2.22.2009

Rich

Frank Rich today talks about the fine line Obama must walk by installing confidence while being explicit about the dire problems the country faces - and must bring his message to a tone-deaf America.
No one knows, of course, but a bigger question may be whether we really want to know. One of the most persistent cultural tics of the early 21st century is Americans’ reluctance to absorb, let alone prepare for, bad news. We are plugged into more information sources than anyone could have imagined even 15 years ago. The cruel ambush of 9/11 supposedly “changed everything,” slapping us back to reality. Yet we are constantly shocked, shocked by the foreseeable. Obama’s toughest political problem may not be coping with the increasingly marginalized G.O.P. but with an America-in-denial that must hear warning signs repeatedly, for months and sometimes years, before believing the wolf is actually at the door.

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Steroids, torture, lies from the White House, civil war in Iraq, even recession: that’s just a partial glossary of the bad-news vocabulary that some of the country, sometimes in tandem with a passive news media, resisted for months on end before bowing to the obvious or the inevitable. “The needle,” as Danner put it, gets “stuck in the groove.”

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Two comments:
It's easy to get us to believe your lies if we in fact want you to tell us those lies. -McKibben

On lack of effort:
You can lead people to the gas chambers if you can just give them enough reason to think that they're showers. Likewise, You can lead people to the end of the world if you can just get them to believe they can solve the global warming problem by changing a few light bulbs to CFLs.
-Derrick Jensen relating the lack of effort to an existing analogy.