BILL
CLINTON:
OUR FIRST POSTMODERN PRESIDENT
Sam Smith
The following is an excerpt from "Shadows
of Hope: A Freethinker's Guide to Politics in the Times of Clinton"
by Progressive Review editor Sam Smith, written after just one
year of the Clinton administration and published by Indiana University
Press
Not all the myths of the Clinton campaign
were for public consumption. There were also the myths it created
for and about itself.
At the center of the Clinton team's internal
mythology were some of the values that characterized America's
upwardly mobile minority of the 1980s. Most Americans lost ground
in this decade; the real income of a male worker with only a
high school education dropped some 15%. Gaps showed up everywhere.
According to economist Robert J. Samuelson, the difference between
the best and the worst paid college graduates grew as did that
between the best and the worst paid lawyers.
But there was a small group of winners
and the Clinton people were among them. They had gone to the
best undergraduate schools and the best law or business schools.
A few had made millions during the 80s. They possessed boundless
self-confidence, a strong sense of entitlement, a willingness
to work extremely hard and long to win admission to the society
of the hyper-successful, and were neither burdened nor blessed
with notable institutional, family or community ties.
Clinton and his team had grown up as many
of the communal support systems of society were disintegrating.
Family, church, and neighborhood were all on the ropes. Politics
was also breaking down: not only had the machines faded, but
the parties were faltering and Congress splintering. Extraordinary
national common symbols were gone as well: the Kennedys, Rev.
King, and -- just as the 80s began -- John Lennon. Young America
entered the decade very much alone.
Thus the egocentrism of yuppie America
did not originally spring from greed, but from an apparent reality;
it truly seemed a struggle between oneself and the rest of the
world. Quietly, and unnoticed at first, the economy was following
community into disarray and a Darwinian imperative took hold.
Winning became its own justification.
The Clintonites' sense of entitlement stemmed
from qualities they valued in themselves and others: intelligence,
skill in communications, and a managerial ability to rise above
the factions and ideologies of everyday life.
The intelligence they admired was not that
of the philosopher, the artist nor even that of a good street
politician or business entrepreneur. It was of the sort that
excelled in the accumulation and analysis of information and
data. It was the skill of the lawyer or academician who could
find every defect in an argument and compose every possible counter-argument.
As congressional aide and former Washington Monthly editor Jonathan
Rowe would say during Clinton's first year, "The proposals
they send up here are term papers; they have no politics in them."
Politics has many traps for those who rely
on rationality and analysis, for it requires not only objective
calculation but a blending of experience, morality and knowledge
into judgments that can not be parsed and decisions that can
not be charted. And it frequently demands choices before all
their implications can be calculated.
Further, skillful campaigners, no matter
how brilliant their account of the inadequacies and injustices
of current affairs, will not necessarily become wise or intelligent
incumbents. The jobs are so different that one politician, burdened
with the newly discovered problems of office, remarked, "Hell,
I didn't want to be governor; I just wanted to be elected governor."
When Clinton, the lawyer, became president some of the decisions
he faced seemed to propel him towards catatonia. In contrast,
Harry Truman, the haberdasher, directly and simply made even
tougher choices and yet slept well the same night. Clinton, seeing
the possible flaws in a policy, would hesitate, pull back. Roosevelt,
on the other hand, understood that government was a constant
act of experimentation, and that experimentation included failure.
The second virtue, the ability to communicate,
is one common to all animals. What distinguishes human beings,
it has been noted, is that they can also think. This is not a
mere quibble, because people who use the verb communicate a lot
tend to mean something closer to a frog's baroomph than an essay
by Emerson. In response to their communications they seek not
thought nor an articulated response, but a feeling. We are supposed
to feel like having a Michelob, feel like the president's bill
will stimulate the economy, feel like all our questions about
healthcare have been answered.
The rhetoric of contemporary "communications"
is quite different from that of thought or argument. The former
is more like a shuttle bus endlessly running around a terminal
of ideas. The bus plays no favorites; it stops at every concept
and every notion, it shares every concern and feels every pain,
but when you have made the full trip you are right back where
you started.
Consider Mrs. Clinton's comment on the
death penalty:
We go back and forth on the issues
of due process and the disproportionate minorities facing the
death penalty, and we have serious concerns in those areas. We
also abhor the craze for the death penalty. But we believe it
does have a role.
She paused dutifully at major objections
to the death penalty yet finished her homily as though she had
never been to them at all. In the end, the president would propose
fifty new capital crimes in his first year.
The approach became infectious. As the
Clinton administration was attempting to come up with a logical
reason for being in Somalia, an administration official told
the New York Times that "we want to keep the pressure on
[General] Aidid. We don't want to spend all day, every day chasing
him. But if opportunity knocks, we want to be ready. At the same
time, we want go get him to cooperate on the prisoner question
and on a political settlement."
If you challenge the contemporary "communicator,"
you are likely to find the argument transformed from whatever
you thought you were talking about to something quite different
-- generally more abstract and grandiose. For example if you
are opposed to the communicator's proposed policy on trade you
may be accused of being against "change" or "fearful
of new ideas" and so forth. Clinton is very good at this
technique. In fact, the White House made it official policy.
A memo was distributed to administration officials to guide them
in marketing the president's first budget. The memo was titled:
HALLELUJAH! CHANGE IS COMING! It read in part:
While you will doubtless be pressed
for details beyond these principles, there is nothing wrong with
demurring for the moment on the technicalities and educate the
American people and the media on the historic change we need.
Philip Lader, creator and maitre d' of
the New Year's "Renaissance" gatherings attended by
the Clintons for many years, liked this sort of language as well.
Said Lader on PBS:
The gist of Renaissance has been
to recognize the incredible transforming power of ideas and relationships.
And I would hope that this administration might be characterized
by the power of ideas. But also the power of relationships. Of
recognizing the integrity of people dealing with each other.
There is an hyperbolic quality to this
language that shatters one's normal sense of meaning. Simple
competence is dubbed "a world-class operation," common
efficiency is called "Total Quality Management," a
conversation becomes "incredibly transforming," and
a gathering of hyper-ambitious and single-minded professionals
is called a "Renaissance" weekend.
Some of the language sounds significant
while in fact being completely devoid of sense, such as "recognizing
the integrity of people dealing with each other." Some of
it is Orwellian reversal of meaning such as the president's pronouncement
after his first budget squeaked through: "The margin was
close, but the mandate is clear." This is the language not
of the rationalists that the communicators claim to be, but straight
from the car and beer ads. One might ask, for example, exactly
what has really been transformed by the "power of ideas
and relationships" at Renaissance other than the potential
salaries, positions and influence of those participating.
The third virtue claimed by the Clintonites
is the ability to arise above the petty disputes of normal life
-- to become "post-ideological." For example, the president,
upon nominating Judge Ginsberg to the Supreme Court called her
neither liberal nor conservative, adding that she "has proved
herself too thoughtful for such labels." In one parenthetical
aside, Clinton dismissed three hundred years of political philosophical
debate.
Similarly, when Clinton made the very political
decision to name conservative David Gergen to his staff, he announced
that the appointment signaled that "we are rising above
politics."
"We are," he insisted, "going
beyond partisanship that damaged this country so badly in the
last several years to search for new ideas, a new common ground,
a new national unity." And when Clinton's new chief of staff
was announced, he was said to be "apolitical," a description
used in praise.
Politics without politics. The appointee
was someone who, in the words of the Washington Post, "is
seen by most as a man without a personal or political agenda
that would interfere with a successful management of the White
House."
By the time Clinton had been in office
for eight months he appeared ready to dispense with opinion and
thought entirely. "It is time we put aside the divisions
of party and philosophy and put our best efforts to work on a
crime plan that will help all the American people," he declared
in front of a phalanx of uniformed police officers -- presumably
symbols of a new objectivity about crime.
Clinton, of course, was not alone. The
Third Millennium, a slick Perotist organization of considerable
ideological intent, calls itself "post-partisan." Perot
himself played a similar game: the man without a personal agenda.
The media also likes to pretend that it
is above political ideology or cultural prejudice. Journalists
like Leonard Downie Jr. and Elizabeth Drew don't even vote and
Downie, executive editor of the Washington Post, once instructed
his staff to "cleanse their professional minds of human
emotions and opinions."
"What part of government are you interested
in?" I asked a thirtysomething lawyer who was sending in
his resume to the new Clinton administration. "I don't have
any particular interest," he replied, "I would just
like to be a special assistant to someone." It no longer
surprised me; it had been ten years since I met Jeff Bingaman
at a party. He was in the middle of a multi-million dollar campaign
for US Senate; he showed me his brochure and spoke enthusiastically
of his effort. "What brings you to Washington?" I asked.
He said, "I want to find out what the issues are."
If you got the right grades at the right
schools and understood the "process," it didn't matter
all that much what the issues were or what you believed. Issues
were merely raw material to be processed by good "decision-making."
As with Clinton, it was you -- not an idea or a faith or a policy
-- that was the solution.
This purported voiding of ideology is a
major conceit of post-modernism -- that assault on every favored
philosophical notion since the time of Voltaire. Post-modernism
derides the concepts of universality, of history, of values,
of truth, of reason, and of objectivity. It, like Clinton, rises
above "party and philosophy" and like much of the administration's
propaganda, above traditional meaning as well.
Like Clinton, the post-modernist is obsessed
with symbolism. Giovanna Borradori calls post-modernism a "definitive
farewell" to modern reason. And Pauline Marie Rosenau writes:
Post-modernists recognize an
infinite number of interpretations (meanings) of any text are
possible because, for the skeptical post-modernists, one can
never say what one intends with language, [thus] ultimately all
textual meaning, all interpretation is undecipherable.
She adds:
Many diverse meanings are possible
for any symbol, gesture, word . . . Language has no direct relationship
to the real world; it is, rather, only symbolic.
Marshall Blonsky brings us closer to Clinton's
post-modernist side in American Mythologies:
High modernists believe in the
ideology of style -- what is as unique as your own fingerprints,
as incomparable as your own body. By contrast, postmodernism.
. . sees nothing unique about us. Postmodernism regards "the
individual" as a sentimental attachment, a fiction to be
enclosed within quotation marks. If you're postmodern, you scarcely
believe in the "right clothes" that take on your personality.
You don't dress as who you are because, quite simply, you don't
believe "you" are. Therefore you are indifferent to
consistency and continuity.
The consistent person is too
rigid for a post-modern world, which demands above all that we
constantly adapt and that our personalities, statements and styles
to become a reflection for those around us rather than being
innate.
Later, Blonsky (perhaps illuminating why
Gennifer Flowers and the draft and ever-changing policy positions
don't matter) writes, :
Character and consistency were
once the most highly regarded virtue to ascribe to either friend
or foe. We all strove to be perceived as consistent and in character,
no matter how many shattering experiences had changed our lives
or how many persons inhabited our bodies. Today, for the first
time in modern times, a split or multiple personality has ceased
to be an eccentric malady and becomes indispensable as we approach
the turn of the century.
Other presidents have engaged in periodic
symbolic extravaganzas, but most have relied on stock symbols
such as the Rose Garden or the helicopter for everyday use. Clinton,
on the other hand, understands that today all power resides in
symbols and devotes a phenomenal amount of time and effort to
their creation, care and manipulation. Thus the co-chair of his
inauguration announced that people would be encouraged to join
Clinton in a walk across Memorial Bridge a few days before his
swearing-in. "It signifies the way that this president will
act," Harry Thomason said. "There are always going
to be crowds, and he's always going to be among them."
As a post-modernist, Clinton is in some
interesting company. Such as Vanna White, of whom Ted Koppel
remarks, "Vanna leaves an intellectual vacuum, which can
be filled by whatever the predisposition of the viewer happens
to be." Blonsky reports that Koppel sees himself as having
a similar effect and says of Bush's dullness: "You would
think that the voter would become frustrated... but on the contrary
he has become acclimated to the notion that you just fill in
the blank." And then Koppel warns: "It is the very
level of passion generated by Jesse Jackson that carries a price."
Clinton understands the warning and the value of the blank the
viewer can fill in at leisure.
Of course, in the postmodern society that
Clinton proposes -- one that rises above the false teachings
of ideology -- we find ourselves with little to steer us save
the opinions of whatever non-ideologue happens to be in power.
In this case, we may really only have progressed from the ideology
of the many to the ideology of the one or, some might say, from
democracy to authoritarianism.
Among equals, indifference to shared meaning
might produce nothing worse than lengthy argument. But when the
postmodernist is President of the United States, the impulse
becomes a 500-pound gorilla to be fed, as they say, anything
it wants.
Michael Berman describes one postmodernist
writer's "radical skepticism both about what people can
know and about what they can do [passing] abruptly into dogmatism
and peremptory a priori decrees about what is and what is not
possible." The result, Berman says, can be a "left-wing
politics from the perspective of a rightwing metaphysics,"
not a bad description, it turns out, of President Clinton's health
care policy.
That postmodernism is confusing there is
no doubt. Stephen Miller, writing in American Enterprise, quotes
the editor of a collection of essays on the subject attempting
a definition: "I have regarded Postmodernism as a theoretical
and representational 'mood' developing over the last twenty years."
Novelist and semiotician Umberto Eco says the term appears to
be "applied today to anything the user of the term happens
to like."
Certainly Mrs. Clinton found the concept
troubling. In a speech some have compared to Jimmy Carter's maladroit
oration on malaise, she said:
We are, I think, in a crisis
of meaning. What do our governmental institutions mean.? What
do our lives in today's world mean? What does it mean to be educated?
What does it mean to be a journalist? What does it mean in today's
world to pursue not only vocations, to be part of institutions,
but to be human?
We lack at some core level meaning in our
individual lives and collectively.
Quoting a dying Lee Atwater as saying,
"You can acquire all you want and still feel empty,"
Mrs. Clinton went on:
We need a new politics of meaning.
Now, will it be easy to do that? Of course not. Because we are
breaking new ground. . It's not going to be easy to redefine
who we are as human beings in this post-modern age . . .But part
of the great challenge of living is defining yourself in your
moment.
Columnist Charles Krauthammer cast a skeptical
ear towards all this:
Heavy, as we used to say in college.
Yes, there is more to life than power and prestige. Yes, there
is more than politics and economics. Yes, life needs meaning.
Most adults, I dare say, have come to these thundering truisms
early in life.
Trite indeed, a fast-track lawyer's yearning
out of sync with the 94% of Americans who say they believe in
God. Another example of the current trend towards intellectual
cross-dressing in which ministers mess in politics and politicians
pretend they are theologians. Yet in the speech was a cry for
something to grab, something solid in the moment-driven, symbol-pumped
postmodernism of the life she and her husband have known. And
Mrs. Clinton did touch on a common sense that something is missing,
better expressed by UCLA history professor Joyce in the journal
Liberal Education: noted
We live in an era of posts. The
buildings going up around us are postmodern. Our age is postindustrial.
Our literary criticism poststructural. We have postpositivist
sociology, postbehavioral political science, and postanalytical
philosophy: Ours is clearly an age that knows where it has been
and senses that it is no longer there.
Later, she says:
We continue to think within a
liberal frame of reference even as we chip away at the frame.
What we no longer share is liberalism's potent, energizing, cohering
faith in progress. The use of "post" language to locate
ourselves in cultural time indicates that we still identify ourselves
through the old convictions. We have not rejected liberal values
so much as we have lost liberal certitude.
Of course, Bill Clinton, as in other matters,
is far from pure in his post-modernism. He likes facts and data
too much. Writing about the president at the end of his first
100 days, Arkansas columnist Paul Greenberg remarked, "What
the clintonized culture hath wrought is summarized pithily in
one of the better chapters of Jack Butler's new novel, Living
in Little Rock with Miss Little Rock: 'People. . . understood
reality as machinery rather than God's own dream of existence,
intelligence as information rather than judgment.'" Clinton
might sell his programs with the postmodernist's flair for symbolism
and indifference to truth and consistency, but he would head
the most rationalistic government this country has seen since
Robert MacNamara and his whiz kids attempted to purify Vietnam.
In Voltaire's Bastards: The Dictatorship
of Reason in the West the Canadian historian John Ralston Saul
argues: "When the 18th-century philosophers killed God,
they thought they were engaged in housekeeping-- the evils of
corrupt religion would be swept away, the decent aspects of Christian
morality would be dusted off and neatly repackaged inside reason."
Instead says Saul, came "a theology of pure power -- power
born of structure, not of dynasty or arms. The new holy trinity
is organization, technology, and information."
Reviewing Saul's work for the Utne Reader,
Jeramiah Creedon wrote:
The new priest is the technocrat,
someone who interprets events not morally but 'within the logic
of the system.' Saul's point is that reason alone has no inherent
virtue; it is simply an intellectual tool. In fact, when reason
is allowed to unfold in an ethical vacuum, untempered by common
sense, the results are apt to be terrible. The classic example
is the 'perfectly rational' Holocaust, planned by the Nazis with
'the clean efficiency of a Harvard case study.' . . . Reason
has also created a recurring human type well suited to perpetuating
it: the leader for whom calculation is everything.
To embrace all of this -- from cold logic
to hip logos -- and to create a technicolor technocracy without
drowning in the contradictions was a tour de force. To the trinity
of organization, technology and information, the Clinton team
had added a spectacular symbolic sound and light show.
In Work of Nations, seminal Clintonite
Robert Reich described the world's emerging new elite as "symbolic
analysts" who spend their time "manipulating symbols.
Blonksy goes further:
Connotation today -- far beyond
advertising phenomenon -- is no longer merely 'hidden persuasion'
but is in fact a semiosphere, a dense atmosphere of signs triumphantly
permeating all social, political, and imaginative life and, arguably,
constituting our desiring selves as such.
The Clinton campaign would ultimately become
a victim of its own success in manipulating the semiosphere,
for it would not only fool us, it would, once in office, delude
itself. But in July 1992, everything was still in tact, albeit
after a few symbolic alterations in which the media gladly acquiesced.
The message -- what with Ms. Flowers, the draft and the drifts
-- had gone awry. The campaign let it be known that the Clintons
would be "reintroduced" at the convention. They were
and few seemed to find it at all strange or disingenuous, for
we had become postmodern, too.
The convention at times looked more like
a leveraged takeover than a political gathering. Clinton operatives
were busy spinning off the unwanted assets of the Democratic
Party -- blacks, unions, the cities and progressives, as longtime
workers of the firm, from Jesse Jackson to Gov. Casey, were told
they'd have to take a cut in pay or that their services were
no longer needed. If you took a loyalty pledge you got a few
moments on the podium and one sentence in the candidate's acceptance
speech (where liberals were lumped with the homeless as among
the pariahs of America), but after such cameo appearances you
were expected to shut up and get out of the way so the lawyer-lobbyist
kill-or-be-killed tough guys could turn the party into a lean,
mean and profitable corporation.
They didn't fool around. Even the language
had a yuppie baron's tone to it. One businessman reported getting
a call from Clinton fundraiser Rahm Emanuel that began, "The
governor's gonna be in Chicago next week, and he wants to see
you. Bring $10,000 or don't come." The day before the election,
Clinton campaigner Paul Begala told a reporter the campaign couldn't
coast, it had to "drive a stake" through the GOP's
heart. And Newsweek reported Clinton responding to a Bush offensive
by saying, "I want to put a fist halfway down their throats
with this. I don't want subtlety. I want their teeth on the sidewalk."
After you cut through the talk about a
"new covenant" and "inclusion" and so forth,
much of the Clinton campaign was about political power in its
purest sense. There was mention of "vision," but as
they say in Texas, it was all hat and no cattle. These weren't
people out to build coalitions or create a movement, only to
win and make sure everyone knew they had. Later, Time would calculate
that phrase 'new covenant' had virtually disappeared by the spring
of Clinton's first year in office.. A check of five major newspapers
found it mentioned 45 times in July 1992, 31 times in August,
but only four times the following April.
The 80s began with the murder of John Lennon.
In the early 90s, Mark David Chapman explained it this way: "I
wasn't killing a real person. I killed an image. I killed an
album cover."
Within days of the election, Ford began
running a TV ad using a voice-over that sounded just like Clinton
delivering a speech to an enthusiastic audience. Or was it really
Clinton delivering a speech to an enthusiastic audience? Or really
Clinton selling cars a few days after his election?
We had helped put Clinton in the center
of the semiosphere. He knew how it worked and how to work it.
But did we? |