Glossary, mid-December, 2012

A selection of key memes, phrases and obsession in Wall Street Journal editorials, Dec. 9-Dec. 18, 2012

coercion: any Obama administration strategy or tactic for policy or fiscal reform. (see also “serious and specific”)

good-faith negotiations: no tax increases.

government benefits:  federal incentives not to work: disability, unemployment, food stamps.

harm to the economy:  any Obama fiscal or tax policy proposal. See also “pro growth”

funneling: putting  union dues  into the hands of liberal politicians.

health care insurance exchanges: “centralized,” interventionist, hyper-regulatory”  (see also, “nimble and useful”). Always “coercive”.

lawmaker: “someone whose job it is to spend other people’s money.” “Making businesses pay more is good sport in the halls of Washington”.

monopoly wages: aka, a living wage. Even though right-to-work states average 10% lower wages, the republicans argue that the higher wages in union states are due solely to the unions’ “monopoly power”. Living wages are “extracted from industry”—economic equality being neatly paralleled to strip mining. Generally, any initiatives or policies put forth by the unions are characterized as abusive “monopoly” power.

nimble & useful: private insurance companies (see also “health care insurance exchanges”)

Obamacare: a farce.

offshoring profits:  a “corporate duty”—rational and patriotic behavior.

onerous : any and all cuts to the defense budget

pro-growth: any Republican fiscal or tax proposal. All of Washington is characterized as “anti-growth”

serious and specific: any Republican fiscal or tax proposal

soaking the rich:  The Democrats’ ultimate wet dream.

tax reform:  lowering taxes; never defined as eliminating deductions

thuggishness: any tactics or strategies of labor union to maintain workers’ right

trench warfare: what the Republicans need to engage in for the next two years. Never negotiate.

States’ Rights, Pro-Choice Leanings, and California Freakin’

The Journal has been in a tizzy about states’ rights for about the past ten days. On December 9 they launched their states=growth mantra, with “growth “ naturalized as  only economic growth, however unequal. Only the states are the instruments of “hope and change” (Dec. 10). Right-to-work states show higher per-capita income growth than states with “thuggish” “monopoly union power”. (Thus glossing over lower wages and more income inequality in these states). Singapore, with no capital gains tax, thrives, while tax-plagued California dies. Singapore, that bastion of democracy. States having Obamacare shoved down their throats are mere “serfs”. (Dec. 13).

However, California, the nation’s most populous state, is the reverse of this pro-growth mantra, thanks mainly to CALPERS, the state’s pension fund. CALPERS “and California” are “arms of the public unions”. (Dec. 14).  CALPERS, with its “police power”,  “strong-arms” citizens and municipalities to get it’s way. On Dec. 16, the ever-demonized “monopoly labor unions” of California were blamed for the federal deficit, and for undermining “tax equity and economic growth”. Class warfare merges with geographical warfare: the good folk of Knoxville, Lubbock and Orlando suffer  because privileged fools in San Francisco rob the federal kitty via tax deductions.

Interestingly, the Journal  is sounding distinctly pro-choice when it comes to right-to-work laws:

The best case for the right to work is moral: the right of an individual to choose.

Now where have we heard that phrase before?

Post-Election Mythorializing At the Wall Street Journal

“The battle for liberty begins anew this morning.”

Wall Street Journal editorial, Nov. 7, 2012

It’s been a month or so now since the the Romney-Ryan-(Ayn) Rand ticket’s defeat. Ultimately, the Republicans were brought down by the moral Taliban, the Tea Party, and the plutocrats–the ranks of their party most out of touch with a changing America.

Since election night, undaunted and unchastened as ever, of course, the Wall Street Journal’s editorials have been doubling down on a few key themes left over, oh, let’s say, from the Reagan years: class warfare, ending all taxes if possible, unfettered free markets, and the inherent evils of government. Money quotations:

The great mistake of Mr. Obama’s first term was putting his social and political agenda above nurturing a faster economic growth. ( “Obama’s Real Fiscal Problem,” Nov. 30)

Mr. Obama has humiliated House Republicans and punished the affluent for the sheer joy of it. (“The Hard Fiscal Facts”, Nov. 11)

Imagine the gusher of revenue the feds could get if government got out of the way and let the economy grow faster. (“The Hard Fiscal Facts”, Nov. 11)

In this era when envy trumps growth, the government is raising taxes on thrift, investment and risk-taking in the name of fairness and to finance more government spending. No one should be surprised when there are fewer dividends and capital gains to tax. (“The Great 2012 Cashout”, Nov. 28)

“American prosperity is best served by letting business exploit as many opportunities as possible…” (“Energy Economics In One Lesson”, Dec. 6)

To be fair, there are a few more contemporary obsessions: fracking, school choice (“the great civil rights issue of our era”), teachers’ unions (“the Evil Empire”), and, of course, Obamacare.

One of the best Obamacare editorials (“Hope and Exchange,” Nov. 27) talked about Obamacare as the “re-engineering” of the health care system,” being “rammed” down the throats of the throats of Republicans. It especially extols Utah’s medical insurance exchange, organized around the trifecta of Republican dogma: defined contribution, consumer choice, and free markets. In other words, coverage caps, the end of all state insurance regulation, and no cost controls whatsoever.

images

The more these guys change, the more they stay the same.

RHETORICS AND FLOURISHES: DEMYTHOLOGIZING THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

As I recently posted, I am going to begin a daily interrogation of Wall Street Journal  editorials, a practice I started long ago. This example illustrates some of the tools of rhetorical analysis that I’ll be employing.  

WALL STREET JOURNAL EDITORIAL  7-14-86: “Reagan’s Year”

“Myth on the right is well-fed, sleek, expansive, garrulous. It invents itself ceaselessly. It takes hold of everything.” (Roland Barthes, Mythologies, 148-49)

Not since the days of Teddy Roosevelt and William Randolph Hearst has such a close alliance existed between a newspaper and a president as that between the Wall Street Journal and Ronald Reagan. In the heady days of RR’s rise to power, the Journal’s editorial page was a virtual blueprint of administration policy and an early-warning system for presidential rhetoric. Since the departure of Craig Paul Roberts and Jude Wanninski from the Journal’s edit pages, and the gradual fading of the supply-side controversy from headlines, the Journal is less in the political spotlight. Yet editorial page editor Robert Bartley and his staff have perfected the outrageous ideological editorial form over the past six years. Their invectives have been described aptly by Bob Kuttner as “scornful, sneering, and Manichean.” Manichean is the key: they see themselves speaking for god-like principles struggling to control the universe. This holy war attitude gives them fire, and makes for rhetoric-with-a-vengeance, language with blood on its mind. If rhetoric may be called the art of swaying and holding an audience–identification and hypnosis–then its principle task, as French writer Roland Barthes put it in his classic Mythologies, is to create a myth by making it seem natural, a given, a “structure of reality,” as French rhetorician Chaim Perelman calls it. Since the Journal is still the creator of the reality principle for the Reagan administration, it seems useful to annotate a mid-term, mid-1986 seminal Journal editorial, using some ideas of Barthes and Perelman to illustrate how the rhetoric of the Reagan administration is created and creative.

 

1-Quantity masquearding as quality. Poll ratings, net worth, GNP, and corporate earnings have become fully ensconced as the bellweathers of success in Reagan’s America.Quality has been reduced to a co-efficient of power. The ’70’s emphasis on “quality of life” seems naive and innocent: not real. Numbers are no longer contextualized or seen as arguments, but are treated as somehow natural, the way things are. Even arguments are not presented as such, or even as explanations, but as statements of fact, as things that mean something all by themselves.

 

2- Theses built on adherence to premises: getting the audience to buy into your assumptions. The thesis of the editorial, that RR’s revolution is as permanent and far-reaching as FDR’s, depends on two main premises: that America was “in decline” under Jimmy

Carter, and, correlatively, that America has been rescued after being held hostage by the Democrats, who, like the Iranians and Soviets, affront the real America. The myth-making starts here, using paired either/orisms to create the dichotomy  defective Others (Democrats, Iranians, etc)/born American.  The pejoratives “whims of Congress” and “redistributing income,” are shorthand for anything that stands in the way of Reaganomics; the naturalized terms “economically favorable” and “most productive assets” establish the norm, which “laughs” at a whimsical and socialist Congress.

 

3. Using codewords to signify something beyond their literal meaning. These godwords are the essence of supply-side ideology, and always have an agenda: “incentives” are what the Democrats took away from Americans. Under Carter, it wasn’t worth it to be an American. The “margin” of incentive is what “Reagan” has restored: Americans can now put in that extra effort to earn the next dollar because incentive “is back”. Incentive lies at the margin–everything has its price and net worth. Everything is for sale, except for those whimsical few who don’t “work”.  “Work” has replaced “whim” and “productivity” has replaced “redistribution”. The Democrats are not “productive assets”.

 

4.Establish a concrete entity as an eternal order whose essence you are in touch with.  The electorate has been held hostage. A “political” judiciary nearly ran away with “the Constitution”. Thus a new myth is born: the new apolitical Reagan judiciary. How could judges ever have gotten “political” (tainted) when they could wrap themselves in the pure mantle of the “Constitution” (now made fixed and sure, like the sun). Reagan’s judges speak for the Constitution, automatically.

 

5.Simple cause and effect as the key to high melodrama. The effects: America’s decline and revival. The causes: the loss and recovery of will. Like Congress and the judiciary, the Soviets, Libyans and Sandinistas have been holding America hostage. The Other as clown, scandal or enemy. But now “punishment,” “unequivocal opposition” and  high tech have put the blues (or, rather, the Reds) on the run, “off balance”. “High tech” and “punishment” are naturally preferable to whim and equivocation.

 

 

6. Prolepsis (the inoculation), or the art of presenting objections you are eager to respond to. The Journal excels at the sarcastic prolepsis, which belittles the case by overstating it. Here, for example, by listing so many possible explanations for “Ronald Reagan’s” success, they reduce them all absurdity, and strengthen their own case for RR as FDR.

 

7. Relying on the emotional associations of an analogy to cover over ways the analogy breaks down. The heart of the analogy: just as FDR didn’t compromise in the face of the  Depression, a great crisis of American “decline,” neither will “Ronald Reagan” compromise with the contemporary threats to “America”: the “economic destructiveness of a steeply progressive tax system” or the “dangers of expanding federal programs”. Despite the obvious fact that the late ’70s shared little with the late ’20s and early ’30s, the inflated analogy bullies the reader into accepting the themes of decline and rebirth. At some point concrete realities, like taxation, become abstract principles, like “decline,” and are thus given a qualitatively different nature. In such a new universe, it becomes unnatural to even consider new federal programs or taxes. Such talk is “decline”.

 

8. Redefining key terms and appropriating them to your argument. The “Washington political establishment” astonishingly doesn’t seem to include the current administration, the Republican Senate or the new Reagan courts. Yet, somehow, these post-’79 elements have established a revolution in Washington. “Establishment” no longer means the ruling powers, but those elements opposed to RR. Journal editorialists excel at this art of turning words inside-out and repossessing (co-opting) them. Here, they have usurped the New Left’s use of “establishment” and thus mythologize themselves as Constitutional purists and outsiders, not connected with “Washington”. Thereupon, a major pitch for “Star Wars”, based on the assumption that anyone opposed to SDI is stuck in ’79, in Carteresque, unconstitutional, traitorous malaise.

 

9. Rationalize a wish-list by using verbs to establish values.  The line-item veto (“the only solution to the budget problem”??) would “inject discipline” by cutting all domestic (read: nondefense) funding; the gold standard would, euphemistically, “stabilize the value of capital commitments,” and SDI would “defend our military assets” and, oh yes by the way, “ultimately our population”.

 

10. Arguing in a circle by assuming the very thing you need to prove. The myth delivered: America has been forever remolded. Why? Because: Because assets are stabilized, incentive is restored, and “domestic outlays” are now being handled “prudently” by leaders with “discipline”. Never mind that “assets” are being defined a certain way, or that “prudence” and “discipline” simply mean adhering to administration policies.  Asserting causation doesn’t prove it, but challenging any of these “becauses” becomes treasonous. It’s a charmed circle, the winner’s circle, and anyone who doesn’t have the common sense of reality to know what prudence, discipline and stability mean, had better stop laughing. There’s been a revolution, and they’ve been left at the station. Now that’s invective.

In the Right’s Kitchen: Mythorializing At the Wall Street Journal

Written in 1987, this article of mine still helps unpacking Republican “naturalizing” rhetoric for what it is.  Going forward, my task is the daily deconstruction of Wall Street Journal’s editorials.

“Myth on the right is well-fed, sleek. expansive, garrulous. It invents itself ceaselessly. It takes hold of everything.” (Roland Barthes, Mythologies)

Late October, 1986. Dire hubris looming for the Right. Cocky and off-guard in the delirium of the success of the “Standing Tall,” High Noon spin finessed onto the Reykjavik bustup, the Right’s high priest Irving Kristol, in his 10/24 column in the The Wall Street Journal, Kristolizes the story-made rhetorical world of the Reagan presidency. Kristol’s piece, “The Force Is With Reagan,”  (awkwardly titled insofar as the administration was trying to delete all references to “Star Wars”) brings together several streams of rightist rhetoric in a particularly bald and banal conceit: “The force is with Ronald Reagan. It has abandoned the liberal bodies it once inhabited… When the Force is with you, all the breaks come your way…For the Force rewards those political leaders whose instincts and basic perception are ‘in tune with reality’–with human realities, political realities, economic realities, social realities.”

Two and a half weeks later, White House chief of staff Donald Regan: “Some of us are like a shovel brigade that follow a parade down Main Street cleaning up. We took Reykjavik and turned what was really a sour situation into something that turned our pretty well. Who was it that took this disinformation thing and managed to turn it? Who was it who took on this loss in the Senate…and managed to pull that?” Like with the Wizard of Oz, the impersonal “Force” of history that Kristol claims as kin is unmasked as the work of White House illusionists “pulling” this and “turning” that.

Kristol’s lofty “there is a tide in the affairs of men” tone is the quintessence of six years of steady Journal rhetoric about the Reagan revolution as the first major shift in American politics since FDR. The unlikely RR-FDR axis was formed early by Reagan strategists, and is used as a show-stopper whenever any debate of substance occurs, as was going on over Star Wars when Kristol wrote. As a rhetroical creation, it has more substance than shadowy events like Reykjavik or the Iranian arms “deal”. Lately, this inchoate “Reagan Revolution” is all the administration clings to.

Whatever else “history” does with this administration,  the High Reagan era, which now looks like a bygone epoch, will be seen as a golden age of political rhetoric, polemical self-creation: mythologizing on a massive scale. This was an era in which political reality was so “naturalized” by the administration in power that questioning any of its version became kin to treason. Even in the wake of severe setbacks, in its embattled rhetoric, there is no possibility of doubt: reality is rendered perfectly intelligible to all, except hypocrites, idealists, and self-servers.

And, as events at last begin to spin on their own, not so susceptible to “pulling” and “turning,”  administration apologists (in the technical sense of the term, not the pejorative one: explicators and synthesizers, not excuse-makers) increasingly come to resemble those astronomers trying to hold the Ptolemaic system together in the wake of Copernicus: ever-more eccentric orbits, epicycles, and labyrinthine explanations-within-explanations.

The fascinating thing is that this revolution-by-rhetoric has been, and continues to be, worked out in the edit columns of the Journal, hidden right out in the open, often well in advance of public debate. More importantly, as Bob Kuttner argued in The New Republic two years ago, The Journal, with its “scornful sneering, and Manichean” editorial tone, has revivified political polemic and invective to a degree, and has much to teach tamer editorialists. It’s damned fun to read this stuff: a morning shot of bile.

Manichean is the key: they see themselves speaking for god-like principles struggling to control the universe. This holy war attitude gives them fire, and makes for rhetoric-with-a-vengeance, language with blood on its mind. If rhetoric may be called the art of swaying and holding an audience–identification and hypnosis–then its principle task, as French writer Roland Barthes put it in his seminal Mythologies, is to create a myth by making it seem natural, a given, a “structure of reality,” as French rhetorician Chaim Perelman calls it.

A close reading of Journal editorials from October, 1985 to October 1986 spotlights some recurrent past themes worked out over time and retooled for the next two years of brutal rhetorical slugfests. Now that the administration is on the defensive, the rhetorical devices of the Journal’s editorials are more transparent, and thus offer a wonderful opportunity for denaturalizing analysis of political rhetoric.

More importantly, perhaps, using some basic tools of rhetorical analysis helps us read any political rhetoric, left, right, or center. Political rhetoric is in large part the art of sneaking in assumptions that the audience buys into without knowing they have just bought the farm. For example, as Gary Wills pointed out in his classic Inventing America, the Declaration of Independence begins with all sorts of incredibly loaded language about “the course of human events” and “reasonable men” and “inalienable rights,”  justifying the American Revolution not merely as a reasonable outcome, but as a natural one (or, to be precise, natural because so “reasonable”). Just as Irving Kristol privileges a whole series of “realities” and trips all over himself doing so (what are “human realities,” anyway”?), so Jefferson invents a series of realities and calls them natural.

 

A YEAR’S WORTH OF CLASSICS

What a bonanza of classic Journal editorials from October ’85 to October ’86 and how gleeful they are in their invective. From last Fall there are: “What’s Good For America,” a blistering attack on “special interest groups”* (see glossary for all starred items) and how they were blocking tax reform; “Bidding the Banks Goodbye,” blaming the American left for the failure of “constructive engagement”* in South Africa; “A Supply-Side World?,” on how Friedmanite open markets will save the Third World from itself; and “Voice From the Past,” attacking Justice Brennan and all “activist judges”*.

Winter brought “Closing the Antitrust Century,” an epitaph for government regulation; “A Question of Management,” blaming the shuttle disaster on Congressional regulators; “Clouds Over Acid Rain,” calling the very notion of acid rain * into question, and “Contra Aid: The Stakes,” sounding the alarm bell about Communist aggression.

Spring brought such gems as “Shanty Raids,” a putdown of anti-apartheid college students; “Doomsday Baggage,” a savage attack on the idea of a test-ban treaty; “Worst Possible Case,” a dismissal of environmental impact statements * addressing potential disasters; “The Russian Syndrome,” which only talks about Chernobyl* in geo-political Superpower terms, not in terms of the safety of nuclear power * ; “The Long Struggle,” equating terrorism and Congress; and “Getting Past Vietnam,” a withering attack on Congressional paralysis in Nicaragua, and a call for aid for the Contras * .

As spring turned to summer, we read of “Intellectuals In Isolation,” belittling SDI *  opponents; “Putting Qadhaffi to the Test,” somehow managing to link Libya, SDI and free enterprise; “Senitorial Tempriment,” in its deliberate misspelling ridiculing Senate attacks on the intellectual attainments of Daniel Manion; “Your Money or Your Life,” blaming Congress for defense-industry fraud; and, “Where’s the Hardware?,” calling for an instant deployment of SDI.

The heating up of SDI, anti-apartheid, and Contra battles, as well as tax reform and Congressional races, brought some summer classics: “The Defense Roller-Coaster,” another strong argument for Contra aid as a way to take back the anti-communist momentum lost in Vietnam; “The Bonn-Tokyo Deflation,” one of many slightly muffled calls for a return to the gold standard; “Reagan’s Year,” a classic mythologization of the entire Reagan presidency as a permanent political revolution; “Doing The Kremlin’s Work,” an equation of Democratic arms control *  bills with Soviet strategy; “The Lebanon Model” and “Sanctions, The Moral Issue” both arguing against sanctions or any interference in South Africa; and “Winners and Losers,” a tax-reform scorecard arguing for dynamic rather than static economic analysis * .

And, of course, everything culminated this fall, what with Rehnquist and Scalia; South African sanctions; tax reform; new anti-drug laws; Contra aid; Reykjavik and SDI, and Congressional races, and the Journal has been up to the rhetorical challenge. Read: “Surviving the Aliens,” the aliens being members of Congress returning to their districts; “Goodbye, Mr. Tambourine Man,” a really smug and patronizing dismissal of the left as a gang of drug-crazed losers; “The Rehnquist Court,” a further, substantial attack on “judicial activism,” as opposed to “original Constitutional intent”; “Ronald Reagan’s Killer Rabbit,” warning the Pres not to give up SDI to the Russians; “Das Kapital (Revised ed.),” about how the world wants to dream American; “Superfund Cleanup Waste,” arguing that there really is no toxic waste problem; “On Manipulating Democrats,” about how “arms control” is an “illusion”; “Staying Cool In Reykjavik,” about letting Reagan be Reagan; “Reykjavik Saga,” about the childishness of believing in arms control fairy tales; “Arms Control Unchained,” about the new era of American supremacy, built around SDI and forcing the Russians to become “a more open society”; “Bring Back the Veto,” one in a long series of calls for a presidential line-item veto; “The Tax Reform Rollback,” calling tax reform a Democratic “Ponzi scheme” to raise taxes next year; “King Caucus vs. SDI,” about how Congress is anti-American and “arms control” is a joke; and, near the end of October, “The Irrepressible Mr. Meese,” about how liberals and “activist judges” are enemies of the Constitution. This past Fall has been a real windfall for Journal editorial addicts.

A mere list of such go-for-jugular editorials doesn’t give nearly the full effect of a daily immersion. This isn’t just high school civics stuff: these words are for huge stakes, and isn’t “just rhetoric,” cute but harmless. As in any era considering fundamental social, politico-military and economic experiments, rhetoric becomes both the crucible and creator of new attitudes toward history.

 

MYTHS OF THE MOMENT

Among the “givens” going into the 1986 Senate elections, these myths emerged as the “turn” the administration and Journal were trying to give to reality. Many seemed outdated a week later, but to make such lists is to see how remarkably fluid political reality is, how much is up for grabs, and how little objectivity there can be:

1. SDI is the hole card against the Soviets,who have been in ascendancy since Vietnam. SDI should be deployed (Not just developed or tested) NOW. Arms control is a snare and delusion.

2. Voting for the Contras helps roll back Vietnam.

3. Just as SDI and the Contras roll back Vietnam, such shopping items as a presidential line-item veto and the

repeal of the War Powers Act will roll back Watergate.

4.The Journal and the Rehnquist court know what the Constitution is, and anyone who doesn’t agree with them is a “judicial activist.” “Activism” is a pejorative again.

5. Democratic congresspersons  (invariably, in a bit of gay-bashing, called “San Francisco Democrats” but never again after the Senate elections) are as dangerous to America as terrorists or communists.

6. Environmentalism is a total sham and boondoggle, and things like acid rain, toxic waste, dangerous pesticides, or nuclear safety threats simply don’t exist. Ditto for consumerism and social justice.

7. South Africa should be left alone to solve its own problems. Trying to help the blacks is the worst thing we can do to them.

8. All gloomy economic analyses and forecasts are due to “static analysis,” whereas all favorable ones (i.e. those which must be projected beyond 1988) are right because they rely on “dynamic analysis”.

9. “Real Americans,” who are “unsophisticated,” don’t have anything to do with the Beltway or the House, and don’t take drugs, have regained control of their country.

10. Last, as a culmination of all foreign and economic policy, the Golden Rule: leverage unto others as ye would have them leverage unto you. The free market is America’s true manifest destiny. We are moving toward a total global supply-side, market-driven economy, the pure mechanism of the celestial economic spheres, based on the gold standard, which, as the Journal so deliciously puts it, “stabilizes the value of our capital commitments.” “Our”?

 

DIRTY TRICKS

Just as Jefferson and Kristol, Journal editorialists invoke “reality” so often, both explicitly and implicitly in the pitying tone they take toward the “San Francisco Democrats,” that dissenting readers are made to feel either like traitors, perverts or children. Anything that doesn’t square with their mythic world is appearance, naive idealism, or hypocrisy masquearading as idealism. Idealism itself is not possible in this world; a world in which, as Barthes puts it, nature is inserted between the sign and the signified.

Take the phrase “arms control”. Journal editorialists often set it off with fright quotes, which trivialize it or make it into a laughing stock. Yet this form of ridicule (the sign) is even more insidious because its content (the signified) is smuggled in as an assumption, via circular reasoning, which assumes the very thing it needs to justify and explain: Naturally, arms can’t be controlled because, naturally, we can’t trust the Soviets because, naturally, they are Communists naturally bent on world domination. Thus, anyone who favors any form of arms control is abetting Soviet world domination.

Given such a sure grip on the world, in which judgments masquerade as facts or common sense, and intimidation poses as logic, any catalogue of drawbacks or objections is, as Barthes argues, “complacent” because their position is unfavorably compared to nature. This complacency extends to language, in which one group of naturalized words, in Barthes’ term, “admonishes” or “excludes” a set of defective words: “free market” (along with “risk” and “performance”) admonishes “regulation”; “strong defense”/ “arms control”; “the Constitution”/ “activist judges”; “the people”/ “Congress”;” colorblindness/”affirmative action”; “SDI”/ “Vietnam”; and, in the grandest admonition of all perhaps, “the truth”/ “politics”.

Since this mythologizing rhetoric is on the side of those in power, this linguistic (i.e. legal) murder of the opposition notifies as it points out: in naming it imposes, surrounds in an imperceptible and unquestionable way. The Journal’s Ronald Reagan myth is a perfect illustration of why Barthes calls myth “depoliticized speech”: Democrats, Soviets, Naderites/environmentalists and “activist judges” are “too political”, just as pacificists “politicize” arms control. The astonishing rhetorical ploy here is that a Republican President, administration, court system, and, up until Nov. 4, Senate, are considered above politics: they have entered the eternal and pure world of nature. Everyone else is committing unnatural acts.

We Build That: The Re-emergence of Obama’s Communitarian Script

President Obama’s election night victory speech marked a return from political exile of a rhetoric of communitarianism, a turn toward an ethic of caring and sharing. The sense that the whole  of society is greater than the sum of its parts; that individualism is not the ultimate answer to the question of “what is a good life?”, and that we cannot be fulfilled if we deny our ties to others–all of these sentiments drove the speech.

Right away, for example, after talking of the need to continually be “perfecting our union” (union thus having a double meaning: our state and our common identity), Obama talks of “you” (meaning all of us–no more 47% or 99%) “reaffirming the spirit.” This identifiable “spirit”  (newly “reaffirmed”–a religious concept at heart) that has “lifted the country” is much more than the belief in “our individual dreams”, it is also “a belief that…we are an American family, and we rise or fall together as one nation and one people.”

Talk about the unitary executive! Talk about family values! Call it collectivism or unitarianism or communitarianism, what it amounted to in the speech is a radical rejection of Romney/Ryan/ Ayn Rand Social Darwinism.

What values are most worth caring about in this big family? Spoiler alert: not tax cuts, the sainthood of “the entrepreneur”, self-deportation, radical deregulation, or forcible transvaginal ultrasounds. Instead, we witness the re-emergence of some of the unmentionables, the family members hidden during the campaign: redressing inequality, doing something about a “warming planet,” turning America  back into a “generous…compassionate…tolerant” county again, and so forth.  It’s been a long time since privatization has been made to seem so small-minded and mendacious.

To make sure we don’t miss the point, he later returns to this communitarian rhetoric, talking of our “shared destiny”, our “obligations” and “responsibilities”. He even takes on “American exceptionalism” by inverting its Republican connotation of world dominance by saying “what makes America exceptional are the bonds that hold together the most diverse nation on earth.”  Even patriotism is honored, but as part of a “responsibility” for “love and charity and duty and patriotism”. Responsibilities as well as rights–a radical re-balancing of the national moral equilibrium–suddenly, magically, we are, once again, “greater than the sum of our individual ambitions.”

In a single speech, Obama reaffirmed what the New Yorker editors argued in their Oct. 25 endorsement of Obama:

The choice is clear. The Romney-Ryan ticket represents a constricted and backward-looking vision of America: the privatization of the public good. In contrast, the sort of public investment championed by Obama—and exemplified by both the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and the Affordable Care Act—takes to heart the old civil-rights motto “Lifting as we climb.” That effort cannot, by itself, reverse the rise of inequality that has been under way for at least three decades. But we’ve already seen the future that Romney represents, and it doesn’t work.

The reëlection of Barack Obama is a matter of great urgency. Not only are we in broad agreement with his policy directions; we also see in him what is absent in Mitt Romney—a first-rate political temperament and a deep sense of fairness and integrity. A two-term Obama Administration will leave an enduringly positive imprint on political life. It will bolster the ideal of good governance and a social vision that tempers individualism with a concern for community. Every Presidential election involves a contest over the idea of America. Obama’s America—one that progresses, however falteringly, toward social justice, tolerance, and equality—represents the future that this country deserves

Maybe it’s too much to hope that we are  more than a country that knows the cost of everything and the value of nothing. Maybe we have at least temporarily undermined a rhetoric of cold market reasoning; maybe, in the light of common day, we can collectively turn back to that project of “perfecting” our “union.”

Mitthammer

“If you’re a hammer, everything looks like a nail”

The Romney-Ryan website’s foreign policy section, entitled “An American Century,”  is firmly rooted in the logic of classically Orwellian Cold War rhetoric:

Our country today faces a bewildering array of threats and opportunities. As president, Mitt Romney will safeguard America and secure our country’s interests and most cherished ideals. The unifying thread of his national security strategy is American strength. When America is strong, the world is safer. It is only American power—conceived in the broadest terms—that can provide the foundation for an international system that ensures the security and prosperity of the United States and our friends and allies.

A Romney foreign policy will proceed with clarity and resolve. Our friends and allies will not have doubts about where we stand and what we will do to safeguard our interests and theirs. Neither will our rivals, competitors, and adversaries. The best ally world peace has ever known is a strong America. The “last best hope of earth” was what Abraham Lincoln called our country. Mitt Romney believes in fulfilling the promise of Lincoln’s words and will defend America abroad in word and in deed.

The usual paradoxes apply: peace through strength, security through conflict, prosperity through power. It calls for a century-long vigilance (“resolve”) against weakness and apology; facing up to an unending cycle of threats from “rivals, competitors and adversaries,” necessitating a perpetual process of putting these rivals “on notice”.

The sketchiest assertions here are:

1) that America will dominate an entire century of world affairs and,

2) that “The best ally world peace has ever known is a strong America.”

“The best ally of world peace EVER KNOWN”

Really?

Ryan’s Mastermemes in the VP Debate

Bellicose: Martial Law

Two dominant Ryan word clusters emerged from the VP debate. (Wordclouds of each are based on the frequency of each word).  The first portion of the debate, centered on the Benghazi assault, brought the extreme bellicosity of the Romney-Ryan foreign policy to the fore. This is the word family clustered around “peace through strength”,  “no apology”, “projecting weakness”, “American Exceptionalism”, and “emboldening our enemies”. It is well and truly Roveian (that is, inherently two-faced by turning everything into its opposite)  insofar as it claims that its aim is peace (For example, Ryan saying “We want to prevent war,” when he was directly asked if he wanted a war), but the emotional weight and entire subtext is what can be characterized as the material and psychological martial law enforced by America, the world’s sheriff.

In the alchemy of this rhetorical compound, ordinarily neutral terms such as “values” and “credibility” are appropriated into the discourse of dominance. The rest of the world–the subservient Other–has no credibility and doesn’t share “our” values.

Because this position is inherently unstable and subject to threat, it’s  always working to seem invulnerable. It’s the mastermeme that sanctions an unending “war on terror,” a state of velvet but perpetual martial law. It is eternally vigilant, always defending whatever means it uses (waterboarding, drone strikes, military invasions) to justify the end.

This paranoid sense of threat explains Ryan’s obsession with “credibility” and with not “projecting weakness”.  The projection is all. There’s absolutely no rhetorical space for irony or tragedy. It can never, ever “apologize”. It is hubris personified.

“Social Darwinism” is a second major Ryan meme, domestic cousin of the “martial law” meme:

Social Darwinism

This cluster (again, based on the number of times Ryan used each term in the debate)  stresses “self sufficiency”, “responsibility” and “making the tough choices”. It is a winner-take-all mentality, a Hobbesian materialism that is the diametrical opposite of Christian caritas. It eschews all dependencies–on the government, on foreign energy suppliers, on labor. It privileges the super-rich, rechristened and valorized as “job creators”. It is the only possible definition of “success“, so all else is, by implication, failure.

A taint of failure and thus scorn is rhetorically attached to anyone in opposition to any aspect of it. At best, dissenters from this orthodoxy are either dismissed as “special interests” (yet another neutral term that Roveianism appropriates, along with “values” “responsibility”, and even, astonishingly, “bi-partisaniship”) or as selfish “class warfare” crusaders hypocritically posing as humanitarians. The “heroes” of this meme are either Ayn-Rand titans of industry or “entrepreneurs” and “small businesses”. (Anyone but the workers themselvesof course). Although Ryan didn’t use the term “redistribution” in the debate, it is also part of the “failure” meme.

Both of these memes are deceptive and two-faced in their very DNA. They’re like deadly viruses, and Obama and Biden are running out of time to develop an antidote.

Apples, Oranges and Mush: Romney’s Sleight-of-Hand

One of the reasons the commentariat is so befuddled about Romney’s first debate performance is that everyone (especially Mitt) conflates entirely different things: tax cuts (aka, revenue reduction), tax deductions (aka, tax hikes for the punters who can longer write off their mortgage interest), spending cuts, and revenue increases from accelerating economic growth (aka, “trickle down”.)

Here’s the Mittmaster’s hocus-pocus at work at a key moment early in the debate:

 

The second area, taxation, we agree, we ought to bring the tax rates down. And I do, both for corporations and for individuals. But in order for us not to lose revenue, have the government run out of money, I also lower deductions and credits and exemptions, so that we keep taking in the same money when you also account for growth. (emphasis added)

 

So this is how he can say that his $5 trillion tax cut is not a tax cut at all because it is “revenue neutral.”  In Mittworld, things both are and are not.

And where does the offsetting revenue come from? Two places: one unspecified  (which “deductions, credits and exemptions”  beyond PBS?) and thus impossible to ever reach, and the other (from “growth”)  purely fantastical. Like Wimpy in Popeye, Mitt wants to pay us on Tuesday for a hamburger he wants to feed the super-rich today. Pay it forward, Mittman!

To disentangle this rat’s nest, I’d suggest that next time Professor Obama practice the Socratic Method:

Obama: Do you not agree, Governor, that when speaking of more than thing, that it is prudent to understand each thing fully in its own turn before going on to another?

Romney: Yes, that seems prudent.

Obama: And would you not further agree that you cannot deny the existence of one thing simply by projecting the existence of an entirely different thing?

Romney: That is self-evident.

Obama: Then, sir, let us first speak solely of tax cuts, irrespective of offsets. Is it not true that tax cuts–considered wholly on their immediate and primary effect– only increase the deficit?

Romney: Yes, I suppose that’s true, strictly speaking, in a reductionist way of looking at things.

Obama: And would you not further agree then that your proposed 20% across-the-board tax cuts would deprive the government $5 trillion over ten years?

Romney: No, because, as I’ve already explained, I’m not in any way calling for a tax cut that will cost the government anywhere near $5 trillion. In fact, my tax cut will pay for itself.

Obama: But that is an impossibility because you cannot generate revenue out of a reduction of revenue, just as you cannot generate water out of a parched desert. The water has to come from some other source. And you specify two sources: “reduced deductions, credits and exemptions,” and the presumed economic growth that will trickle down from the rich, who most benefit from the tax cuts. Since both of these assumptions are not in any way properties of the tax cuts themselves, to speak of them in the same breath as the tax cuts in simply to change the subject, and sneak in a new ace when everyone is looking the other way.

 

What Politiscripts Is All About

A nation gets the political rhetoric it deserves, and that political rhetoric reveals as well as conceals. Rhetoric is the art of persuasion, not the negative connotation it has for being just double talk, b.s. or obfuscation. Political talk tries to be strictly scripted but the script is always disrupted by unexpected events and emergent or recombinant memes–“bimbo eruptions” or the fall of Lehman Brothers or “self deport” or “legitimate rape”.

This blog keeps track of the ever-shifting meanings of words, phrases, references and numbers. Especially in politics, no word, number, image, reference or metaphor is innocent; context changes content. Every thing is a weapon in the total war that is contemporary American politics.

I intend to look at “speech acts” in the double sense of speech in itself constituting an action (and thus having consequences as well as an ethos), as well as being a scripted act. Even when political speech seems genuine–in fact, especially when it seems most genuine–it is a calculated choice, all artifice, all the time.

 

Blog name: Politiscripts
politiscripts.com
Rhetoric is the art of persuasion, not the black arts of double talk, b.s. or obfuscation. A nation gets the political rhetoric it deserves, and that ever-shifting political rhetoric reveals as well as conceals. Political talk tries to be strictly scripted, but the script is always disrupted by unexpected events and emergent or recombinant memes–“bimbo eruptions” or the fall of Lehman Brothers, or “self deport”, or “legitimate rape”, or Obamacare.

This blog keeps track of the ever-shifting meanings of words, phrases, references and numbers. Especially in politics, no word, number, image, reference or metaphor is innocent; context changes content. Everything is a weapon in the total word war that is contemporary American politics.

I intend to look at “speech acts” in the double sense of speech in itself constituting an action (and thus having consequences as well as an ethos), as well as being a scripted act. Even when political speech seems genuine–in fact, especially when it seems most genuine–it is a calculated choice, all artifice, all the time. The ends justify the memes and the memes justify the ends.