Comandante Obama
Peter Robinson, 02.27.09, 12:01 AM ET
"But you don't understand," the Colombian said. "We've seen this before."
"He's right, my good friend," the Cuban said. "We Latin Americans know the
pattern. Believe me we do."
The American tried to shrug off the Latin Americans' warning. To his
consternation, he found that he couldn't. Peron, Fidel, now Chavez, they
insisted. The emergence of misrule, corruption and economic stagnation in Latin
American nations follows a particular sequence or progression. Now the sequence
was unfolding in the United States.
"It starts with a cult of personality," the Cuban explained. "One man declares
himself the jefe, the caudillo, the big leader."
Had Obama attempted to instigate something like a cult of personality? The
American found the charge impossible to refute. During the campaign, Obama had
failed to advance a genuine agenda, instead campaigning on "hope" and "change."
In effect, he had asked Americans to turn the nation over to him on blind faith.
He would, he promised, transcend racial and partisan divides in his very person.
The One had thrived, moreover, on addressing vast gatherings. In Berlin, he had
addressed a quarter of a million Germans. At the Democratic convention, he had
given his acceptance speech not in a convention hall before a few thousand
supporters, but in a stadium before 80,000. In some subtle but palpable way, the
American had to admit, Obama had transgressed our political tradition. He had
reduced his supporters to facelessness.
And to an astonishing extent, the American had to grant, the elites--Congress,
academics, the mainstream media--had proved only too willing to place themselves
in thrall to Obama. On Feb. 17, for example, the president had signed an $800
billion "stimulus" bill, at least three-quarters of which was devoted not to
stimulus but to political payoffs. Less than a week later, he had hosted a White
House "summit" on fiscal responsibility. Had the press noted the contrast? Had
it objected? The very idea.
Let George W. Bush mispronounce a word, and the press would howl for a month.
Let Barack Obama offend against language itself--let him suggest that he signed
perhaps the most reckless fiscal act in American history as an instance of
"fiscal responsibility," engaging in an almost Orwellian example of
doublespeak--and the press utters scarcely a murmur.
"After the cult of personality," the Colombian explained, "what comes next is
nationalization." Fidel had nationalized the Cuban sugar mills, Chavez the Banco
de Venezuela, Morales the Bolivian oil and gas industries.
Obama? He may not have been issuing sweeping diktats. But as the American had to
admit, he had already presided over a vast expansion of the federal stake in
banks, in the automobile industry and in the mortgage markets. And in his
address before Congress, he had proposed a new federal presence in health care,
an industry that accounts for a full one-seventh of the economy.
"The last step?" asked the Cuban. "Censorship. It won't be obvious at
first--they're always too smart for that. But it will come."
"Never," replied the American. "We have the First Amendment."
"And soon enough," the Cuban said, smiling sadly, "you will also have the
Fairness Doctrine."
Revoked in 1987, the Fairness Doctrine required broadcasters to air contrasting
views of public issues. Reintroduced today, the Fairness Doctrine would force
radio stations to pair conservative talk show hosts, who draw big audiences,
with liberal hosts, who, as Al Franken's brief radio career demonstrated, draw
barely any audiences at all. As the American had to grant, the Fairness Doctrine
would thus make talk radio unprofitable, in effect censoring Rush Limbaugh, Hugh
Hewitt, Michael Medved, Michael Reagan, Laura Ingraham and other conservative
stars.
The re-imposition of the Fairness Doctrine--and the imposition of censorship.
Was this possible? As the American had to admit, it now appeared not only
possible but likely.
"[O]ur new president has rightly talked about accountabililty…," Sen. Debbie
Stabenow, D.-Mich., had said during a recent discussion of the Fairness
Doctrine. "I absolutely think it's time to be bringing some accountability to
the airwaves. ... I have already had some discussion with colleagues and ... I
feel like that’s going to happen."
A cult of personality, nationalization and censorship.
"We still have the Constitution," the American told himself after the
conversation had ended. "A Fidel? A Peron? In this country? Ridiculous." Yet he
found that one image kept coming to mind: that of the 2 million people who had
thronged the Mall on Inauguration Day, gazed upon a charismatic leader and
chanted "O-ba-ma! O-ba-ma!"
Four years from now, the American thought, voters may very well remove the new
president from office. In certain ways, however, he has already made this great
nation look like a banana republic.
Peter Robinson, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University and contributor to RobinsonandLong.com, writes a weekly column for
Forbes.