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- iHaveNet.com: Politics
by Kenneth T. Walsh
From Joe Wilson's "you lie" to Kanye West, civility has gone out the window
Civility in public life seems to be fading fast. Take, for example, the insult hurled at President Obama during his address to
It's not just politics that's been contaminated by the viruses of rudeness, self-indulgence, and just plain nastiness. In the last several weeks, rapper Kanye West disrupted the MTV Video Music Awards by interrupting Taylor Swift's acceptance speech because he didn't think she deserved the honor for Best Female Video. President Obama then stepped into the mess when, in a supposedly off-the-record comment prior to a TV interview, he called West a "jackass." This caused another sensation. Last but not least, the sports world was thrown into a tizzy when tennis star Serena Williams berated and threatened a line judge after a controversial call at the U.S. Open. She was penalized during the match and later fined.
Yet it is in politics where incivility seems the most harmful
Vitriol can poison the debate in Washington and cause a stalemate in doing the public's business. Just as important, if the president's authority is undermined, the credibility of the entire government is jeopardized. Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg says Obama's critics are trying to "delegitimize" him, attacking his policies in order to destroy his presidency. This is part of the same long-term trend of demonization that caused opponents to mercilessly attack George W. Bush and Bill Clinton over the course of 16 years.
The difference today is that Obama is the first African-American president, and some of his advocates say racism is at work. Certainly, the level of fury directed at Obama this summer at various rallies and other events was unusually intense. And there have been false arguments from the "birther" movement that Obama was born in Kenya, not Hawaii, as the official records verify, a charge designed to show that Obama is not a "real" American.
Former President Jimmy Carter drew considerable attention last week by arguing that racism is indeed at the heart of the anti-Obama movement. "I think an overwhelming portion of the intensely demonstrated animosity toward President Barack Obama is based on the fact that he is a black man," Carter told
For his part, President Obama tells friends that he believes that most Americans are rooting for him to succeed, and he feels strong support and affection from everyday people outside Washington. "I think what he's struck by, what all of us are struck by, is as you travel the country, there's so many people who offer their support and good wishes," says David Axelrod, a senior
But political scientist Bill Galston at the
Galston, a former
Unfortunately, there is no end in sight to the politics of demonization.
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Nastiness Dominates Washington & the Anti-Obama Movement
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