California has just elected an adolescent fantasy as governor. One
imagines fans, used to paying for Schwarzenegger's image projected on a
screen, leaving rallies feeling blessed at having glimpsed him in the
flesh - dyed hair, induced tan, eyebrow-waxing, capped teeth, and all -
much as winners from a church bingo go home feeling blessed.
The model for American society is fast becoming a set of gigantic
lotteries, the final reduction of the American Dream. While I dislike
most nonsense about dreams and visions, at least the line about the
American Dream did recall an epic struggle in a brave new world with its
waves of vibrant, migrant population.
For years now there has been a growing view in America that
opportunity consists in every citizen getting a lottery ticket for some
dazzling pay-out. It's an idea implicit in think-tank pamphlets and in
the behavior of many American corporations. Of course, lotteries only
work because almost everyone loses, but they are fun along the way,
taking your mind off unglamorous reality, and anticipation is hyped-up
for each new draw.
The lottery-society idea now has been extended from the economy to
government itself. The people of California voted to eject as governor a
perfectly competent man overtaken by a wave of adverse economic change.
Never mind allowing him to make changes and adjustments - that is,
allowing him to govern. Never mind orderly government. He's a loser, get
rid of him. We want it all, and we want it now. In his place, bets are
placed on a celebrity whose every utterance is a cut-and-paste slogan
from the Internet site of some American think-tank.
And it doesn't seem to matter that his past is littered with nasty
behavior. The right-wing is like that: ceaselessly preaching morality,
but when one of its own is caught, as it were, with his pants down, he
always somehow still qualifies to govern.
The current President had a history of substance abuse and rich-boy
drifting, but a few mumbled references about the Lord made him a
Christian warrior-President. And so Schwarzenegger's life-long lousy
behavior towards women and past Hitler-admiration are swept away. I
don't know that he ever mentioned the Lord during his campaign, but
clearly he is needed for the Lord's work.
Despite the tired slogans of his campaign, Schwarzenegger's opening
gambit, as of this writing, is to demand money from the President for
California's financial plight. Now there's an original idea. I wonder
how many drawling, sputtering Republicans over the last thirty years
have excoriated liberals about money and "the damned fed'rah
gov'ment"? Well, this is a sophisticated new breed of Republicans.
They've discovered a magic formula: it's okay to spend more, lots more,
as long as you also cut taxes.
Of course, Schwarzenegger will have an entrée at the White House the
former Democratic governor could never have had, but it does seem an
awkward time to ask for money. The new Governor may have to stand in a
long line of diplomats from countries seeking early installments of
their War on Terror bribes, from Pakistan, Turkey, and Poland to some
thirty or forty others. There are scores of corporate representatives
lined-up, wanting their first bloated payment for screwing in light
bulbs or replacing taps at American headquarters in Iraq. There's also
an impressive contingent looking to donate to the President's upcoming
campaign, providing some understanding over contracts in Iraq can be
reached.
Well, Schwarzenegger probably will get in ahead of some of these
people. Bush does want a warm greeting in California during the
re-election campaign. Could it be that the principled Schwarzenegger is
using political leverage for a bribe? No, this is the business of the
nation, as conducted between Republican governments.
Well, a no-account, ranting, army-nut drifter in Germany about
seventy years ago did set Germany back on the rails from the Great
Depression, just before he proceeded to blow up the entire rail system.
People do get the government they deserve, and California has elected
a circus, complete with heady whiffs of elephant manure and an obscene
cabaret act. My God, there's even America's Political Gothic, the
ghastly Borgia clan from Massachusetts, taking bows as toothy, sequined
performers, drawn to new sources of power the way vampires are to fresh
blood.
Oh well, they can always have another recall, can't they?
John Chuckman chuckman@yellowtimes.org
is former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He
has many interests and is a lifelong student of history. He writes with
a passionate desire for honesty, the rule of reason, and concern for
human decency. He is a member of no political party and takes exception
to what has been called America's "culture of complaint" with
its habit of reducing every important issue to an unproductive argument
between two simplistically-defined groups. John regards it as a badge of
honor to have left the United States as a poor young man from the South
Side of Chicago when the country embarked on the pointless murder of
something like 3 million Vietnamese in their own land because they
happened to embrace the wrong economic loyalties. He lives in Canada,
which he is fond of calling "the peaceable kingdom." John's
columns appear regularly on Counterpunch, Media Monitors, Online
Journal, Scoop (New Zealand), Liberal Slant, Yellow Times, Dissident
Voice, Jeff Rense, and many other Internet sites. He is regularly
translated into Italian (Utopia) and Spanish (Rebelion)