The public response regarding Syria is quite interesting,
and hopefully quite telling. The last
time I recall a public stance this strong was regarding the first TARP vote
five years ago: of the contacts to Congress, 90% or more were against. And the first Congressional vote was “No.”
I remember: I was watching CNBC at that moment. They had the camera on the trading floor when
the “no” vote was announced. The trading
floor erupted in cheer. On camera, Maria
Bartiromo. Of course, she was not in a
euphoric mood. I can still remember her exasperated
and pleading voice upon hearing the cheers for the thumbs down vote: “Come on,
people.”
Well, they kept voting until they got the “right” answer. It only took a second vote.
Back to Syria. I don’t
know what will happen here. Will Obama
get his way to murder innocent civilians in one vote, two votes, never? Who knows?
But the public outcry is telling.
And this despite the mainstream media push for war.
Peggy Noonan at the Wall Street Journal has an Op/Ed
column on the subject of Syria. Her comments
specifically on point are not important to me.
But her afterthoughts are interesting.
Remember, this is on the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal
(jokingly referred to as the “War” Street Journal in the circles I inhabit):
A point on how quickly public
opinion has jelled. There is something going on here, a new distance between
Washington and America that the Syria debate has forced into focus. The Syria
debate isn't, really, a struggle between libertarians and neoconservatives, or
left and right, or Democrats and Republicans. That's not its shape. It looks
more like a fight between the country and Washington, between the broad
American public and Washington's central governing assumptions.
To the extent this is true it is a very significant
event. I have always viewed that the
reason the elite picked Obama to be president was because he was the most
capable of neutering the anti-war movement: more than Hillary, and obviously
more than McCain. That certainly seemed
to work for five years.
But perhaps now the strategy has backfired. Until now, the wars Obama has been involved
in could be blamed on Bush (Iraq, Afghanistan), or (falsely) on events outside
of the influence of the US government (Egypt, Libya, etc.). The anti-war left could pacify themselves
with this fairy tale. Syria, if Obama
decides to kill innocent people, will sit squarely on him. After the isolation of the rest of the world
on this, and by various international institutions, this one is completely on
the big “O.” Perhaps even the left has
decided it cannot ignore the significance of this.
Is it possible that the entire left/right debate is
exploding: it is us against them? The people
against Washington? I must mention that
I first saw reference to this possibility in a comment at EPJ – a comment to one
of my posts that Mr. Wenzel graciously published at his site. The comment is by Anonymous, on September 7,
2013 at 3:01 PM.
Even more: does this quick jelling of public opinion –
against the press of the mainstream media – demonstrate the incessant work of
the internet?
I have always struggled with the reality that the elite has
countless billions of dollars to spend on forming public opinion and narrative;
those of us pecking away part-time at our keyboards in obscurity had no such
resources at our disposal.
How could we ever beat people who got paid very well, worked
full-time, and had unlimited access to channels of influence? My hope was in and remains in the truth of
human action and markets – the division of labor and free markets in ideas
would eventually beat the centrally-planned narrative.
But perhaps Ms. Noonan has hit on something. Eventually perhaps, like the dam scene in Force Ten From
Navarone, the small explosion does tremendous damage. In this case, damage to the establishment….
God willing. And God
bless and protect the innocent in Syria from further calamity.
BM: Is it possible that the entire left/right debate is exploding: it is us against them? The people against Washington?
ReplyDeleteSallybluey: I hope this statement is true. People may finally be stepping out of the right/left dialectic that is always created in the MSM. The people may be starting to wake up and realize they are neither left or right but realize they are actually against violating a nation's soveriegnty.
Obviously more and more people are waking up. The result is very uncertain though. I push and explain as usual but fear to hope for a good outcome. As you said, the sentiment against TARP was over 90%, yet they didn't appear to even consider not going through with it. Now it is not just the country that objects but nearly the whole world. They are hearing the bankers, weapon makers, Israelies, and Saudies very well. Do they even care what any of the rest of us think? taxes
ReplyDelete"Now it is not just the country that objects but nearly the whole world."
DeleteThat the rest of the world appears to be making a statement may be at least as important as the push back in the US.
Boétie wrote of withdrawing consent. What if much of the rest of the world does this in regards to the US?
Yes, what if? I keep rewriting this post but it's all guesses. taxes
DeleteBM,
ReplyDeleteI think this is a watershed moment. People are not buying the propaganda anymore. I doubt if many realise it now but perhaps a decade from now people will look back and see the Syrian debacle has removed the blinders from the general public.