Ira Chernus PROFESSOR OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER |
Beyond
the
Who can deny
it? It’s an almost physical pleasure to watch George W. Bush’s fall from grace.
And it’s so easy. All you have to do is say, “Bush has botched the war on
terrorism. Bush is not keeping us safe from terrorists -- or from the terrors
of nature.” You’ve already got over half the country with you, and more are
jumping on board the anti-Bush train every day. But before we settle in to ride
that train to political glory, we ought to consider whether it can really take
us to a better future.
The latest TV
ad from MoveOn.org sums up the commonest theme of the campaign to cripple, if
not topple, the Bush presidency: “We’re no safer today than we were four years
ago.” The rest of the case goes something like this (and who can deny its
accuracy): We have good reason to be
afraid. We’re more vulnerable than ever to another attack on our soil, because
the Bush administration is fighting the war on terrorism totally the wrong
way. In fact, in
At the huge
DC peace rally, speakers denounced the war as a diversion from another pressing
threat. "National security begins in
Again, who
can deny that making levees makes much more sense than sending more Louisiana
National Guards to
Hurricane Katrina
has sealed the public image of Bush as a failure. He is, after all, a one-issue
president. His success hinges completely on getting high marks in protecting us
from danger. Now his big gamble -- turning the war on terror into a war on
The Bush
administration still doesn’t seem to get it. With hundreds of thousands descending on
The President’s only chance to recoup is a reprise of 9/11, sending another chill of fear up the spine of the body politic. Bush’s success has always depended on the fear factor, on the prospect of threat without end.
Fear does
move public opinion. That’s a lesson that the anti-Bush forces have learned
well. Their nemesis in the White House has turned out, in this way, to be their
master teacher. They are using fear most effectively to bring down a presidency
built on fear. It’s a delicious irony.
It’s also a
blessing, at least in the short run. A weakened presidency suffers on every front.
The privatization of social security is moribund and will soon be pronounced
dead on Capitol Hill. Chief Justice Roberts will be bad, but he’s probably not
the Scalia clone that Bush promised his right-wing base. And when was the last
time you heard the words “compassionate conservatism”? Though there is plenty
to worry about under a weak Bush, it would have been far worse under a strong
Bush.
But what
price will we pay for this blessing in the long run, if we purchase it with the
currency of mounting public fear?
Fear can be
an energizing emotion. It can move us to fight or flight. But fear, when it
becomes overwhelming, is more likely to paralyze -- think of the proverbial
deer in the headlights. Long ago, in
His great
insight was that the bomb didn’t have to fall for this tragedy to befall us. In
a sense,
The idea of a
whole society working together to imagine a better world, and then turning
imagination into reality, has been off the American radar screen for some six
decades now (except for a brief ray of light in the 1960s). When it seems safer
to allow no significant change at all, politics naturally becomes an exercise
in circling the wagons and hunkering down for an endless siege. The 9/11 attack
and the Bush-orchestrated response insured that the United States would
continue to be a hunkered-down national insecurity state (and now a homeland
insecurity state) well into the 21st century.
All of us,
supporters and critics alike, have absorbed this lesson. When we criticize Bush because he has failed
to keep us safe, we score valuable political points. But we may pay a price for
those points, because we reinforce the basic premises of the national insecurity
state -- that danger
is everywhere and can never be eliminated; that all significant change is
dangerous; and that our
best hope is a government strong enough and pugnacious enough to prevent
significant change and so protect us from fear’s worst effects.
The urge to be safe, to keep fear at bay, is
certainly natural and understandable.
But after more than a half-century in a state of heightened national
insecurity, Americans have largely forgotten the other side of the human coin:
the urge to be daring, to take chances that can lead to positive change. Insecurity
is now in the national bloodstream. That’s why anti-Bush campaigns that evoke
fear can be so successful. To be
successful in the longer term, though, we have to constrict that sense of insecurity,
to return it to the more modest place where it belongs, until actual security
comes into sight.
Otherwise, no
matter how much the anti-Bush campaigns weaken the president,
they end up reinforcing the pervasive insecurity that has been the key to his
political success. They make it more likely that the public will want future
leaders in the Bush mold, who demand “peace through strength.” No flip-flops
need apply.
The human
resource -- potentially so readily available -- that can help us break out of
this cycle of fear and numbing is imagination. Imagine American political
language and life no longer based simply on the question, “How can we be safe?”,
but on the question: “How can we make life better for all of us?” Imagine it
for a little while, and you begin to realize that such a profound shift would
give us the best chance -- maybe the only chance -- to be really secure.
Consider, for
example, Class 5 hurricanes. It’s a good idea to build stout levees, if they
are just a first step. For real security, though, we have to move beyond fear
to hope. We have to focus on the positive changes that will help everyone, even
if there is never another great storm. We should reclaim wetlands -- nature’s
own buffer against flooding -- to create a stable environment where a myriad of
species, including humans, can flourish creatively. We should support the
decades-old local organizations in poor stricken areas, the folks who know how
to build vibrant communities in their own neighborhoods. We should take steps
to cool down the earth to make wetlands more stable, growing seasons more
predictable, and harvests more bountiful.
The prospect
of really making things better gives people a reason to think and act together.
It makes them feel empowered. Once set loose, hopeful attitudes and actions build
on each other. That’s when genuine
change begins, whether its wetlands, poverty, global warming or any other issue
-- including the “war on terrorism.”
You hardly
have to be as well educated as the average Al Qaeda activist (who, it turns
out, is pretty well educated) to see that present American efforts to “make the
world better” are mainly efforts to protect
Once you
start talking the language of “protecting and defending,” though, you’re on
your way into the land of self-fulfilling prophecies. To make the smokescreen
work, the administration has to turn everyone who disagrees with them into “the
enemy.” Then it’s a natural step to set out to destroy them, which, of course,
turns them into genuine enemies.
But suppose
the
It makes
sense to join the liberal chorus of “End the war in Iraq so we can protect
ourselves against terrorists” as long as it’s just a first step, as long as we
go on to say things like: “Instead of draining our national treasury for
endless war, we demand that our tax dollars be used to repair the damage done
to Iraq and to fund services in our communities.” Those words, from the United for Peace
and Justice website, echo the sentiment of
hundreds of groups that are imagining a better future.
Many demand
that our tax dollars be used to fund services and repair the damage the
The best way to be secure is to imagine a genuine politics of hope. Imagine. Unfortunately, when John Lennon said, “It’s easy if you try,” he was quite wrong. After six decades of our national insecurity state, it’s incredibly hard. But it’s an effort that anti-Bush forces ought to make. The alternative is, however inadvertently, to reinforce the politics of fear that Bush and his kind thrive on. The belief that danger is everywhere -- that we must have leaders whose great task is to keep us safe -- is the one great danger we really do need to protect ourselves against.
[ HOME ] [ COURSES ] [ RESEARCH ] [ CONTACT ME ] |
[ OP-ED COLUMNS / SINCE SEPT. 11 ] [ PUBLIC CITIZEN ] |