George W., Hillary, And McCain, And The Last Gasp Of "The Me Generation"
By
Jeff Goldsmith
Many Democrats feel dismayed, even betrayed at the unwillingness of Hillary
Clinton and her supporters to step aside for the good of the party, and to
better our chances of beating McCain. Clinton and her supporters, on the other
hand, feel dismayed and betrayed by the lack of deference that Obama and his
supporters have shown towards what they regard as Clinton's long-and-hard-earned
right to lead our party. This intra-party death match is a classic generational
succession struggle, akin to countless others through history. The fight is not
about gender or race. At stake is a new "Generation Gap", this one coming on the
trailing edge of the Baby Boomers.
The boomers are arguably the most idealistic and innovative generation since the
founding of our nation. They brought us Civil Rights, Women’s Rights, Sexual
Freedom, a revolutionary love for the planet as a whole - the Environmental
Movement - and an entire culture of caring. These are profound contributions to
the destiny of humanity.
As the boomers aged, America aged. When they were young and horny, America got
"free love". When they were seeking their fortune, America got "yuppies" and
gentrification. And when they were old and rich, and worried about staying that
way, America got "welfare reform", and tax breaks for the wealthy.
Their massive influence upon, and dominance of American life is enabled by a
single, simple fact: sheer numbers. Regardless of ideology, Americans born
during the Boom share one trait in common - throughout their whole lives there
have always been more of them than of their parents, or children. Thus they are
in all things self-ratified.
Self-ratification has led to many, many excesses, including violent rioting,
mass drug addiction, sex in the streets in some cities, rampant divorce, Rovian
politics, and above any and all particulars, a culture suffused in a powerful
sense of personal entitlement. They are "The Me Generation”. They’re not
embarrassed at this because they feel entitled to their entitlement. Not
surprisingly, the central ethic of a self-ratifying generation turns out to be
greed. The Me’s turned a nation of citizens into a nation of "consumers".
Their ambitions have been hampered only by their own incessant sibling rivalry:
between their Young Republicans, and their Vietnam War protesters. That
in-focused hostility has mounted as they have aged. The Me's are fixated on
their Me siblings, and are impervious to the claims of other generations.
The oft commented upon “Bush/Clinton dynasty” has an important asymmetry to it
that is always brushed over. The two Bush presidents are cross-generational in
the most explicit terms possible – George Sr. and George Jr. – whereas (if
Hillary is elected) the two Clinton presidents will be intra-generational, again
in the most explicit terms possible – husband and wife. There is no better
definition of a generation than those examples provide.
So despite ideological differences, Bill, Hillary, George Jr., and John McCain,
are generational “siblings” - the “Me Dynasty” – and they pushed the generation
of Bush Sr. to the side.
Recall, if you can, the televised debate between George H. Bush, the father, and
Bill Clinton – then at his prime at age 46 – in which the candidates were
deprived of podiums, and given tall stools on which to sit. Bush, in his stiff,
straight, presidential suit was obviously horribly ill at ease. Clinton, in
contrast, slouched on his stool like he was at a bar, and frequently rose up
deftly and reached out to individuals in the near-at-hand audience. He moved
like he owned the place. When Bill was elected, much was made of the ascendency
to power of the baby boomers. He was our third youngest president, knew nothing
about foreign policy, but he was smart, and sexy, played sax on Saturday Night
Live, and had a gift with words.
And if that sounds almost like a description of Barack, it should not surprise
us. As Bill was then, Barack Obama is 46 now.
That was 1992. Eight years later, in 2000, when George W., the son, became
President, W. was 54; exactly eight years older than Bill was when Bill became
President. And eight years after that, in 2008, if Hillary becomes president,
she will be 61; exactly 7 years older than W. was when W. became President. In
short, the age at which a politician may be elected President has, miraculously,
perfectly tracked with the aging of the Me Generation.
Until Obama.
Observing this, we can now more fully understand what Hillary meant by her
infamous remarks that “I bring a lifetime of experience to the White House. I
know Senator McCain will bring a lifetime of experience to the White House. And
Senator Obama has a speech he made in 2004.”
George W.’s invasion of Iraq - with it’s unutterable rational, “God damit,
that’s our oil” - was the penultimate criminal excess of Me-ism. Which is why it
is significant that Hillary and McCain both signed on to Bush’s war, with it’s
incomprehensible toll of lives, damage to our economy, and lost international
good will. And why it is significant that Obama did not. Obama staked his
political future to oppose that war - yes, by making “a speech in 2004”.
Hillary comments amount to a summary dismissal the claims of any generation but
her own. It appears that she would prefer any Me-Generation President, rather
than cede power to Obama.
All of which explains why Hillary’s supporters have sought to demean, rather
than to embrace the younger voters whom Obama has brought into the Democratic
Party in such large numbers. They deride Obama supporters as “cult” members and
“Kool-aid drinkers” who mindlessly follow their “rock-star super-guru”
candidate. This critique is particularly rich, coming from the generation which
invented the concepts of rock star and super guru. Remember them screaming
non-stop all the way through the Beatles’ concerts?
Hillary’s supporters complain that younger voters, who are engaged in the
electoral process in numbers never before seen, cannot be relied upon to vote in
the fall. So the Me’s have turned on it’s head that old maxim which they coined
to justify themselves, and now we must never trust anybody under 30. How
convenient. And the only demographic group among which Hillary consistently
polls ahead is those over 60.
In contrast, inclusivity, rather than identity, marks the generation that
followed the Me’s. Obama’s generation rejected both bigotry and identity
politics, and chose instead to “celebrate diversity.” Who cares if we have a
black President, or a woman President ? We just want a great President. Part
white, part black, Christian with Muslim roots, Obama physically embodies
multiculturalism. Inclusivity is also reflected in Obama’s extraordinarily broad
base of small donors.
Moreover, the two campaigns are each rallied by directly contrary ideas
regarding the proper locus of political action. Hillary promises “I’ll fight for
you”, which casts both herself and the citizenry in the singular form: “I” and
“you”. For it’s lack of inclusiveness, this stands in marked contrast to
Barack’s assurance to us that “Yes we can”.
In Hillary’s refusal to step aside, despite the impossible math, despite the
destruction of our party, despite risk to our country, we see again the exemplar
of Me-ism. Let’s face it. The Me Generation has never had to concede anything.
So they are not likely to cede control of the body politic before their physical
bodies give way to decrepitude.
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