Sanctions Against Russia Symbolic Of A Hollow Culture
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- There are fewer things more pathetic than watching someone take a
running dive off a high board only to end in a spectacular belly flop and still
think that they're scoring a perfect 10. That's U.S. President Barack Obama
right now on the issue of sanctions against Russia. It's a worrying attitude
that increasingly permeates Western culture.
Europe and America supported a coup d'état against a democratically elected
government and president in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, which in turn led to
Russia backing a democratic vote March 16 in Crimea -- the southeast corner of
the country -- to reject the coup and separate.
The West wants Russia to leggo its Eggo, and that's just not going to happen. So
now here comes the pain, comrades. European sanctions are no joke. They involve
the European bureaucracy, whose primary purpose is to act as a supermax prison
for wallets in order to keep the socialist dream alive.
In fact, the EU bureaucracy is so efficient that it preceded itself: Even before
the EU identified 21 Russian and Ukrainian individuals as the targets of
economic sanctions this week -- all subject to asset freezes and travel bans --
the Cypriot newspaper Famagusta Gazette had already reported that Cyprus had
launched investigations into freezing the assets of 18 Ukrainians, including
President Viktor Yanukovych and his prime minister. In light of the EU bailout
Cyprus received last year, and despite being a renowned home to the money of
Russian and Ukrainian oligarchs, it doesn't appear as if Cyprus is going to do
anything to derail the Brussels-to-Nicosia gravy train, even with the country's
former foreign minister, George Lillikas, calling for Cyprus to oppose sanctions
against Russia.
Hot on the heels of the EU sanctions, Obama announced some of his own: Seven
Russian officials and four Ukrainian officials will be barred from vacationing
at Disney World or earning Bank of America loyalty points. Nor will they be
permitted to visit the moon, cure cancer or ride on Cher's "Dressed to Kill"
tour bus.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin responded on Twitter, the
appropriate venue for retorts to hollow threats: "Comrade @BarackObama, what
should do those who have neither accounts nor property abroad? Or U didn't think
about it?" Rogozin speculated that a "prankster" had drafted Obama's sanctions.
"We're making it clear that there are consequences for their actions," Obama
said. But I don't think that word he keeps invoking, "consequences," means what
he thinks it does.
Obama really shouldn't be toying with sanctions anyway. I don't think that
Russian President Vladimir Putin and his cohorts are being unreasonable in their
actions thus far with respect to Ukraine. But if Obama is going to impose
sanctions anyway, he needs to make them meaningful and follow through reliably,
or else he should just zip it. Obama appears to use threats of "consequences" to
fill conversational vacuums, as though they were the equivalent of "uhs," "ums"
and "likes."
Unfortunately, Obama increasingly appears to typify many of the people who voted
for him -- so in love with mere ideas and visions that they fail to sufficiently
consider the reality of implementation.
During the Ronald Reagan years, we Generation Xers grew up watching movies like
"Flashdance," "Top Gun" and "Rocky." Pop culture and society's message was
clear: Unless you invest the sweat capital, you aren't getting anywhere. There
was no faking it, no shortcuts. Exceptionalism was earned, not granted. These
days, hard work has been replaced by hot air, and Rocky Balboa has been replaced
by reality-television stars whose main talent is attracting attention to
themselves.
Passion is largely dead -- unless it means defending one's own ego. Putin, by
contrast, has an undeniable passion for things beyond his personal self -- his
country, his people -- possibly to the point of obsession. But obsession means
that you're thinking about it day and night, and passion means that after all
that thinking, you're ultimately driven to act. Sadly, Western leaders are no
match for this.
What we're witnessing now is a culture war. Think Rocky Balboa facing off
against a Kardashian. And our biggest enemy isn't Russia or any other nation --
it's within. We no longer have the heart and fire even to be who we once were.
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN