Monday, April 14, 2008

The truth hurts

Many Americans believe that truth is in short supply among public officials. How many times have you heard somebody say, “They’re all liars,” or, “I wish we had a straight-talking politician”? What’s interesting is that we now have a politician who “tells it like it is,” and he’s being criticized for his truthfulness.

About a week ago at a gathering in San Francisco, Sen. Barack Obama displayed some of that yearned-for straight talk when he described the bitterness of small-town American voters: “It’s not surprising, then, they get bitter; they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.”

Sen. Obama’s comments are right on point. As working-class Americans see their jobs--indeed, their very lives--going down the drain, it’s understandable that in many instances they turn inward. Instead of voting in their best economic interests, they, in their justifiable anger, turn to fear-mongering candidates, demagogues who offer attractive, simplistic (but wrong) “solutions” that blame minorities, immigrants and persons of other (or no) faith traditions for their economic woes.

Because he confronted a problem, used his brain to analyze it, and then told the truth about it, Sen. Obama is being attacked as an “elitist.” These attacks exemplify America’s alarming love affair with mediocrity, a widespread attitude that glorifies dumb and vilifies smart. How else can one explain the election to the presidency, not once, but twice, of a semi-literate simpleton like George W. Bush?