Thursday, August 09, 2012

Is Our President Learning?



The short answer appears to be "yes, but very slowly". 

I would have been greatly encouraged if something like the following had appeared in "The New York Times" in, say, December, 2008:
Obama Is an Avid Reader, and Critic, of the News

...
The news media have played a crucial role in Mr. Obama’s career, helping to make him a national star not long after he had been an anonymous state legislator. As president, however, he has come to believe the news media have had a role in frustrating his ambitions to change the terms of the country’s political discussion. He particularly believes that Democrats do not receive enough credit for their willingness to accept cuts in Medicare and Social Security, while Republicans oppose almost any tax increase to reduce the deficit.

Privately and publicly, Mr. Obama has articulated what he sees as two overarching problems: coverage that focuses on political winners and losers rather than substance; and a “false balance,” in which two opposing sides are given equal weight regardless of the facts.

Mr. Obama has said the lack of an effective narrative has been one of his administration’s biggest missteps. “The mistake of my first term — couple of years — was thinking that this job was just about getting the policy right,” Mr. Obama said in an interview last month with CBS’s Charlie Rose. “But the nature of this office is also to tell a story to the American people.”

While Mr. Obama frequently criticizes the heated speech of cable news, he sees what he views as deeper problems in news outlets that strive for objectivity. In private meetings with columnists, he has talked about the concept of “false balance” — that reporters should not give equal weight to both sides of an argument when one side is factually incorrect. He frequently cites the coverage of health care and the stimulus package as examples, according to aides familiar with the meetings.

Jay Carney, the White House press secretary, was previously Time magazine’s Washington bureau chief. He said the president thought that some journalists were more comfortable blaming both parties, regardless of the facts. “To be saying ‘they’re both equally wrong’ or ‘they’re both equally bad,’ ” Mr. Carney said, “then you look high-minded.”

The term “false balance,” which has been embraced by many Democrats, emerged in academic papers in the 1990s to describe global-warming coverage.

“I believe this type of ‘accuracy’ and ‘balance’ are a huge thing afflicting contemporary media,” said Josh Marshall, editor and publisher of the left-leaning Web site Talking Points Memo.
...
But it didn't. 

 Nor did any of this high-order thinking show up in print in 2009, or in 2010, or in 2011.

The depressing fact is, it apparently took until this week for the Obama Administration to fully dial into the fact that Centrism is nothing but Conservative-enabling bullshit.  Which maybe -- just maybe -- had something to do with the with the kinds of columnists with whom President chose to have his "small sit-downs": 
...
In dealing directly with the news media, Mr. Obama prefers small sit-downs with columnists, including The Wall Street Journal’s Peggy Noonan, The Washington Post’s E. J. Dionne and Ruth Marcus, and The New York Times’s David Brooks, among others... 
The topic of "Centrism is Corrosive Bullshit" is not merely one which I and many, many other Liberals columnists have have written about thousands and thousands of times at exhaustive and exhausting length over the past decade,  but it is also a topic which almost any Liberal I know would have been more than happy to straighten the Obama Administration out on had they ever bothered to ask during one of the President's many little "summit meetings" with the smaller digital ink-stained wretches:
In addition to well-known columnists, Mr. Obama also holds summit meetings with niche online outlets that did not have access, or did not exist, during previous administrations, including personal finance Web sites like The Consumerist and Fool.com, and African-American Web sites like Jack & Jill Politics, The Root and theGrio.
Regular readers of this blog know that I consider the Big Lie of Centrism to be the most destructive political force abroad in modern America, because it is our greatest enabling lie -- the Big Lie that makes all the little lies possible.  Readers know that I believe the main political mission of Liberalism in the short term must be to raze the edifice of Fame Centrism to the ground and then salt the ground. 

To that end, it seemed like a good time to re-run this post, which I wrote back in 2010, shortly after the Democratic Party got crushed as a direct result of buying into the core Centrist delusion that if Democrats (and only Democrats) would just compromise with the batshit Right...and then compromise some more...and then compromise a little more....and then compromise just a weeee bit more....the Randite Supermen could be appeased sufficiently to hold off nuking the global economy for a little while longer.

Because now that the Administration appears to be paying attention, maybe they're actually paying attention
Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Left


For his entire adult life, Barack Obama has succeeded by offering himself as the perfect midpoint between others. As a mathematical function, not a leader. As an averaging equation, not a true believer.

Since he showed up on the political radar, he has marketed himself relentlessly as
Half black and half white...
Half American urbanite, half world-citizen...
Half wonk, half preacher...
Half Harvard Yard, half Back o' the Yards...
Half red and half blue...
And this bone-deep reflex -- plus his formidable intellect and ability to rise to the rhetorical occasion -- would have prepared him perfectly for the Presidency...if this were 1960.

But it is not 1960 -- nor is he dealing with Harvard Conservatives pals or Springfield Republican pols -- and being a results-agnostic "process guy" when the process is utterly broken no longer works.

Instead, the ideologically-lockstepping Right led by Rupert Murdoch and the Koch brothers have found in Obama their perfect patsy: the Democrat who seems constitutionally incapable of counter-punching, who can only feel comfortable while suspended between two opposing positions and who will, therefor, find a compromise between opposites even when he has to invent wholly fictional opposing views to which he can cede half the playing field.

From Paul Krugman:
Lacking All Conviction

Mark Thoma directs us to an appalling story — apparently Obama held a meeting after the midterm to debate whether our unemployment problem is cyclical or structural.

What I want to know is, who was arguing for structural? I find it hard to think of anyone I know in the administration’s economic team who would make that case, who would deny that the bulk of the rise in unemployment since 2007 is cyclical. And as I and others have been trying to point out, none of the signatures of structural unemployment are visible: there are no large groups of workers with rising wages, there are no large parts of the labor force at full employment, there are no full-employment states aside from Nebraska and the Dakotas, inflation is falling, not rising.

More generally, I can’t think of any Democratic-leaning economists who think the problem is largely structural.
...
In order to avoid wasting his presidency, squandering the opportunity we have given him, and letting the country spiral into a permanent corporate feudal pest-hole, Barack Obama must do the hardest thing of all: he must exceed his design specifications. This is not unprecedented, but like Franklin Roosevelt the capitalist-turned-social-Democrat or Abraham Lincoln the compromiser-turned-Emancipator, Obama must let go of a central pillar of his identity and embrace the brutal fact that our modern house divided against itself cannot stand.

That we cannot endure permanently half-Fox and half-free.

That we will become all one thing, or all the other.

And that this is your fight, President Obama.

This burden has fallen to you: it cannot be shirked and cannot be delegate.

If you take up this challenge, millions of us will have your back, Mr. President.

But if you cannot summon the inner strength to evolve past your reflexive need to compromise with people who want to destroy you, then we are all well and truly fucked.

12 comments:

steeve said...

Imagine the democrats advocating for increasing the top tax rate to 70%. A report "balanced" between that and the conservative position would still be false balance, since the 70% rate is objectively correct and proven to work.

But the media wouldn't report it balanced! It would be yelling at democrats, and only democrats, for being completely insane. Which shows that the media doesn't feel any pressure to be objectively high-minded. It feels pressure ONLY to be conservative. They report false balance only when conservatism is indefensible on every single point.

Same with the "horse race" coverage. If the democrat is way behind in the polls, the media would go out of its way to prop up the republican.

The pressure to be conservative, plus the pressure to be unforgivably stupid and lazy, are the only forces acting on the media.

(The media also isn't pressured to make money. When's the last time it changed its format to respond to demand? When's the last time it cared about how low their ratings are?)

marindenver said...

"But if you cannot summon the inner strength to evolve past your reflexive need to compromise with people who want to destroy you, then we are all well and truly fucked."

This was a great post (as usual). I'm up in the mountains this weekend (which,as I just learned, the Ryan Budget proposes selling off to the highest bidder including the most awesomely beautiful place in the county, possibly the world, Rocky Mountain National Park rather than eliminate tax credits for big oil) trying to relax but, oops, I brought my computer. But I think Barack is getting there or if he is not at least those managing his campaign are. The *bitch* slaps at RMoney are coming pretty regularly now.

Also, too, I had to listen to NPR morans as I drove opining that invoking the Clintons in their campaigning was just another case of "both sides do it" because the Rethugs were telling outright lies about Clinton and Obama was just hoping to carry on his legacy. Lucky I didn't drive off the road.

And also, also, too. Obama's basic decency and willingness to believe the best in other people is one of the things I love about him. But politics ain't beanbag.

Eric Whitney said...

I wish Obama would read some books, in particular _Why Nations Fail_, and _Debt, The First 5,000 Years_. I'll settle if he just reads _Why Nations Fail_. If he would only do so, he might realize how high the stakes are in his presidency.

Cirze said...

But if you cannot summon the inner strength to evolve past your reflexive need to compromise with people who want to destroy you, then we are all well and truly fucked.

And more and more of those left of center will move away from supporting Obama out of disgust and further alienation.

And there's nothing we can do about that as education just encourages more people to move away.

S

P.S. Watching W. Kamau Bell's new show "Totally Biased" with Chris Rock right now.

Fantastic!

Anonymous said...

From 2009


http://www.correntewire.com/people_have_spoken_health_care_and_marijuana_and_obama_naturally_ignoring_them#more

And this is the sad part. The disconnect between the hopes and dreams people still have, and Obama's performance, is really quite glaring; we focus a lot on health care here, so that's what I picked out, but the same disconnect is evident on foreign policy (permanent closure of all torture facilities; re-evaluate aid to Israel).

Anonymous said...

From2009

http://www.correntewire.com/people_have_spoken_health_care_and_marijuana_and_obama_naturally_ignoring_them#more

And this is the sad part. The disconnect between the hopes and dreams people still have, and Obama's performance, is really quite glaring; we focus a lot on health care here, so that's what I picked out, but the same disconnect is evident on foreign policy (permanent closure of all torture facilities; re-evaluate aid to Israel).

cactusflinthead said...

Two points
1) Somewhere back in the fuzzy gray cells I have a memory of someone from his past saying of Obama back during the primaries that though he appears slow he finishes strong. I would advocate patience rather than outright dismissal.
2) If you are going to sit out the election you are aiding and abetting the opponent. Purists will not ever find the perfect statesman. They do not exist.

I do not condemn the goading of the man. That is our job. I applaud it. I welcome it. However, I will also goad you into getting into the voting booth. Hold your nose and vote for Obama if you have to. Reluctant voters are better than non-voters. The country cannot afford to have another Congress such as this one. It isn't just about you. Down ballot matters. Your district matters. Get out there and vote. Hold their feet to the fire, goad them relentlessly, but you damn well better show up come November and some cash to deserving individuals would be nice before then.

Caoimhin Laochdha said...

While Mr. Obama frequently criticizes the heated speech of cable news, he sees what he views as deeper problems in news outlets that strive for objectivity

I assume he means "neutrality," which creates false equivalencies, as opposed to "objectivity" which requires that a reporter actually report facts - even when "facts" upset people on "either side" of the issue

For years, those of us on the left, have suffered from media beholden to the masquerade of neutrality which is a license for lying and dissembling. No matter how big the lie and no matter how outrageous the claim, NPR will report it and put the burden on a liberal (or someone NPR claims is a "liberal") to give "the other side." The result is, invariably, to validate claims such as "more strip mining and expanding the use of coal generation to meet all our energy needs."

"Neutral" and "objective" are completely different concepts. Personally, (to illustrate the point), I am a liberal and I tend toward the socialist tax policies of Dwight Eisenhower, and I am a partisan Democrat. I am also completely objective rarely ever neutral

Cenk Uygur sums it up perfectly:

Here's neutral: The Jedi rebels say the Death Star is a peril to the universe, but Darth Vader assures the universe that the empire is trying to protect us from the insurgent terrorists that seek to do us harm.

Here's objective: It's called the Death Star. Its objective is complete control. Darth Vader's tactics are brutal and dictatorial.

But, of course, it's even worse. The headline today would read: "Vader Says He Will Keep Us Safe!"

sláinte,
cl

See, generally, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/cenk-uygur/the-media-isnt-supposed-t_b_20521.html

Dan Hagen said...

Well said. If you stop halfway between left and right, you will not find the home of truth. That's the address of cowardice and intellectual laziness. Many people take a wrong turn and get lost right around there.
http://danhagen-odinsravens.blogspot.com/2012/02/lets-be-clear-about-this-isnt-any.html

Anonymous said...

What he said ^^...and this guy:
http://www.esquire.com/blogs/politics/black-like-him-0912

Anonymous said...

Driftglass,

I didn't think you would get any better, but you just did. I thought you would remain the best heckler in the world, but perhaps not the best teacher. This post and the later one about Gingrich rules are among the best political writing I have ever seen; clear succinct, accurate, all-encompassing. You managed to distill much of the Republican evil into these posts.

Carry on Driftglass. We need you badly.

Paul Rogers

Paul L. said...

A few of us inside the system were arguing this privately since the early '90s, when the mainstream press went demonstrably beyond ``false balance'' in covering Bill Clinton, re Whitewater, Troopergate, the White House travel office and so on. There was an assumed liberal prejudice among reporters that was assiduously corrected with slavish attention to concerns for what conservative critics might think. Reportage didn't necessarily adopt the conservative point of view -- and I'm excluding here any outlets where the right-wing ownership baked in the bias, e.g. Washington Times, Fox ``News'' et al -- but editors made damned sure conservatives had a voice whenever they had a beef, whereas the reverse was simply not true and isn't true now for a liberal point of view. Liberal bloggers have been correcting the press's bias for a solid decade now.
It's good that Obama seems to be finally freeing himself from the illusion that there is a liberal media. It's quite disheartening on the other hand to see a purported media ``expert'' like the Project for Excellence in Journalism apply false balance in assessing Obama's critique of the mainstream news media. The NYT writer strokes the Bush-Cheney regime, allowing its unnamed members to assert they ``ignored'' the press, when the reality -- which should be painfully obvious to the former employers and colleagues of Judith Miller -- is that the regime manipulated and abused the press to further its power. The Project spokesman then comes along and affirms that Obama's misgivings are the same as Bush-Cheney's cynicism by contending that we've ``learned'' to be wary of presidents who criticize the press.
I hope Obama can see through that bullshit, too.