Obama pretends to be above the political divides he fostered, but it was Trump who introduced supra-ideological politics
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Former President Barack Obama slammed the notion of ideological
divisions last week while stumping for New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy ahead of
next month’s gubernatorial elections. “These are serious times, and we need
serious people. We have too much to get done to be going backwards,” Obama said.
“Here we are trying to recover from a global pandemic that has killed more than
700,000 Americans, put millions in harm’s way. We don’t have time to waste on
phony culture wars or fake outrage that the right-wing media are peddling just
to juice up your ratings.”
In case anyone has failed to notice, the conventional right-left paradigm has
already been fading as the primary internal battle line within western
societies. What has since emerged is a new divide between those who mostly
adhere to the establishment narrative on the key issues facing our societies
versus the challengers skeptical of the status quo.
And supra-ideological politics all started with Donald Trump — not with Barack
Obama.
Obama transitioned to party politics from a career as a community organizer —
essentially a professional reformer — working on the activist left. It was the
same political left that spent eight years seething about the fact that George
W. Bush, who was either an evil genius or a total moron, depending on which
leftist you were asking, beat professional environmental drum-beater Al Gore in
the closely fought 2000 presidential election. So, in 2008, all those
right-wingers were going down. And Obama was their payback: an activist who knew
godfather of community organizing Saul Alinsky’s, “Rules for radicals” inside
and out.
Beyond Obama’s appeal to the hardcore left, which seemed to vicariously enact
their personal revenge for Bush through him — he also had a global appeal.
European politicians drooled over Obama during his eight years in the White
House. Mainly because his agenda was their agenda, which basically involved
selling out the middle class by peddling a con job of lofty principles all while
fattening the wallets of the elites.
You could almost hear the swooning all the way from European Union headquarters
when Obama crossed the Atlantic to rally Europeans during his first election
campaign. During a campaign event in Berlin in July 2008, he hit all the right
globalist notes, from world peace to climate change. Obama was going to end wars
and save the world. “This is the moment we must come together to save this
planet,” Obama told Berliners. Ultimately, he ended up ramping up drone strikes
overseas, the only thing that has really been saved by all the climate change
rhetoric seems to be the economic interests of those who are constantly peddling
it.
So, it’s a bit rich when Obama now evokes fake culture wars when he’s long been
fueling the same establishment propaganda that propagates it. You can’t sing
from the leftist globalist hymn book and be given a free pass by the
anti-establishment movement now dominated by the political right. The
establishment itself has now largely become synonymous with the political left.
So, when Obama attacks the right-wing for fueling culture wars that he calls
“phony”, what he’s really doing is protecting the political left that dominates
the establishment. So, by extension, he’s protecting the current order in
Washington and in the world that has so disadvantaged the average working and
middle-class citizen of western nations.
And while former President Donald Trump was often accused of fueling the culture
wars, it was mostly a misinterpretation of what he was doing, which was trying
to dismantle the Washington establishment (and arguably, the Washington-based
global order). Which is precisely what he was elected to do.
You might recall that in 2016 many voters held their noses over Trump’s
abrasiveness and took a chance on the political outsider for the sole purpose of
avoiding another four years of the free world being led by an establishment
fixture like former senator, secretary of state, and first lady Hillary Clinton.
The fact that Trump’s targeting of the status quo was misunderstood by some
critics as right-wing pandering further gives credence to the notion that the
right is synonymous with anti-establishment. So, if one wants to crush any
establishment opposition, just attack the credibility of the political right.
And if you want to defend the political left without openly advocating for it,
then just defend the status quo and its institutions — both domestic and abroad.
Obama’s right about one thing, though. The problems we all face are too
important for petty politics. He evoked the example of the pandemic. Again, it’s
hardly a coincidence that the left is evangelizing the establishment COVID-19
narrative, however much it flip-flops, self-contradicts, cherry picks or censors
information – while the right constantly challenges it.
Until the corruption endemic in politics is brought to light and we start
hearing the truth from our leaders instead of manipulative talking points
tailored to opaque special interests, tribalism and division will persist.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN