Click Here to Go to the Ashbrook Center's Homepage

Subscribe to Our Email Update
 
SEARCH
 

Home



Support the Ashbrook Center



Subscribe to Our E-Mail Update




No Left Turns:
The Ashbrook
Center Blog







Ashbrook Scholar Program

Master of American History and Government






  Podcasts



Other Ashbrook
Web Sites:


AshbrookScholar.org



mahg.ashland.edu



TeachingAmerican
History.org


Document Library

Constitutional Convention

The American Founding



Presidential
Academy.org




Congressional
Academy.org




Letters from
an Ohio Farmer




VindicatingThe
Founders.com




ClassicsOf
Strategy.com

No Satisfaction
Editorial
February 1999

by: Ken Masugi


As a political scientist perplexed by the public infatuation with him, I had to see with my own eyes this 50-something adulterer who is receiving such adulation. I was surprised how much younger he looked than his years. Totally at ease before his jubilant audience of all ages, sexes, sexual orientations, and races, he acted like a man half his age. Enthusiasm exploded from his diverse audience. The screams and spontaneous chants testify to his ability to scintillate--and to further outrage those who can’t comprehend this appeal.

Does he steal rivals’ ideas? No doubt. But he has clever way of repackaging them into a unique form.

The emotional outpouring for him is more than mere sympathy for a likable devil, who had often escaped threats of an early demise and gone on to a long career, which now sees no end. The eternal longing heard in the wail of a saxophone characterizes his Faustian career. Let a wonderful world come to this boy of lowly origins! In his quest for fame, he had seen many a rival fall: One was even jailed for masturbating on his audience.

No, our judgments of Mick Jagger’s private life do not mar our fascination with him. The success of the Rolling Stones’ star in his latest tour explains as well President Clinton’s apparent success. Both entertainer Jagger and Clinton have erotic affairs with their audiences--which doubtless have considerable overlap. They are flattered by the attention paid to them. They not only feel, they transform our pain, without our feeling their pleasure. To put this in other entertainment terms: If the Republicans are broadcasting old re-runs of "Victory at Sea," Clinton is a rock video. If Republican-leaning country music better expresses the depth of our souls than Clinton-Jagger rock, the latter inspires an explosiveness, against ordinary decency, conventional thinking. The late Allan Bloom could have been describing Clinton as well as Jagger when he wrote about the latter "shrewd, middle-class boy" 12 years ago in The Closing of the American Mind:

"He was beyond the law, moral and political, and thumbed his nose at it. Along with all this, there were nasty little appeals to the suppressed inclinations toward sexism, racism and violence, indulgence in which is not now publicly respectable. Nevertheless, he managed not to appear to contradict the rock ideal of a universal classless society founded on love…."

An earlier outrage against common decency probed the depths of these differences: The brash Socrates thought the human soul’s passions were fundamentally anger, on the one hand, and longing or love, on the other. The Republican Party has enjoyed success in years past as the party of anger--at mindless bureaucracy, incompetent economic policies, racial quotas, screaming feminism, and an inept foreign policy. Arguably the most successful Democratic President of the century, Clinton, the boy from Hope, appeals to the longing or striving for making the exotic his own; from Arkansas to Washington, from the Ozarks to Oxford. He has done so in the most calculated way: Focus groups tell him where the parade is headed, and he puts himself at its head. A stubbornly ideological Democratic Party and an irresolute, anchorless Republican Party make it all the easier for Clinton to practice "triangulation," the art of being not just the logical compromise but appearing the Leader.

Yet perhaps an even better model for Clinton than the raunchy, always disreputable Rolling Stones would be the Beatles, in particular their "White Album." In that greatest of rock albums, the Beatles show they can perform any type of contemporary popular music better than their best performers. No one can surpass them in this skill--white is all colors, after all.

Clinton’s recent State of the Union Address is his "White Album." Anything anyone of any party has proposed, he can do better: Pat Buchanan xenophobia, Ronald Reagan missile defense, George Bush diplomacy, Jack Kemp enterprise zones, Ross Perot reforms, Martin Luther King inspiration, John Kennedy optimism, Jimmy Carter compassion, and so on. Republican policies, Democratic packaging. The historical success of the Democratic Party has been in appealing to those excluded from the mainstream of American life, who long to be part of it: Over the years, westerners, southerners, Catholics, immigrants, labor, blacks, intellectuals, homosexuals…. Clinton seizes on this Democratic longing.

Perhaps Clinton is sui generis. If he isn’t, and the Democrats can really learn from him the way George Bush and Bob Dole couldn’t from Reagan, then the Republicans may be spending many years singing country music to themselves, as they discover what makes the American soul complete. One place to take their cue from: the greatest love song ever written for the American people, the Gettysburg Address, which combines anger and longing and transcends them both, to wisdom about American duty.

Ken Masugi is an Adjunct Fellow of the Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs at Ashland University. He is writing a book on American citizenship.



 


Printer-Friendly Version

Upcoming Events

Mike Huckabee
Thursday, June 28

Maureen O’Connor on the Constitution
Monday, Sept. 17


Recent Publications


A Policy Analysis of Local New York Laws Banning Oil and Gas Exploration by Robert Alt

Obamacare and the Supreme Court: An Opportunity for Reflection by Michael Schwarz

Moratoria on Drilling are Legally Dubious by Robert Alt

Rick Santorum and Limited Government by Andrew E. Busch

Who Owns the Bard? by Ellen Tucker

Clarence Thomas and the Wisdom of the Founding by Ken Masugi

U.S. Headed in the Right Direction by Peter W. Schramm

Deficits and Cultural Politics by David Marion

America’s Future in New Europe by Justin Paulette

Our Discussion of Islam by David Foster

The Tea Party and Nullification by Michael Sabo

Drama Queens: Elizabeth Taylor, Camille Paglia, and the Purposes of Female Power by Julie Ponzi

Honoring Ronald Reagan by Peter W. Schramm

Realigning American Politics: Do We Still Hold These Truths? by Matthew Spalding

Reagan’s Inherent Goodness Made Him One of the Great Presidents by Peter W. Schramm

Reagan the Radical by Stephen Knott


Audio Archive


Terrence Moore on Education Reform (2012)

Stephen Moore on Capitalism (2012)

David Tucker on Fear and Freedom (2012)

Reed Browning on the War of Austrian Succession (2012)

Pat Tiberi on the American Dream (2012)

Ramesh Ponnuru on Obamanomics (2011)

Gordon Lloyd on Political Economy (2011)

Steven Hayward on the Health of Capitalism in America (2011)

John Boehner (2011)

Jonah Goldberg on Liberalism (2010)

Mitt Romney (2010)

John Kasich on the Future of Ohio (2009)

Conference on the Presidency and the Courts featuring President George W. Bush (2008)

Jeb Bush on America’s Promise (2008)

Glenn Beck on Militant Islam (2006)

Karl Rove on Conservatism (2005)

James McPherson on the Battle of Antietam (2005)

David Hackett Fischer on Liberty and Freedom (2004)

William Bennett on the Politics of War (2004)

Edwin Meese on Homeland Security (2003)

Barbara Bush on CSPAN (2003)

Victor Davis Hanson on Terrorism (2003)

Benjamin Netanyahu on Attaining Peace (2002)

Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court (1999)

Margaret Thatcher on Ronald Reagan and Freedom (1993)

Dick Cheney on American Foreign Policy (1991)

Ronald Reagan on John Ashbrook (1983)

  Real Logo
Visit our archive of over 200 other Ashbrook speeches at
audio.ashbrook.org or subscribe to our
Events Podcast.








ASHBROOK SCHOLAR PROGRAM | MASTER OF AMERICAN HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT |
PUBLICATIONS | EVENTS | PODCASTS | NO LEFT TURNS BLOG | AUDIO ARCHIVE | DONATE | ABOUT US

 

Ashbrook Scholar Program:  Home | Apply Online | Request More Information | Course of Study | Faculty | Speakers |
Why Study History or Political Science? | Internship Opportunities | Student Publications | Financial Assistance | FAQ | Contact Us

Master of American History and Government:  Home | About | Admission | Schedule of Courses | Course Registration | Tuition | Faculty | Request More Information

TeachingAmericanHistory.org:  Home | Saturday Seminars | Summer Institutes | Partner on a Teaching American History Grant | Historical Documents Library | Audio Lectures and Discussions | Constitutional Convention | Ratification of the Constitution

Presidential Academy for American History and Civics:  Home | About the Program | Documents and Texts | Faculty | Itinerary | Application

Congressional Academy for American History and Civics:  Home | About the Program | Documents and Texts | Faculty | Itinerary | Application

Podcasts:  Home | What's a Podcast? | Subscribe

No Left Turns Blog  Home | Archive | Postings by Author | Comments by Our Readers | What's in a Name? | RSS Site Feed

Publications:  Home | Editorials | On Principle | Right from the Center | Dialogues | Books | Monographs |
Ashbrook Statesmanship Theses | Res Publica | Publication Request Form | Publications by Subject

Events:  Home | John M. Ashbrook Memorial Dinner | Major Issues Lecture Series | Colloquium |
Van Meter Scholarship Luncheon | Conferences and Special Events | Calendar of Events | On-Line Speeches (RealAudio)

About Us:  Home | Board of Advisors | Staff | Who Was John M. Ashbrook | Support the Ashbrook Center |
Map and Directions

 

Verizon Foundation
Support for ashbrook.org is provided by the Verizon Foundation.


John M. Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs
Ashland University
401 College Avenue | Ashland, Ohio 44805
(419) 289-5411  |   (877) 289-5411 (Toll Free)