. On the other hand,
the race has been tightening in the final stretch as undecided voters
move by slightly higher margins to support McCain, who many regard as
the "safe" choice.
Whichever candidate takes the oath of office,
he will face a multitude of wrenching problems, including a public
desperate for solutions and impatient with partisanship. But the
ongoing economic turmoil forecast into late next year could also
produce a resurgence of the "bitter" and "betrayed" electorate that
Obama once described. If voters are too willing to assign blame when
intractable problems don't yield to quick solutions, the national
healing that normally follows the inauguration and "honeymoon" could
rapidly dissolve in the leftover acids of the campaign.
Call it
our final exam. After the election, we will have to decide whether to
support the glib rhetoric of easy solutions or the difficult changes
our nation requires. To pass that test, we will have to
remember--again--what we've learned in spite of stump speeches, political
ads and complacent news reporting.
If we've paid very close
attention to our own recent political history, the multiple choices
after the election will be easier, even if the solutions are not.
Cross-posted from Postscript in MediaTalk at SCAAMD.org