Of all the striking utterances that Sarah Palin delivered during her speech to the National Tea Party Convention on Sunday, none is more worthy of analysis than her claim that, as our president, โWe need a commander in chief, not a professor of law standing at the lectern.โ
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The charge is puzzling on several levelsโbut crystal clear on another.
Puzzling, because it makes no sense to criticize the Obama administration for arresting accused Christmas bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab and prosecuting him in civilian courts for allegedly trying to blow up a passenger jet as it descended into Detroit.
That is exactly how the Bush administration handled the shoe bomber, Richard Reid, now doing time in a federal prisonโand no one, least of all Palin, has ever accused Bush of being soft on terrorists.
Moreover, Palinโs sneering hint that Obama is going easy on the nationโs foes is belied by the facts. He has relentlessly escalated the war against al-Qaida, the Taliban and their allies, sending tens of thousands of additional troops to Afghanistan and using CIA-controlled Predator drone aircraft to kill terrorist leaders in Pakistan.
Palinโs insinuations aside, Obama is certainly neither a wimp nor a pacifist.
On the other hand, he is the recipient of an Ivy League education, and he was a professor of constitutional law at one of the countryโs best law schools, the University of Chicagoโand that, itโs now perfectly clear, is what Palin really has against him.
Like George Wallace, with his cracks about โpointy-headed intellectualsโ and Spiro Agnew with his attacks on โeffete intellectual snobs,โ Palin is tapping into age-old resentment against the educated, urban elite, whose major crime is to actually know something about which they speak.
In her view, and that of the tea party movement she is seeking to co-opt to her own inflated political ambitions, the painstakingly acquired insights of experts on subjects ranging from evolution to global climate change is of less value than the instinctive โcommon senseโ of average people with no special knowledge of those subjects.
Hence her sarcastic references to the common peopleโs supposed resentment of being โlecturedโ by Obama and his fellow liberal politicians. To Palin, Obama is the teacher you loved to hateโespecially if you didnโt get to go to college. Itโs the envy the C students aim at the A students, and it does not go away.
More ominously, her campaign draws on the same old tacticsโscapegoating outsiders and immigrants, ascribing power to nefarious plotters, pitting the so-called people against the so-called oppressive eliteโthat have characterized right-wing, know-nothing, populist movements since the early days of the Republic.
They often arise at times of economic stress, such as the current recession, pointing fingers and driving out rational thought with appeals to angry emotion. Theirs is the impulse behind vigilantism and the urge to ban books and the invocation of supposed traditional values to oppose social change. Theirs is the value system that stubbornly puts more value on intuition and received wisdom than on scholarship and experimentation. Theirs is the mind of the mob, resenting being told things it does not want to hear.
And that is what ought to alarm us. What Palin is doing is nothing new. In fact itโs the same, old, very sad story, and itโs playing out over again.
Jack White is a regular contributor to The Root.
is a former columnist for TIME magazine and a regular contributor to The Root.
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