THE
POLITICS OF RUSH LIMBAUGH
THE GLOOMY PEOPLE VS. THE HAPPY PEOPLE
By: Sean Scallon
A writer's best ideas or thoughts are based
on inspiration and more often than not, that inspiration comes from other people. Some may
be loath to give credit where credit is due but I am not.
So this
piece is brought to you by blogger Daniel Larison
courtesy of fellow blogger Clark
Stooksbury.
Limbaugh
it seemed, during one of his interminable rants, did actually say something profound or at
least gave some insight on his primitive political philosophy. And no, this has nothing to
do with Michael J. Fox. This actually occurred during a broadcast just after the Mark
Foley scandal broke. To quote
El Rushbo:
You
know, Republicans are said to be racist and sexist and bigoted and homophobic. The liberal
policy, liberal philosophy is to assume bad behavior, bad human behavior. They assume it,
they have a condescending look toward people in general. Its what makes them
liberals. People are incapable of doing the right thing without liberals guidance,
people are incapable of making the right decisions to get ahead in life without liberal
guidance, theyre incapable of earning a decent living. . . Liberalism assumes bad
human behavior and then coddles it as imperfect. After they coddle imperfect, bad human
behavior, they are able to say those who judge imperfections in people and come out strong
for right and wrong, the simplistic black and white, good versus evil, people who come out
for law and order and so forth, theyre the sinners, because none of us are perfect.
The liberals understand this, they coddle the imperfections, they create victims out of
those who are imperfect, turning them into a cause celebre, and blaming the right, these
Draconian, intolerant, inflexible people who judge others while ignoring their own
foibles."
Such
a statement is an interesting one coming from someone heading up the EIB Network's Advance
Institute of Conservative Studies. For any instructor at such an institute would know that
the early philosophy of the conservative movement had very much to do with man's
imperfections, especially given the many Catholics who were conservative intellectuals
back in the 1950s and 60s. Indeed, Larison's initial take on this is as one just
dumbstruck at Limbaugh's idiocy, until he stumbles onto the answer to the politics of Rush
Limbaugh.
"It will hardly come as news
to anyone here that Limbaughs conservatism was never, ever all that terribly similar
to Burkean-Kirkian conservatism. It was originally, back in the old days of the early
90s, a rehashed low-tax, pro-market conservatism that was good on mocking
bureaucratic absurdity and Clintonian pretenses but basically superficial and empty. It
could even occasionally border on a sort of populism given its medium on the radio, but as
Limbaugh became more successful he increasingly embraced the establishment GOP views on
everything and frequently became their willing propagandist in a way that was not the case
when he began. Once the debate over Iraq started, he was no longer funny and became
something like a WSJ-programmed robot, reaching a
particularly low point when he lent his name and popularity to the lie that Atta met with
an Iraqi agent in Prague to help solidify the fraudulent claim in the public mind that Al
Qaeda and Iraq were working together.
For
a time, to the extent that he had a touchstone, it was Reagan, which meant that
conservatism was made up of Reagan (and more broadly, Republican) apologetics in the same
way that it has become Bush apologetics in the new generation. There was always the
sickening emphasis on optimism as the core of this conservatism and Limbaugh
never tired of reiterating (and I should know, since I listened to him often when I was
growing up) that Reagan was successful because he was optimistic and that Americans love
optimists (this may unfortunately be true), and liberals are tiresome and oppressive
because they are not. It was always a struggle of the happy people vs. the gloomy people,
which somehow translates into believing that the gloomy people think that man is
flawedbecause, well, that is a gloomy thing to think. If man is fallen, flawed and
imperfect, optimism doesnt seem very reasonable, but if he is perfectible and can
make progress towards that perfectibility optimism is the essence of common sense.
In
this sense, there is nothing surprising about Limbaughs embrace of the old liberal
conceit that everyone is basically OK. He would almost have to think that if we just
create the right conditions (for a right-liberal, this typically ought to mean less
government regulation) everything in society will work out just fine. It is perhaps why
Limbaugh has had no difficulty switching gears and getting on board with the Iraq project
and the freedom agenda, since he would have no strong, principled reasons to
object to social engineering as suchhe just doesnt want social engineering run
by Democratssince he must think that injustices and imperfections in the world are
the result of having the wrong kinds of structures and environments around us rather than
permanent features of life here below. Give people freedom, make the
environment optimal for opportunity and stand back! And throw in the
occasional war or two for the sake of American greatness and the glory of the superpower.
That seems to sum up Limbaughs worldview pretty well. It says volumes about modern
conservatives that millions of them listen to this man daily and take what he
says as some kind of wisdom; it says plenty about the vapidity of popular conservatism if
Limbaugh is one of its representatives." |
Thus the subtitle of this article:
"The Gloomy People vs. the Happy People." Again, thanks both to Mr. Larison and
Mr. Stooksbury for the inspiration.
Limbaugh once admitted
during a broadcast that he wore a "WIN" button back in the 1970s.
"WIN" stood for "Whip Inflation Now," which was Gerald Ford's attempt
to solve the inflation problem of that time through the power of positive thinking. So you
can see why "optimism" as an ideology has an appeal to Limbaugh. The problem is,
there's no consistency to it. If we were
living during the 1930s, Limbaugh would be on side of the Democrats and the New Dealers,
because they were the ones back then who were "optimistic." In fact, it may not be a stretch that Limbaugh sees
himself as a latter day FDR and his radio broadcasts a modern day version of the
"Fireside Chats," dishing out the daily does of "optimism" to the
American people. Meanwhile, the gloomy people were the conservatives and the Republicans
and they had a lot to be gloomy about. If they were a small manufacturer, they were gloomy
that their plant was going to be forcibly unionized. If they were a banker, they were
gloomy about the fact that they were now going to be regulated by the federal government
and have to pay a progressive tax rate of 90 percent. If they were religious, they were
despairing at the march of Communism and if they were an intellectual, they despaired over
never seeing the old republican form of government ever again. Yep, not exactly the
fun-bunch here.
Conservatism's
association with gloom lasted until the 1970s when new groups began to challenge it. One
such group was the "fusionists," who believed that the American people were
essentially good but were being turned bad by the government. Then there were the
neoconservatives, many of them former Leftists, Socialists and New Dealers themselves who
brought their 1930s cheer with them along with their faith in the "masses." And
along with all of them came the politicians like Ronald Reagan, Newt Gingrich and Jack
Kemp, who were tired of conservatives being portrayed as bunch of Ebenezer Scrooges or
angry demagogues and were determined to put a 1970s-style happy face on conservatism.
What allowed the
"optimists" to take control of the conservative movement back when it really was
a movement was a philosophic vacuum that led to electoral success. The 1970s liberals
began a downcast turn. They were becoming the gloomy people. It all began with the savage
reaction from the chic New Left to Hubert Humphrey's "Politics of Joy," and has
gone downhill ever since. Liberalism became identified with gloomy environmental forecasts
about the destruction of the Earth, gloominess about nuclear war, gloominess about the
economy and oil shocks and the increasing shrillness and divisiveness of the civil right
movement. All of this was encapsulated in Jimmy Carter's singular "malaise"
speech in 1979, which ultimately did much to undermine his presidency and liberalism in
general because it gave an opening to Reagan and his Republicans charging that the
Democrats and liberals had basically gave up on the American People and the American Dream
and wished to live in a world of "limits." Since "limitation" was not
something in the U.S. lexicon, whether as a pioneer, a homesteader or a Navy pilot, it was
easy for Republicans to claim the "optimistic" label and carry it through 1984's
"Morning in America," Reagan re-election campaign until the disastrous GOP
convention of 1992, where the party lost the optimistic label and became not the gloomy
party but the "angry party" of Clinton-haters in 1990s. That was until George
Bush II's "compassionate conservatism," gave the GOP an optimistic sheen once
again in 2000. Since Rush Limbaugh came to political consciousness in the late 1970s and
early 1980s after his FM "stoned" age, it was natural for him to gravitate
towards the happy people and thus, conservatism and the GOP. They were happy and the other
side wasn't. It's that simple.
The splits within the
Republican Party and within conservatism after Reagan left the scene in 1988 falls down in
large part on an axis of optimist vs. gloomy, or, maybe a better term, optimist vs.
realist. Gloom, for obvious reasons, is not much of a seller politically or, one would
suppose, as a talk-radio radio format. The liberals can have the monopoly on gloom. But
the problem the optimists have, as once described by David Frum during his better Dead Right days, is that
"it prefers to avoid thinking hard about anything unpleasant." To think about
anything unpleasant means being gloomy, not happy. This
is why, I think, not much planning or thought
was put into what a postwar Iraq would be like because the optimists naturally assumed
Iraqis would welcome the U.S. liberation of their country with candy and flowers and thus
all would be well after the war was over. No siren songs of warning were heeded because
that would be "gloomy" thinking and that's not the way conservatives think. They
think happy thoughts. And if you extend that logic even further, you can see why there was
a slow federal response to Katrina, why today's so-called conservatives ignore the budget
deficit and the growth of big government or the ill-affects of illegal immigration and the
loss of the U.S. manufacturing base. All not happy subjects and therefore not discussed.
Remember, only happy thoughts now.
So the politics of Rush
Limbaugh, it seems, has nothing to do with any kind of "Burkean/Kirkian"
conservatism, but a chorus of the song "Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy."
"Published originally at EtherZone.com :
republication allowed with this notice and hyperlink intact."
Sean Scallon is a freelance writer and newspaper reporter who
lives in Arkansaw, Wisconsin. His work has appeared in Chronicles: A magazine of American
Culture. His first-ever book: Beating the Powers that Be: Independent Political Movements
and Parties of the Upper Midwest and their Relevance in Third-party Politics of Today is
now out on sale from Publish America. Go to the their website at www.publishamerica.com to
order a copy. He is a regular columnist for Ether Zone.
Sean Scallon can be reached at: pchsports@rivertowns.net
Published in the November 2, 2006 issue of Ether Zone.
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Zone.
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