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October 27, 2004
The
Real Divide is Only in Elitist Minds
by
Victor Davis Hanson, The San
Francisco Chronicle

Are things really as ghastly
as they appear this election year? President Bush is derided as a liar,
brain-dead and a coward, not just by fringe groups but by prominent members
of the Democratic establishment. Major intellectuals and artists lament
that John Kerry won all three debates by skilled debating — and
yet gained little ground.
Even the wives and children are involved now. Kerry and his running mate
John Edwards gratuitously broached the sexuality of Vice President Dick
Cheney's daughter; his wife fired back that Kerry is not "a good
man." And just when we got a brief respite, Teresa Heinz Kerry derided
Laura Bush as never having a real job — before apologizing that, yes,
a decade at work in public school counts as real employment.
Third-party ads, fueled by the money of multimillionaires, imply that
Kerry was also a coward and traitor and that Bush was AWOL. CBS News anchor
Dan Rather is caught promulgating clearly forged documents, an ABC memo
warns against the chimera of objectivity, and Sinclair Broadcast Group
agrees to air only portions of a clearly partisan film after Democrats
howled. There is no need to mention the conspiracy theories of "Fahrenheit
911," Teresa Heinz Kerry's "scumbag" and "shove it,"
or Dick Cheney's use of the F-word.
Meanwhile, the back-and-forth acrimony prompts thousands of lawyers to
contest an election in advance, hoping to win through the courts should
they fail in the popular vote or Electoral College. Unfounded rumors circulate
about a renewed draft, the end of Social Security and even of big-shot
conservative politicians crowding ahead of the more needy for flu shots.
Is our republic paralyzed with hate, about to experience a dreaded next
stage of violence in the streets, akin to the last dark days of the Roman
Republic when gangs stormed the forum? Not really.
There is a long history of similar American political invective. The
elections of 1864 saw far worse slurs. Statesmen like Andrew Jackson,
Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan were routinely decried as savages, baboons
and senile. For all the current name-calling, no one has accused either
candidate of fathering illegitimate children, turning the country over
to the Pope, or being intoxicated while on the job — standard election
year slander of the past. There are no riots in the streets, as was common
in 1968.
Yet the true nature of our loud
divisiveness is rarely remarked upon. In the last three decades, there
has been a steady evolution from liberal to moderately conservative politics
among a majority of the voters, whether gauged by the recent spate of
Republican presidents or Bill Clinton's calculated shift to the center.
Now the House, Senate, presidency and the majority of state governorships
and legislatures are in Republican hands. A Bush win will ensure a conservative
Supreme Court for a generation.
In contrast, the universities, the arts, the major influential media
and Hollywood are predominately liberal — and furious. They bring an
enormous amount of capital, talent, education and cultural influence into
the political fray — but continue to lose real political power. The talented
elite plays the same role to the rest of America as the Europeans do to
the United States — venting and seething because the supposedly less
sophisticated, but far more powerful, average Joes don't embrace their
visions of utopia.
Elites from college professors and George Soros to Bruce Springsteen
and Garrison Keillor believe that their underappreciated political insight
is a natural byproduct of their own proven artistic genius, education,
talent or capital. How then can a tongue-tied George W. Bush and his cronies
so easily fool Americans, when novelists, actors, singers, comedians and
venture capitalists have spent so much time and money warning them of
their danger?
For all Sean Penn's rants, Rather's sermons, Michael Moore's mythodramas
and Jon Stewart's postmodern snickers, America, even in times of a controversial
war and rocky economy, is still not impressed. National Public Radio,
"Nightline" and the New York Times are working overtime to assert
their views in this philosophical debate; Jimmy Carter and Al Gore —
not George H. W. Bush and Bob Dole — are fuming. Most Americans snore
or flip the channel.
It is apparently a terrible thing to be sensitive, glib, smart, educated
or chic — and not be listened to, as we have seen from this noisy and
often hysterical campaign among elites. That is the real divide in this
country, and it is only going to get worse.
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