Archive for August, 2011

Good stuff online

August 7, 2011


The lead piece in the Sunday Review section of today’s New York Times is a superb essay by Drew Westen called “What Happened to Obama’s Passion?” From beginning to end, it’s a thoughtful, reasoned, mournful yet open-eyed reflection of what most of us who voted for Obama think about our president these days. It’s long, worth reading, and gets better as it goes along, ending with these powerhouse paragraphs:

“THE real conundrum is why the president seems so compelled to take both sides of every issue, encouraging voters to project whatever they want on him, and hoping they won’t realize which hand is holding the rabbit. That a large section of the country views him as a socialist while many in his own party are concluding that he does not share their values speaks volumes — but not the volumes his advisers are selling: that if you make both the right and left mad, you must be doing something right.

As a practicing psychologist with more than 25 years of experience, I will resist the temptation to diagnose at a distance, but as a scientist and strategic consultant I will venture some hypotheses.

The most charitable explanation is that he and his advisers have succumbed to a view of electoral success to which many Democrats succumb — that “centrist” voters like “centrist” politicians. Unfortunately, reality is more complicated. Centrist voters prefer honest politicians who help them solve their problems. A second possibility is that he is simply not up to the task by virtue of his lack of experience and a character defect that might not have been so debilitating at some other time in history. Those of us who were bewitched by his eloquence on the campaign trail chose to ignore some disquieting aspects of his biography: that he had accomplished very little before he ran for president, having never run a business or a state; that he had a singularly unremarkable career as a law professor, publishing nothing in 12 years at the University of Chicago other than an autobiography; and that, before joining the United States Senate, he had voted “present” (instead of “yea” or “nay”) 130 times, sometimes dodging difficult issues.

A somewhat less charitable explanation is that we are a nation that is being held hostage not just by an extremist Republican Party but also by a president who either does not know what he believes or is willing to take whatever position he thinks will lead to his re-election. Perhaps those of us who were so enthralled with the magnificent story he told in “Dreams From My Father” appended a chapter at the end that wasn’t there — the chapter in which he resolves his identity and comes to know who he is and what he believes in.

Or perhaps, like so many politicians who come to Washington, he has already been consciously or unconsciously corrupted by a system that tests the souls even of people of tremendous integrity, by forcing them to dial for dollars — in the case of the modern presidency, for hundreds of millions of dollars. When he wants to be, the president is a brilliant and moving speaker, but his stories virtually always lack one element: the villain who caused the problem, who is always left out, described in impersonal terms, or described in passive voice, as if the cause of others’ misery has no agency and hence no culpability. Whether that reflects his aversion to conflict, an aversion to conflict with potential campaign donors that today cripples both parties’ ability to govern and threatens our democracy, or both, is unclear.

A final explanation is that he ran for president on two contradictory platforms: as a reformer who would clean up the system, and as a unity candidate who would transcend the lines of red and blue. He has pursued the one with which he is most comfortable given the constraints of his character, consistently choosing the message of bipartisanship over the message of confrontation.

But the arc of history does not bend toward justice through capitulation cast as compromise. It does not bend when 400 people control more of the wealth than 150 million of their fellow Americans. It does not bend when the average middle-class family has seen its income stagnate over the last 30 years while the richest 1 percent has seen its income rise astronomically. It does not bend when we cut the fixed incomes of our parents and grandparents so hedge fund managers can keep their 15 percent tax rates. It does not bend when only one side in negotiations between workers and their bosses is allowed representation. And it does not bend when, as political scientists have shown, it is not public opinion but the opinions of the wealthy that predict the votes of the Senate. The arc of history can bend only so far before it breaks.”

If you need even more disheartening reading to brighten your day, go on to the next article, Ezekiel J. Emanuel’s “Shortchanging Cancer Patients,” about how the pharmaceutical industry has purposely stopped manufacturing low-cost effective cancer drugs because they’re not as profitable as the gigantically expensive newer drugs whose effectiveness has not even been established.

By then you’ll be ready to run out to see Planet of the Apes or something…..

Good stuff online

August 4, 2011

I’ve just been catching up on old issues of The Sun, the excellent no-advertising literary magazine published by Sy Safransky out of Chapel Hill, NC. The June 2011 issue featured a terrific interview with Peter Coyote, an actor with some Hollywood fame but whose life work has revolved around political activism, community organizing, and spiritual pursuits. His interview with David Kupfer covers a lot of territory, with a lot of honesty and soul-searching. (He’s open, for instance, about his history as a heroin addict and the chronic hepatitis C that he lives with as a consequence.)

Here’s a small sample:

Kupfer: …your generation did transform the U.S. political agenda.

Coyote: No, I don’t think we did. We lost every one of our political battles: We did not stop capitalism. We did not end the war. We did not stop imperialism. I can’t point to real political victory.

Culturally, however, we’ve changed the landscape dramatically. There is no city in the United States today where there is not a women’s movement, an environmental movement, alternative medical practices, alternative spirituality, organic-food stores. That is a huge and powerful development that I think will eventually change the political system.

Kupfer: So the political system is the tail on the dog, the last thing to change in the culture?

Coyote: Politicians are not leaders; they are followers. They think that, because they can plunder the public treasury, they are leading. In fact they are terrified of the people. The people are a problem for them to manage, and when they can no longer manage them, they must follow them, or oppress them.

You can read an abridged version of the interview online here.

In the same issue, there are also excerpts from a fantastic advice column called “Dear Sugar” that runs in an online magazine called The Rumpus. Check out the except here.

Quote of the day: HIGH STANDARDS

August 3, 2011

HIGH STANDARDS

The girl of my dreams is probably God.

— Of Montreal, “She’s a Rejecter”

In this week’s New Yorker

August 3, 2011

Lots of good stuff in the magazine this week, starting with Nicholas Schmidle’s riveting, moment-by-moment account of the raid in Abbottabad that resulted in the death of Osama bin Laden — a story I can’t quite get enough of, which surprises me. It reads like the treatment for the first of many Hollywood movies dramatizing this mission we’re going to be seeing in the next five years.

Equally exciting to me, if not more, is Stephen Greenblatt’s news from first century B.C. Rome, in the form of a succinct, comprehensive essay about Lucretius, a poet and philosopher previously unknown to me but clearly a kindred spirit in his devotion to the Epicurean philosophy of pleasure and beauty. His magnum opus, “On the Nature of Things (De Rerum Natura),” helped Renaissance thinkers and artists emerge from the brutal theology of the Dark Ages, which Greenblatt summarizes thusly: “human beings were by nature corrupt. Inheritors of the sin of Adam and Eve, they richly deserved every miserable catastrophe that befell them. God cared about human beings, just as a father cared about his wayward children, and the sign of that care was anger. It was only through pain and punishment that a small number could find the narrow gate to salvation. A hatred of pleasure-seeking, a vision of God’s providential rage, and an obsession with the afterlife: these were death knells of everything Lucretius represented.” The whole piece is dazzling and worth reading.

An especially juicy Talk of the Town section: Hendrik Hertzberg’s trenchant examination of the 14th Amendment and how it’s being stupidly betrayed in the current debt ceiling debacle (“With compromises like these, who needs surrender?”); Nick Paumgarten on clearing out the storage space in the basements of StuyTown; Rebecca Mead on who gets bitten by mosquitoes; Michael Schulman on the props list for the Royal Shakespeare Company’s run at the Park Avenue Armory.

I’m not a big shopper, but I’ve gotten addicted to Patricia Marx’s “On and Off the Avenue” columns, just because her prose is hilarious.

Good stuff online: downloadable free book from David Richo

August 1, 2011

As followers of this blog have surely noticed, I’m a big fan of David Richo, the psychotherapist and author. Although their titles sound simplistic, his books How to Be an Adult: A Handbook on Psychological and Spiritual Integration and How to Be an Adult in Relationships: The Five Keys to Mindful Loving impress me with their clear, sensible analysis and compassionate insight. The latter book also serves as a primer/refresher on Buddhist meditation and Buddhist principles as they apply to everyday life.

In the course of recommending these books to a therapy client, I discovered that Richo has his own website, on which he offers a free book as a downloadable PDF, a compendium of excerpts from his various writings. You might want to check it out here.