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The bookish, twice-unsuccessful Democratic presidential candidate Adlai
Stevenson once sighed that if most thinking people supported him, it still
wouldn't be enough in America because "I need a majority."
For some reason, Democrats have chosen to follow the disastrous model of
Stevenson and not that of feisty man-of-the-people Missourian Harry Truman --
though the former nearly wrecked the party and the latter got elected.
Former President Jimmy Carter likewise seems to feel that he's still too smart
for us. Carter, who turns 86 on Friday, is hitting the news shows to explain why
he remains America's "superior" ex-president -- and why more than 30 years ago
he was so successful yet so underappreciated as our chief executive.
Most Americans instead remember a very different President Carter who finished
his single term with 18 percent inflation, 18 percent interest rates, 11 percent
unemployment, long gas lines, and a world in chaos from hostage-taking in
Teheran and Soviet communist aggression in
Afghanistan and Central America.
Now, John Kerry -- who failed to win the presidency in 2004 and recently tried
to avoid state sales taxes on his new $7 million yacht -- is voicing similar
frustrations about Americans' inability to fathom what their betters are trying
to do for them. He is furious that an unsophisticated electorate might not
return congressional Democratic majorities in 2010. Kerry laments that, "We have
an electorate that doesn't always pay that much attention to what's going on."
Instead it falls for "a simple slogan rather than the facts or the truth or
what's happening."
In 2006, Kerry warned students that if they did poorly in school, they could
"get stuck in
Iraq." He apparently had forgotten that soldiers volunteer for military
service, and are overwhelmingly high school graduates.
In the 2008 campaign, Michelle Obama at one point said of her husband's burden,
"Barack is one of the smartest people you will ever encounter who will deign to
enter this messy thing called politics."
That sense of intellectual superiority was channeled by Barack Obama himself
when he later tried to explain why his message was not resonating with less
astute rural Pennsylvanians: "And it's not surprising then they get bitter, they
cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren't like them or
anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their
frustrations."
During the recent Ground Zero mosque controversy, Obama returned to that
Carter-Kerry-Obama sort of condescension. When asked about the overwhelming
opposition to the mosque, the president felt again that the unthinking hoi
polloi had given into their unfounded fears: "I think that at a time when the
country is anxious generally and going through a tough time, then fears can
surface, suspicions, divisions can surface in a society."
The president often clears his throat with "Let me be perfectly clear" and "Make
no mistake about it" -- as if we, his schoolchildren, have to be warned to pay
attention to the all-knowing teacher at the front of the class.
Disappointed progressive pundits also resonate this angst over having to deal
with childlike Americans. Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson recently
psychoanalyzed the falling support for the president by claiming that "The
American people are acting like a bunch of spoiled brats."
Thomas Frank's best-selling 2004 book "What's the Matter With Kansas?" lamented
that uninformed voters were easily tricked into voting against their "real"
economic interests.
When America votes for a liberal candidate, it is redeemed by the left as
intelligent -- and derided as dense when it does not. We were told not to worry
that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner did not pay all his income taxes since
we were lucky to have someone so well educated and experienced in high finance.
Note that few Democratic candidates are running on the health-care bill they
passed, promising at the time that it would be appreciated by a suspicious
American public. More federal borrowing and amnesty are still pushed under the
euphemisms "stimulus" and "comprehensive immigration reform." House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi claimed that the tea party movement was merely a synthetic
Astroturf movement. Professors and preachers may like such sermonizing, but for
politicians it's a lousy way to get elected. Again, compare the relative fates
of the patronizing Adlai Stevenson and the plain-speaking Harry Truman.
For many of today's liberals, the fact that the president has to deal with so
many Neanderthal know-nothings explains why he can't, as promised, close
Guantanamo, end "don't ask, don't tell," or do away with Bush-era renditions,
tribunals wiretaps, and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
But current polls suggest that these clueless and unappreciative Americans
apparently believe that an elite education does not ensure their officials can
balance a budget, pay their own taxes or speak candidly.
What an outrageous "How dare they!" thought.
Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution,
Stanford University, and author, most recently, of "A War Like No Other: How the
Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War." You can reach him by
e-mailing author@victorhanson.com.
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