Friday, April 17, 2015

David Brooks: The Great Project Continues, Ctd.



Mother Simpson: Abe, isn't Homer cute?

Grampa: Probably. I'm trying to watch the Super Bowl. If people don't support this thing, it might not make it.

Howard Cosell: [on TV] Joe Willy Namath, swaggering off the field, his sideburns an apogee of sculpted sartorium. The foppish follicles pioneered by Ambrose Burnside, Appomattox 1865.

Mother Simpson: His wild, untamed facial hair revealed a new world of rebellion of change. A world where doors were open for women like me. But Abe was stuck in his button-down plastic-fantastic Madison Avenue scene.

Grampa: Look at them sideburns! He looks like a girl. Now, Johnny Unitas. There's a haircut you could set your watch to.
-- The Simpsons, 1995

In January 1969, two quarterbacks played against each other in Super Bowl III. Johnny Unitas and Joe Namath were both superstars. They were both from Western Pennsylvania, but they came from different cultural universes. Unitas was reticent, workmanlike and deliberately unglamorous. Namath was flashy and a playboy. He turned himself into a marketing brand and wrote a memoir jokingly called, “I Can’t Wait Until Tomorrow ’Cause I Get Better Looking Every Day.”

The contrast between these two men symbolizes a broader shift from a culture of self-effacement, which says, “I’m no better than anybody else and nobody is better than me,” to a culture of self-expression, which says, “Look at what I’ve accomplished. I’m special.”

The conventional story, beloved especially on the right, is that this cultural shift took place in the 1960s. First there was the Greatest Generation, whose members were modest and self-sacrificing, but then along came the baby boomers who were narcissistic and relativistic.

As I found while researching a book, this story line doesn’t really fit the facts. The big shift in American culture did not happen around the time of Woodstock and the Age of Aquarius. It happened in the late 1940s, and it was the members of the Greatest Generation that led the shift...
-- David Brooks, April, 2015

It is* possible that if Mr. Brooks had dispensed with the first four paragraphs of lazy filler which padded out his column today, he might have been able to spare a few words to mention other, modern events which bear directly and overwhelmingly on his subject, "When Cultures Shift".

A few words for Vietnam and civil rights, for instance.

And a few words for Nixon and Reagan.

Maybe a few words about how faith in Mr. Brooks' beloved institutions did not fall in a sudden, inexplicable cloudburst of cynicism and self-help books, but rather cynicism and self-interest grew like an infection from the wounds those institutions inflicted on themselves.  

During this period, We The People learned from Vietnam and Watergate how completely and utterly our government had lied to us, and how willing they were to exploit race and fear to stay in power.

During this period, we learned that organized labor had sold out it members.  The Church betrayed it congregants.  The white power structure betrayed minorities and killed those who spoke out too loudly.  The government beat protesters in the streets of Chicago and shot them down like dogs at Kent State.

Perhaps if Mr. Brooks had sacrificed Johnny U he could have squeezed in a little of that American history.

Perhaps he could have spent an hour skimming Adam Curtis' excellent "The Century of the Self" and learned about how the sentiment Mr. Brooks' tsk-tsks in his column --
People need to love themselves more. They need to remove external restraints on their glorious selves. 
-- did not lead to Hippie Anarchy but was hand-walked by high-skilled public relations professionals straight into the heart of Madison Avenue (Buy!Buy!Buy!  Because you're worth it!) and then into the arms of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher (Get rid of that Evil Gummint which stands in the way of your dreams!  Because you're worth it!) and thence to the wholesale razing of the very institutions Mr. Brooks holds so dear.

And maybe a few words about Lee Atwater, Fox News and how the Modern Conservative movement -- David Fucking Brooks' Conservative movement -- was deliberately created as a mob of nihilistic, reactionary, fuck-stick-ignorant, often-racist, often-openly-seditious, anti-government vandals so the GOP -- -- David Fucking Brooks' GOP -- could win elections.

Perhaps a few words about the war Mr. Brooks and his President, George W. Bush, lied us into and then botched.  And maybe just a hypertext link of two to the full-frontal, hippie punching smear campaign that came along with it? Perhaps a few more words about Jerry Falwell or Phyllis Schlafly or Ralph Reed or Glenn Beck.  Maybe Joe McCarthy could have been spared a syllable or two.  Or Abu Gharib.  Or Terri Schiavo.  Or the drowned city of New Orleans?  Or the "IBG/YBG"  philosophy of Mr. Brooks' bankster friends who blew up the world economy to the shock of Alan Greenspan who had sworn by John Galt and Dagny Taggart and all the saints of laissez-faire capitalism that such a thing was unpossible.

Maybe one word about hysterical anti-gummint hategasm that called itself the "Tea Party" (Spoiler: There. Is. No. Tea. Party.)  Maybe another word about Cliven Bundy.  About Sean Hannity.

And perhaps a line or two could have been allocated to mention "welfare queens" and "young bucks" and all the "free stuff" that the Kenyan Usurper and his wife, Moochelle are handing out to the coloreds to keep them dependent on the Evil gummint.

But of course as we all know, none of these things that actually happened and people who actually existed will ever find a home in any David Brooks column because that would blow his whole long con: radiczlly revising all of modern American history into a work of Whig Fan Fiction.  Or as one bitter, fringe nut put it back in 2013:
...it is now painfully clear that Mr. Brooks is engaged in a long-term project to completely rewrite the history of American Conservatism: to flense it of all of the Conservative social, political  economic and foreign policy debacles that make Mr. Brooks wince and repackage the whole era as a fairy tale of noble Whigs being led through treacherous hippie country by the humble David Brooks.

And odds are he'll get away with it too.
So instead we will continue getting these reports from David Brooks' Excellent Whig Adventure, where none of this shit ever happened.  Where society has been screwed up by commencement speakers, self-help books an Twitter:
But I would say that we have overshot the mark. We now live in a world in which commencement speakers tell students to trust themselves, listen to themselves, follow their passions, to glorify the Golden Figure inside. We now live in a culture of the Big Me, a culture of meritocracy where we promote ourselves and a social media culture where we broadcast highlight reels of our lives. What’s lost is the more balanced view, that we are splendidly endowed but also broken. And without that view, the whole logic of character-building falls apart. You build your career by building on your strengths, but you improve your character by trying to address your weaknesses.
And where the "Both Siderist" razor which Mr. Brooks now hides in virtually every column -- that no one is really responsible for the mess we are in so please stop pointing fingers at me! -- is to be found in the very last line... (emphasis added):
That great tradition and body of wisdom was accidentally tossed aside in the late 1940s. It’s worth reviving and modernizing it.

*Thanks for the catch!

12 comments:

pdore said...

Great column. Can you fix one typo? "*It it* possible that if Mr. Brooks..."

steeve said...

"then along came the baby boomers who were narcissistic and relativistic" and voted republican way too damn much.

I've seen a few juvenile delinquency films of the 50s (because the Mystery Science Theater guys made fun of them), and they spend their time calling the greatest generation the Worst Parents Ever, raising a bunch of no-empathy anything-goes authority-hating monsters. Guess those films were on to something.

So if Brooks's Big Book of Character won't spend any time going through real history, he'll have lots of room to mention that the surest mark of character is a refusal to vote for republicans.

Cinesias said...

David Fucking Brooks + Glenn Greenwald = Both Sides Do It

That tweet says a whole fucking bunch about the PurityLeader™ and his PurityBrigade™ followers.

Any time and every time a PurityBrigade™ member comes and comments, let their drivel stay up, and just reply with that .jpg of his tweet.

tony in san diego said...

It's always projection with these guys.

Hey I should make than an acronym like IOKIYAR:

IAPWTG!

Mike Lumish said...

Speaking of full frontal, hippie punching smear campaigns: our old friend, David Atkins, has been busy of late. You remember him, the big wheel county official (with a blog!) who dropped by to "punch down" - as he put it - on the D listers who were discussing the support enunciated by his friends for the "destroy the Democratic Party and await the glories that will arise" strategy that is popular in some circles.

Fast forward two years and Atkins is reduced to hanging out on C list blogs like the Smirking Chimp and pleading with his friends not to vote for Rand Paul. Golly, who could have ever seen something like that coming?

Anyway, 2016 is coming and we may win but we well lose - and if we lose it's really going to suck, but we have lost before and it sucked and we got through it so it will day in hell before I welcome Atkins and his ilk back into the Democratic coalition.

Unknown said...

I contend that Murka was exceptional up until the conclusion of the NASA Apollo program.

Robert said...

Enough with the purity brigade bullshit. Criticizing the President for imprisoning government whistle-blowers, while letting the bankers who crashed the world's economy walk scot free* IS NOT wishing for a unicorn.

Berto

*to say nothing of the fast-tracking of "free" trade agreements giving corporations legal rights to the detriment of sovereign nations.

Chan Kobun said...

Marx was wrong. History repeats first as farce, then as tragedy.

Robert, we've heard all this self-righteous sparkle-pony shit before, now sit down.

Ivory Bill Woodpecker said...

Welcome, Robert, though I can warn you that you'd probably be wasting your time here.

Fiddlin Bill said...

If you want to put an exact point on something that is, as you suggest, necessarily fatter and fuzzier, I'd pick the moment when the bullet entered Dr. King's neck. That's when all those rosy ideals and the possibility that America might get over its dark past in our era died. Memphis, April, 1968, on a motel balcony.

steeve said...

Refusing to vote democratic in general elections in the hope that the republicans win and ruin the world so much that the people will Rise Up _is_ wishing for a unicorn.

Nobody objects to criticizing democrats while working to destroy republicans.

Robert said...

steeve,
Yes, that is crazy. We know Republicans ruining the world doesn't make the people rise up, because they would have after 2008.

I'll still vote for Democrats in general elections, but only if I think they won't sell me out for political expedience (e.g. Obama's vote for Telecomm immunity or almost everything Claire McCaskill does).

Here's a good slogan for you:
Both sides do it, but the GOP-side does it more.