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popular conceit is that "everything" changed with September
11, 2001. But is that really the case?
One theory shared by a social scientist or two says that while
time marches on eras don't move with the explicit beginnings and
endings that the calendar indicates. In fact, there is one body
of thought that decades actually end approximately three years after
their "official" temporal turn.
For example, the 1950's "began" with Eisenhower becoming
president and ended with (either the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962
or on November 22, 1963 as Camelot came to a shocking close with
an assassin's bullet. The social uproar of the '60s were bookended
by Kennedy's assassination and Nixon's reelection. The '70s were
the "Me/Malaise Decade" [1973-1982] typified by three
failed administrations (Nixon, Ford and Carter) and the sloth produced
by Watergate and the "stagflation" economic hangover.
The '80s "began" with the Reagan Recovery in 1983 and
ended with the Bush Recession of 1992. Bill Clinton ushered in the
1990's in 1993 with his inauguration.
If we accept this view, it means that, as much as we might wish
it to be not the case, the Clinton Era ain't over. We might want
to believe that 9/11 was the "real" beginning of the 21st
century and the true launch of the Bush presidency. But there's
a lot of evidence laying around that suggests that the values and
"lessons" of the Clinton '90s still call the cultural
and political tune.
Item: '90s Maudlin Voyeurism. In New York, we have Ground
Zero Deification. In recent days, the cops have been coming down
hard on vendors who have been selling "bootleg" NYPD and
FDNY hats and clothing paraphernalia. One particular company makes
"official" memorabilia, and then licenses them. Well,
as anyone who has visited New York City lately can tell you, street
vendors all around have been selling hats, jackets, scarves, lapel
pins, etc. with the logos and most of them are knock-offs.
This is portrayed as being, not just illegal, but an insensitive
treatment of the city's heroes. The vendors are particular prevalent
in the Ground Zero. Thus, the cops have been confiscating the bootleg
stuff and ticketing the vendors.
That's all well and good, but while this is going on, the city
is giving away "tickets" to see Ground Zero from a viewing
stand. True, they are not selling tickets. Yet, considering that
technically this is still a bodies-and-remains reclamation
project, the scene smacks of the maudlin voyeurism that was the
earmark of the Clinton weeping White House. (An international phenomenon,
actually: How can we forget the weeks following the death of Princess
Diana?)
Of course, former Mayor Giuliani helped create this culture, first
by approving the building of a Ground Zero viewing stand and then
suggesting that the entire area be transformed into a "soaring"
memorial. On ABC's This Week, Cokie Roberts chimed in with
her opinion that the entire sixteen acres upon which the World Trade
Center stood must be considered "hallowed ground" upon
which no economic activity should take place. Which means, to use
a cliché, that the terrorists have really won.
Item: The '90s Victim Culture. Congress' well-intentioned
Victim Compensation Fund passed in the heat of the moment
last fall with the intent to forestall mass lawsuits has
had what should have been considered predictable results. It has
glued the victim culture to the entitlement culture. The fund's
special master, Kenneth Feinberg a Democrat lawyer, in fact
came up with a formula to assess the economic impact to the
victims of the terrorist attacks. The average payout will be $1.6
million per individual (minus deductions for insurance and pensions).Feinberg
used various criteria such as age of the victim at time of death,
salary, number of children, etc. Feinberg also caps the "pain
and suffering" aspect of the award at $250,000. Apparently,
this is not enough. One widow of a firefighter cried, "Setting
limits on our pain and suffering is a slap in the face to our loved
one's memories."
This attitude has opened the door to bipartisan piling on Feinberg.
Republican Gov. George Pataki, Democratic senators Hillary Rodham
Clinton and Chuck Schumer, plus House members of both parties have
all decried Feinberg's criteria and the stipulation that the families
have to forego their right to sue airlines for damages. Amazingly,
all of these people (save Pataki) voted for the fund, in the first
place, even understanding its restrictions. Needless to say, one
of the reasons for going ahead with the fund was the belief that
it was more compassionate to give the victims money straight-away
rather than let them go for years trying to win lawsuits.
Item: Multiculturalism Run Amok. The Firefighter Statue.
Enough said.
Lest anyone think that the Clinton Era hangover is solely a New
York phenomenon:
Item: Closed door White House meetings with private citizens
discussing a sensitive issue central to the economy. In 1994, it
was Hillary Clinton and health care. In 2001, it was Dick Cheney
and energy policy. Yes, there are superficial differences, not the
least of which is that Cheney was an accountable, duly elected public
official running the meetings, while Hillary was none of the above.
Fine, but stiff-arming and tempting a lawsuit from the General Accounting
Office does a disservice to the administration that promised a restoration
of "honor and dignity" to the White House. That means
coming forward and giving the information on who the veep met with.
As NR's Rich Lowry has observed, it's not as if a Bush/Republican
energy plan would ideologically be that different from whatever
suggestions that Enron or other business individuals might suggest.
Republicans do tend to believe in things such as free markets and
less regulation. Adopting a stonewall strategy, on the other hand,
gives foes of the administration a perfect sword especially
now that Enron has exploded in all directions. And, no, Hillary's
hypocrisy in calling for all information on Cheney's meetings doesn't
exonerate the current administration's stonewalling.
Item: Creative Language Interpretation. In response to a
reporter's question about his contacts with Ken Lay, President Bush
responded that he first "got to know Ken Lay" when he
was an "Ann Richards supporter" in the 1994 gubernatorial
campaign. Well, apparently the days of parsing presidential statements
are no longer in the past. Bill Clinton had the nerve to tell the
nation that it depended on the definition of "is." Are
we now supposed to figure out what Bush means when he uses the words
"know" and "support"? Lay's relationship with
the entire Bush family goes back decades. Yes, Lay gave money to
Richards, but he also helped launch Bush's campaign as well
and ended up giving more money to Dubya.
The problem with these Bush statements is two-fold: First, the
most infuriating too-cute wordplay is that which is most easily
verifiable. Why even bother saying it? More importantly, by trying
to minimize the relationship, it makes Bush seem, again, that he
has something to hide. It also buys into the liberal/McCain myth
that the campaign finance system is inherently corrupt. It suggests
that if someone is a supporter of a politician, the relationship
is by definition suspect.
Such dissembling gives the Democrats ammunition on both policy
(campaign finance reform) and politics (scandal) grounds.
War? What war? It's like Bill never left.
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