Monday, November 9, 2009

Opinion

Barack Obama, the First Post-Boomer President, Faces Tension Between Hope and Change

A new generation ascends to power—is the change they bring, the change that we hoped for?

Posted December 24, 2008

Barack Obama, born in 1961, is technically a baby boomer. But his early years were straight out of generation X—abandoned by his father and, for a time, his mother; experimentation with drugs; a sense of drifting. His two predecessors, both born in 1946, generally considered the first year of the baby boom, personified the two halves—liberal and con­servative—of their generation, and both had characteristics that those on the other side of the cultural divide absolutely loathed. Obama, in Boston in 2004 and in Grant Park on victory night, promised to take us above and beyond these divisions.

The constituency Obama assembled during his campaign has a decided new-generational tilt. The Edison/Mitofsky exit poll tells us that Obama carried voters under age 30 by a margin of 66 percent to 32 percent. On the flip side, by my calculation, he won voters 30 and over by just 50 percent to 49 percent. That means that he won by a larger percent­age among young voters than any president and that among voters older than that, he may not have carried states with a majority of electoral votes. In retrospect, the only win­ning Republican strategy would have been to pass a consti­tutional amendment raising the voting age to 35.

This is the third time in a century that we have seen such a generational change in the White House. From 1933 to 1961, we had presidents born between 1882 and 1890. From 1961 to 1993, we had presi­dents born between 1908 and 1924. John Kennedy’s inaugu­ration marked the departure of the World War II comman­ders who occupied the White House for 28 years; Bill Clin­ton’s the moving on of the GI generation after 32 years. Obama’s will mark the passing of the boomers after only 16.

The advantage of a new gen­eration is that it brings fresh ideas and perspectives, a greater sense of possibility, and none of the weariness of fighting the same old battles. The disadvantage is that it lacks experience and doesn’t know the lessons of the past. Obama does make reference to history, especially to distant fig­ures like Lincoln and FDR. But like Tony Blair, he is given to rhetoric that suggests history begins anew with his installation. “This was the moment,” Obama said on June 3, after the last primaries, “when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal.” He is promising more than King Canute.  

There is a tension here between the “hope and change”  Obama promises and the issues he and the leading advisers he has recruited will face. On foreign policy, we have Hillary Clinton at State and Robert Gates at Defense. Our troops in Iraq will be withdrawn but not completely, it seems, and after something like victory rather than the defeat and dis­grace that so many Democratic politicians and voters craved as long as the hated George W. Bush was president. Less change than many hoped for.

Much improvisation. On the economic team, we see Lawrence Summers and Paul Volcker among those tasked with handling economic problems—a collapse of credit, deflation—no one anticipated as recently as six months ago. None of Obama’s sophisticated economists, if they were starting from scratch today, would recommend the stands Obama took during near­ly two years of campaigning: higher taxes on high earners, moves toward protectionism. Those were Herbert Hoover’s policies in the 1930s. So now we will see, as we have in recent months, much improvisation. We have had and will have in key places men who probably know as much about deflation and financial markets as any­one else on Earth. Yet we have the sinking feeling the old team hasn’t been batting 1.000 and that the new team won’t be able to either.

Much of the energy that fu­eled the Obama campaign came from a visceral hatred of Bush and all his works. The re­laxed acceptance that those on the Democratic left have given Obama’s moderate appoint­ments and skinning back on liberal promises suggests they’re satisfied, for now, with Bush’s removal. But in time, they and the rest of us will be making more critical judg­ments on how this new-gener­ation president is doing.

Change is not all we hope for.

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The Answer is: Yes

Time to get all dialectical on you.

We, my family and I, did not go see the the new Jim Carrey movie. Last night we spent our time watching and discussing "Valkyrie". This was a battle between Thanatos vs Eros. Death vs Life. Though the hero loses his life, his shed blood grants life once again to his people.

And that sums up this new generation that has risen to power. Not really boomers, not really X-ers. We have existed between cynicism and hedonism our entire life and sometimes sliding one way or the other. We are synthesis, if we have achieved maturity.

Okay, maybe there is reason for hope, but not because he is like me or I like him. Hope because we can be different and still come together to forge our way through the latest challenge that confronts us.

I really like being American.

The Early Votes?

Okay, we have one vote for Narcissistic Hedonist, and one possible vote for Nihilistic Cynic. Which probably means the Great Cypher continues to elude the general public's ability to accurately understand who Mr. Obama is when the spotlight is not on him.

American Pragmatist: Free to make his own decisions, because he is owned by no one else. Not even the Party. Which still leaves the question open for nihilist or narcissist. And when did the Republicans take over the leadership of the Democratic Party? We often become like those we despise if we hate them long enough.

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