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Empathy, Sotomayor, and Democracy: The Conservative Stealth Strategy
The
Sotomayor nomination has given radical conservatives new life. They
have launched an attack that is nominally aimed at Judge Sotomayor.
But it is really a coordinated stealth attack - on President Obama's
central vision, on progressive thought itself, and on Republicans who
might stray from the conservative hard line.
There
are several fronts: Empathy, feelings, racism, activist judges. Each
one has a hidden dimension. And if progressives think conservative attacks
are just about Sotomayor, they may wind up helping conservatives regroup.
Conservatives
believe that Sotomayor will be confirmed, and so their attacks may seem
irrational to Democrats, a last gasp, a grasping at straws, a sign that
the party is breaking up.
Actually,
something sneakier and possibly dangerous is going on.
Let's
start with the attack on empathy. Why empathy? Isn't empathy a good
thing?
Empathy is at the heart of progressive thought. It is the capacity to put oneself in the shoes of others - not just individuals, but whole categories of people: one's countrymen, those in other countries, other living beings, especially those who are in some way oppressed, threatened, or harmed. Empathy is the capacity to care, to feel what others feel, to understand what others are facing and what their lives are like. Empathy extends well beyond feeling to understanding, and it extends beyond individuals to groups, communities, peoples, even species. Empathy is at the heart of real rationality, because it goes to the heart of our values, which are the basis of our sense of justice.
Progressives care about others as well as themselves. They have a moral obligation to act on their empathy - a social responsibility in addition to personal responsibility, a responsibility to make the world better by making themselves better. This leads to a view of a government that cares about its citizens and has a moral obligation to protect and empower them. Protection includes worker, consumer, and environmental protection as well as safety nets and health care. Empowerment includes what is in the President's stimulus plan: infrastructure, education, communication, energy, the availability of credit from banks, a stock market that works. No one can earn anything at all in this country without protection and empowerment by the government. All progressive legislation is made on this basis.
The
president wrote of empathy in The Audacity of Hope,
"It is at the heart of my moral code and it is how I understand the
Golden Rule - not simply as a call to sympathy or charity, but as
something more demanding, a call to stand in somebody else's shoes
and see through their eyes."
President
Obama has argued that empathy is the basis of our democracy. Why do
we promote freedom and fairness for everyone, not just ourselves or
the rich and powerful? The answer is empathy. We care about our countrymen
and have an obligation to act on that care and to set up a government
for the protection and empowerment of all. That is at the heart of everything
he does.
The
link between empathy and democracy has been established historically
by Professor Lynn Hunt of UCLA in her important book, Inventing Human
Rights. To hear her speak, go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?
The link between empathy and progressive thought is spelled out in my book Moral Politics and in my new book The Political Mind, just out in paperback.
In describing his ideal Supreme Court justice, President Obama cited empathy as a major desideratum. Why? Because that is what our democracy is about. A justice has to take empathy into account because his or her decisions will affect the lives of others. Before making a decision you have to put yourself in the shoes of those who your decision will affect. Similarly, in judging causation, fairness requires that social causes as well as individual causes be taken into account. Empathy forces you to notice what is crucial in so many Supreme Court cases: systemic and social causes and who a decision can harm. As such, empathy correctly understood is crucial to judgment. A judge without empathy is a judge unfit for a democracy.
President Obama has described Justice Sotomayor in empathetic terms - a life story that would lead her to understand people who live through oppression and deprivation and what it does to them. In other words, a life story that would allow her to appreciate the consequences of judicial decisions and the causal effects of living in an unequal society.
Empathy in this sense is a threat to conservatism, which features individual, not social, responsibility and a strict, punitive form of "justice." It is no surprise that empathy would be a major conservative target in the Sotomayor evaluation.
But the target is not empathy as it really exists. Instead, the conservatives are reframing empathy to make it attackable. Their "empathy" is idiosyncratic, personal feeling for an individual, presumably the defendant in a legal case. With "empathy" reframed in this way, Charles Krauthammer can say, echoing Karl Rove, "Justice is not about empathy." The argument goes like this: Empathy is a matter personal feelings. Personal feelings should not be the basis of a judicial decision of the Supreme Court. Therefore, "justice is not about empathy." Reframe the word "empathy" and it not only disqualifies Sotomayor; it delegitimizes Obama's central moral principle, his approach to government, his understanding of the nature of our democracy, and progressive politics in general.
We cannot let conservatives get away with redefining empathy as irrational and idiosyncratic personal feeling. Empathy is the basis of our democracy and its true meaning must be defended.
But the attack can be sneaky. Take David Brooks' column in the NY Times (May 29, 2009). He frames what he calls "The Empathy Issue" in terms of the use of emotions in decision-making. He is doing a conservative reframing of the issue. What is sneaky is that he starts by saying a number of true things about emotions. As Antonio Damasio pointed out in Descartes' Error, you can't make rational decisions without emotions. If you have a brain injury that wipes out your emotional capacity, you don't know what to want, since like and not-like mean nothing, and you can't tell what others will think of you. Here is Brooks:
People without emotions cannot make sensible decisions because they don't know how much anything is worth. People without social emotions like empathy are not objective decision-makers. They are sociopaths who sometimes end up on death row.
Supreme Court justices, like all of us, are emotional intuitionists. They begin their decision-making processes with certain models in their heads. These are models of how the world works and should work, which have been idiosyncratically ingrained by genes, culture, education, parents and events. These models shape the way judges perceive the world.
Note the mixture of truth and non-truth. Yes, sensible decisions require emotions. Yes, people without empathy are sociopaths. Yes, we all make decisions based on models in our head of how the world works. That's basic cognitive science. Mixed in with it is conservative reframing. No, empathy is a lot more than a "social emotion." No, using models of the world in decision-making need not be a matter of emotion. It's just how real reason works. Then the conclusion.
But because we're emotional creatures in an idiosyncratic world, it's prudent to have judges who are cautious, incrementalist and minimalist. It's prudent to have judges who decide cases narrowly, who emphasize the specific context of each case, who value gradual change, small steps and modest self-restraint.
Right-leaning thinkers from Edmund Burke to Friedrich Hayek understood that emotion is prone to overshadow reason. They understood that emotion can be a wise guide in some circumstances and a dangerous deceiver in others. It's not whether judges rely on emotion and empathy, it's how they educate their sentiments within the discipline of manners and morals, tradition and practice.
Empathy here has been reframed as emotion that is "idiosyncratic" - personal - a danger to reason. "Sentiments," that is, emotions, must be "disciplined" to fit "manners and morals, tradition and practice"- in short, the existing social and political order. This is perfect radical conservatism in the guise of sweet, moderate reasonableness. Where Rove and Krauthammer have the iron fists, Brooks has the velvet glove.
The attack on empathy becomes an attack on feelings, with feelings as not merely at odds with justice, but at odds with good sense. Where Brooks' tone is sweetly reasonable, G. Gordon Liddy is outrageous:
Let's hope that the key conferences aren't when she's menstruating or something, or just before she's going to menstruate. That would really be bad. Lord knows what we would get then.
Liddy is saying what Brooks is saying: Emotion is irrational and dangerous. Only Liddy is not nicely-nicely. The attack on feelings is of a piece with the old attack on "bleeding-heart liberals. And one step away from Cheney's attack on Obama and defense of torture.
What about Newt Gingrich calling Sotomayor a racist? It is linked directly to the personal feeling argument: because of her personal feelings for her own kind - Latinos and women - she will discriminate against white men. It is to support that view that the New Haven firemen case keeps being brought up.
The real target here goes beyond Sotomayor. In the last election, conservative populists moved toward Obama. Conservative populists are working people, mostly white men, who have conservative views of the family, of masculinity, and of the military, and who have bought into the idea of the ‘liberal elite" as looking down on them. Right now, they are hurting economically, losing their jobs and their homes. Empathy is something they need. The racist card is an attempt to revive their fears of affirmative action, fears of their jobs - and their pride - being taken by minorities and women. The racist attack has a political purpose, holding onto conservative populists. The overt form of the old conservative argument is made regularly these days: liberalism is identity politics.
Incidentally, Democrats are walking into the Gingrich trap. I heard Ed Schultz defending Sotomayor by saying over and over why she was "not a racist," and using the word "racist" next to her name repeatedly. It was like Nixon saying, "I am not a crook." When Democrats make that mistake, I sometimes wonder why I bothered to write Don't Think of an Elephant!
The attack on Sotomayor as an "activist judge" completes the pattern of radical conservative reasoning: Because of her empathy, which is personal feeling, which in turn is a form of racism, she will interpret the constitution not rationally, blindly, and objectively, but to suit her emotions.
It is vital at this point to understand how conservatives get away with the "activist judge" ploy. As any cognitive linguist knows, there is no such thing as "strict construction" of the Constitution. The reason was given by, of all people, David Brooks, as we discussed above.
Supreme Court justices, like all of us, ... begin their decision-making processes with certain models in their heads. These are models of how the world works and should work... These models shape the way judges perceive the world.
These models also shape they way the most "strict constructionist" of judges read the Constitution. Such models are physically part of the brain and typically operate below the level of consciousness. Conservatives are thus as much "judicial activists" as anyone else.
So how do conservative Republicans get away with the "activist judge" ploy? Democrats hand it to them. Why? Because most Democrats grew up with and still believe a view of reason that has been shown in cognitive science and neuroscience to be false. The sciences of mind have shown that real reason is largely unconscious, requires emotion, uses "models" (frames, metaphors, narratives) and so does not fit the world directly.
But Democrats tend to believe that reason is conscious, can fit the world directly, and works by logic, not frames or metaphors. They thus believe that words have fixed literal meanings that fit the world in itself, regardless of models, frames, metaphors, or narratives. If you believe this, then original meaning could make sense. Democrats don't fight it when they should.
Democrats make another move that allows them to keep their view of reason. They adopt the view of the "living constitution," which opens them up to charges of "judicial activism," charges made by conservative judicial activists. The source of the problem lies in the Democrats lack of understanding of their own unconscious reasoning processes. One of many Democrats deepest beliefs contradicts the facts about the brain and the mind and allows conservative judges to be activists while claiming to be strict constructionists.
Taken together, the attacks on Sotomayor work as attacks on Obama and progressive thought. They are also attacks on "moderate" conservatives, who think with progressives on many issues. The attacks activate radical conservative ideas in the brains of those who voted for Bush and the 47% of the voters who voted for McCain.
Radical conservatives know that Sotomayor will be confirmed. They also know that their very understanding of the world is being threatened by Obama's success. But they have a major strength. They have their message machine intact, with trained spokespeople booked on tv and radio shows all over the country. Attacking Sotomayor, even when they know she will win, allows them to rally their forces and get swing-voting conservatives thinking their way again.
How should Democrats respond?
Democrats should go on offense. They need to rally behind empathy- real empathy, not empathy reframed as emotion and personal feeling. They need to speak regularly about empathy as being the basis of our democracy. They need to point out that empathy leads one to notice real social and systemic causes of our troubles and to notice when and how judicial decisions and legislation can harm the most vulnerable of our countrymen. And finally that empathy is the reason that we have the principles of freedom and fairness - which are necessary components of justice.
Above all, Democrats should be aware that the attack on Sotomayor is not just about Sotomayor. It is an attack on the basis of our democracy and must be answered.


53 Comments so far
Show AllRobert Persig in the early seventies book "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenence" notes that in the never ending debate between, what he lables the classic vs romantic philosophic devide that the classic (right wing) side accuses the romantic (left wing) side of frivolity and lack of serius disipline. The accusation is framed as doing 'just' what you like, with the slur being in the word 'just'. Persig notes that we are so accustomed to that attitude that it rarly occurs to anyone to ask, 'so what is wrong with what you like?' If you don't do what you like then what is it you do? What someone else likes of course.
And here is where the right takes off. They of course are the serious one and should be the people who decide what we should all do. Their problem right now of course is that we have all been doing *what they like* now for three decades and they led us all over a cliff. So now they need to moan and wail about their theories and how right(eous) they are hoping we will all forget what a pile of crap 'what they like' really is.
It really is time for the liberals to assert what we like. We like a government that works. We like justice. We like the rich to pull their own weight. We like regulations that promote the general welfare. In short we like a nation and a world that is livable and we voted for it and won overwhelmingly and we need to demand our elected officials give us what we like.
fpie,
You voted for the wrong people. You thought you voted for people who would "give us what we like."
You got snookered again, and think you won.
I just can't take seriously people like you.
this article might have some meaning if it had any referent to the actual obama and sotomayer's actual court decisions. just b/c she's not scalia doesn't make her thurgood marshall by any stretch.
If she were half the person that Thurgood Marshall was then Sotomayor would be a great justice.
Unfortunately, she's not but she's still better than any of the Bush (41 or 43) appointees.
q
"Democrats should go on offense."
Ignoring the fact that Lakoff's mouth is on Obama's scrotum (Paul Street has written extensively about "Audacity of Hope," but Lakoff can't seem to find Street's work), Democrats NEVER go on offense.
Republicans are crybabies, Democrats are pussies. That is the way of things.
--
Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
Republicans have launched a stealth attack "on President Obama's central vision, on progressive thought itself," says the SPIN-MEISTER George Lakoff, and what could be stealthier than... George Lakoff himself?
Obama IS progressivism! Attacking Obama is the same as attacking progressivism!
But...
Obama is just about as "progressive" as Ronald Reagan.
Is this "Obama" that Lakoff describes the same "Obama" who just finished promoting the LARGEST TAX CUT in the history of the United States, and...
Is this "Obama" that Lakoff describes the same "Obama" who just finished shoving single-payer healthcare off the table, and...
Is this "Obama" that Lakoff describes the same "Obama" who just finished enlarging the insane war in Afghanistan, and...
Is this "Obama" that Lakoff tries to IDENTIFY with "progressive thought itself" the same "Obama" who just gave away $2.93 trillion to criminal bankers in a series of useless bailouts?
Is this "Obama" that Lakoff describes the same "Obama" who just finished backing off EFCA. which Obama promised unions he would fight for, and he promised again and again and again and again and again, in Michigan and Wisconsin and Illinois and Ohio, and...
It was all lies.
Who else but George Lakoff could almost... make Republicans look HONEST in comparison with his ridiculous "stealth" re-framing of Progressivism to fit the right-wing CON-MAN Barack Obama?
Excellent post.
q
I second that.
Sioux Rose
I third it. I was thinking Lakoff got lost in his own paradigm, so busy trying to fit circumstances to fit his concept of framing that he lost track it would seem of the actual policy decisions at play. Progressive, with what as the standard yardstick? This is Lakoff's worst article to date.
I prefer "Republicans and junkies, Democrats are enablers."
This isn't bad (as a descriptor) either.
--
Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
"But it is really a coordinated stealth attack - on President Obama's central vision, on progressive thought itself, "
"Taken together, the attacks on Sotomayor work as attacks on Obama and progressive thought. "
The problem with this is that Sotomayor is hardly progressive.
"Above all, Democrats should be aware that the attack on Sotomayor is not just about Sotomayor. It is an attack on the basis of our democracy and must be answered."
Even if one is are a loyal supporter of the Dems, I still disagree with this. IMO, the Limbaughs, Gringrichs, et al, have done EXACTLY what Obama wants them to. They have walked straight into his trap.
By attacking Sotomayor racially, by attacking her membership of the National Council of La Raza, they are making it much harder for Republican candidates to win Latino votes, the next time there is an election. Furthermore, the National Council of La Raza receives funding / donations from Walmart and Citi !!11!! Hardly a leftist / radical group.
Furthermore, it puts Repubs who voted for Sotomayor before in a bind. They can join the attacks, and try explaining themselves, or they can distance themselves, and piss off the Limbaughs who will start tossing around RINO slurs, deepening splits between the Repubs.
I agree - the big corporations really like latino activism.
When a handful of Mexicans started, finally, to come to live in one small enclave of Pittsburgh, PNC bank immediately started putting slick Spanish language ad's in the newspaper around the city and helped to publish a small Spanish language newspaper - even though we probably have more Russian and Polish-speaking immigrants here than latinos.
The entire wave of Latino immigration of the last decade was created by and for the corporatists. From destroying the economies and resources of Latin American countries to bringing waves of desperate people to America who need EVERYTHING, will work for almost nothing, and are easily manipulated because they are in a political limbo of fear and questionable rights, corporations have exploited the economic growth opportunities that Latinos represent.
The first wave of Latino immigrants that Reagan brought in in the early 80's was similar. Americans were slowing down their growth voluntarily through the somewhat recent access to reliable birth control. The country was on its way to a more sustainable population which was contradictory to the model of rampant capitalism promoted by the neocons.
I think ther were even more important reasons than demographics and slowing population growth. Poor latinos make great scabs too!
You are so right.
The early 20th century race roits happened because corporations flooded the north with subsidized trainloads of poor southern blacks to break northern union strikes.
They had nothing to do with the fact in the south, blacks were still de facto slaves? Slavery ended with the Civil War, in name only.
I think you underestimate people's willingness to immigrate for (better) paying jobs, a new life; and overestimate the influence of governments in "bringing" in immigrants. Immigration happens all over the world, not just in the US, or Europe, or western countries. Within Asia, you have Chinese immigrating to countries such as Singapore, Malaysia. Filipinos immigrating to Singapore and Malaysia. People from the African countries immigrating to China. Etc.
I agree with you a bit, because humans have always been migratory, moving with animal herds, or for better weather or more hospitable conditions. But, part of my point was that when economies and rescources are destroyed, people are forced to relocate, willing or not.
Huh. That is not what I am saying.
All I am saying is that I find it extremely hilarious that the Republicans are attacking Sotomayor for being a member of an organisation that receives donations from Walmart and Citi.
It's worth noting that developmental psychologists view the development of empathy not primarily as an emotional achievement but as a *cognitive* achievement. Children younger than 7 (preoperational in Piaget's framework) are egocentric, not to be understood as "selfish"--they can be deeply caring and compassionate--but as unable to predict another person's perspective; literally unable to explain game rules to another child from a failure to grasp what the second child does or does not know already. Understanding someone's perspective is **understanding**, not feeling.
Dear agingpacifist,
So-called conservatives operate at the "good person / bad person" and "rule breakers should be punished while obedience should be rewarded" levels of moral development postulated by Kohlberg.
The operative word isn't "empathy". This implies individualistic novblesse-oblige, and it also reminds me of a hokey old Star Trek episode (anyone remember it?).
The operative word is "SOLIDARITY". Empathy means "an injury to one is a partial injury to ME. But solidarity means: "An injury to one is and injury to ALL!"
But I guess the flying monkeys would freak out even more if we started using that word.
"it also reminds me of a hokey old Star Trek episode (anyone remember it?)."
Yes. Aside from the fact that all old Star Trek episodes are kinda hokey, this one had aliens torturing McCoy to the point of death to see if "The Empath" would put herself in harm's way by healing McCoy. To do that she actually had to take on his injuries physically.
Would it help if Supreme Court judges were made to feel the actual pain of those who argue before them? If only the amount of pain, not the characteristics of the person feeling it, were the criteria by which cases were judged?
Isn't that why Justice wears a blindfold?
Just imagine "social justice" or "socialism". The horror!
It is more difficult to have solidarity without empathy. It is more difficult to side with someone else if you cannot, or will not, imagine what it is to be like him / her.
The most fascinating and trenchant point elaborated upon in George Lakoff's piece was the need for the American right wing to retain the loyalty of its' foot soldiers, whom are amongst some of those most affected by the rapaciousness of their masters / idols.
Additionally, Lakoff did not mention that these erstwhile privates are a graying demographic as well, thus the need to retain them in order to delay a slide to irrelevance is paramount.
While it is much in doubt whether or not progressives will ever overcome their propensity for circular firing squads and try for some of the common sense debate framing (which the right wing had an exclusive on in American political life for a generation beginning with Grandpa Caligula [Reagan]) that Lakoff has long advocated; so far, the conservatives are shooting themselves in the foot.
However, progressives should be well advised this will not last forever and instead arguing amongst themselves in futile semantic exercises, they should be hastening the demise of the truly horrible conservatism that has visited so much misery upon us instead of just letting demographics do the job in its' inherently slow manner.
"The most fascinating and trenchant point elaborated upon in George Lakoff's piece was the need for the American right wing to retain the loyalty of its' foot soldiers, whom are amongst some of those most affected by the rapaciousness of their masters / idols..."
I thought that too. This whole process is a charade, as the elite corporatists who actually control the Republican Party could not be too upset about Sotomayor, who is no enemy of or obstacle to corporate greed. It is all about convincing the brown shirt hordes that their masters are still fighting for their causes.
Tom Hartman was proposing that most of her decisions were pro corporate.
President Obama's central vision . . .
What might that be?, outside of getting elected and reelected.
This article is a paranoid and overstated. With all due respect to Professor Lakoff, cognitive science has NOT proved that the cognitive schemas and other moral constructs that help individuals make sense of the world operate at the subconscious level or are physically built into the brain. Rather an "emotional memory center" (hypothalamus) is part of the reasoning process.
About all that one can say for sure is that the acquisition and development of verbal language is fundamentally part of the physical structure of the brain.
Let's not get too far ahead of science and make it into what we wish it could be rather than what it actually is...a search for how things begin, develop, and end in the universe.
Don't mean to be too picky, but given the anti-intellectual nature of the discourse on this site, let's just say I'm not sure you know what you are talking about.
If you knew more regarding the actual research in cognitive neuroscience you would be a bit more careful when saying "About all that one can say for sure is that the acquisition and development of verbal language is fundamentally part of the physical structure of the brain."
Let's not get too far behind science and underestimate what it has to offer.
As I see it, the central problem of this article is this: the fallacy of the Sotomayor attack being an attack on "progressivism" and with it the phantom progressivism of Obama. "Empathy" as a characteristic in judgment is an absolutely empty frame, like others of Lakoff's frames. Stand in the shoes of...? Stand in whose shoes? I have no doubt that Obama and his cabinet of neo-liberals and militarists stand in the shoes of health industry execs. terrified of the loss of their profits from single payer; or of Generals and Admirals who want the lids taken off so they can pursue their aggressive missions (like the infantry's: to close with the enemy and kill or capture him); but is he empathetic to a car dealer forced to close by a Chrysler bankruptcy operation that Obama mandated?; does he "stand in the shoes" of the parents of a child killed as "collateral damage" as a U.S. drone goes after "militants?" Everybody, including every court Justice, is empathetic of someone, but that person's biography (which Obama wants as the basis of judging Sotormayor) may contain elements of both an NYC street upbringing and a Princeton/Yale education. So enough already about empathy, Sotomayor like every Court nominee should be judged on where she would stand on constitutional issues and not where her "empathies" lie. With whom (the government or the terrorism detainee) would she empathize in a Court case dealing with the constitutionality of military tribunals or indefinite detention of detainees without charges because they are too dangerous either to try or to turn loose? Will she empathize (when the California referendum passage of Prop 8 comes to the court--as it will) with the will of California's people to deny marriage rights to same-sex couples; or will she emphathize with those jurists who earlier declared that racial segregation is unconstitutional and therefore unlawful even in those states where the "will of the people" was otherwise? Until these and many, many other questions are asked of and satisfactorily answered by the candidate, I refuse to respond to any of the hysterical appeals either to support or oppose her nomination.
well said. funny how "the man from hope" and the "audacity of hope" both came from, relatively, "disadvanted" backgrounds. clinton was a small time state governor (not that he's not extremely talented and all that, rhodes scholar, etc., etc.) who was a quick study at picking up empire. so much of the public face of DC politics is a total charade. i'm almost convinced that the clinton impeachment hooha was just to inject some theater, some drama, into humdrum beltway BS. look at how clinton is now the favorite son of the once "hated & despised" bushes. you'll never see w. clearing brush on the ranch again. packaging for us rubes is all that was.
a very wise and creative piece. make 'empathy' an issue and turn Liddy's sword on himself.
What did you people expect Obama to nominate, an ultraliberal radical such as oh say Jeremiah Wright ? If Mccain were president, he would have nominated another Scalia to the bench and you bedwetting purists would be feeling even dumber for cheering for Mccain's victory.
That's good. The gate is ajar, but you still refuse to leave the corral.
While I admire your books professor, characterizing Obama as a progressive is misinformed, disingenuous, and ignorant. It may provide a nice soundbite, but perhaps you have not been reading the authentic progressive movement on these pages bogged down in your own aims.
Just as a reminder, a political progressive is someone who puts forward progressive legislation. It is true that Obama talks a good game, i.e., he pays lip-service to some progressive causes, but so far, he has not ACTED as a progressive via authentic progressive legislation like single payer health coverage for all, instead he has jumped in bed with the insurance industry to mandate coverage for all providing a profit windfall for his corporate handlers.
A progressive does not escalate war either, nor does he occupy countries like Iraq creating an empire of bases with Iraq as his next building project: a true progressive ends wars and removes troops. Asserting 60K troops will remain in Iraq tells me we have a watered down version of Bush. Covert strikes on non-combatants is not a progressive issue either professor and to authorize such acts hardly an act of "empathy" do you understand the difference between lip service and honest praxis? Nor is a fantasy known as "clean coal" a progressive cause. I suggest you read up on the obfuscation starting with a book called Big Coal by a real progressive named Jeff Goddel.
Moreover, Obam does not have a single progressive in his Administration.
It makes me wonder what source you use to gather your information from? Because if you honestly believe Obama is a progressive, then I might suggest you have been looking down from the Ivory Tower a tab too long, on the rest of the peasantry, forced to make ends meet every week.
elohim, thanks for speaking "truth to the professor."
Elohim: I agree about Obama. He's definitely an improvement on Bush but his inspiring speeches don't match his actions. Bait-and-switch advertising in California is against the law; too bad it doesn't apply to the White House. I'm not naive enough to think perceptions don't change when a politician goes from candidate to president. He's nothing like the man who gave that striking acceptance speech in Denver last August. How quickly Obama has gone from supposed political progressive to political expedient. The catch phrase "Power Corrupts" keeps coming to mind.
Elohim
Touche...Very well stated...I truly enjoyed your post....(A little bit of reality for the good professor)
"How should Democrats respond?
Democrats should go on offense."
How many times since November 2000 have Dems gone on the offense? DC Dems are always getting caught off-guard by their right-wing counterparts, very rarely able to form a knock-out response. Nobody calls the Repugs on their own hypocrisy. Besides grasping at straws on Sotomayor, they're nitpicking the Obamas for taking Air Force 1 to dinner and a movie in NYC. Should they have taken a train or driven a Prius instead? How many times did GWB fly to Crawford or Camp David with a full White House contingent? They talk about waste of public funds? How many thousands of LIVES have been wasted on a bogus war on a country that posed no threat--except to W's ego? Instead Dems just sit by and take the Republicrap which, over time, gives the latter more credibility.
I thought we'd righted the ship again last November and DC Dems grew some balls. Foiled again!
http://freesolaradvice.blogspot.com
"The president wrote of empathy in The Audacity of Hope, "It is at the heart of my moral code and it is how I understand the Golden Rule - not simply as a call to sympathy or charity, but as something more demanding, a call to stand in somebody else's shoes and see through their eyes."
Have another smoke George, then maybe you will see that Mr. Obama is a right wing, lying piece of shyt. He is not a progressive or a left winger.
I suggest Obama stand in anybody's shoes and use his own eyes to see a desending Hellfire missile.
Professor Lakoff has captured the essence of neo-conservatism in his assessment of their lack of a sense of moral and ethical responsibility to others.
For years I have been trying to distill a clear-cut characterization of neo-conservatism from it's many facets, but ultimately, it comes down to pure, selfish, self-centered sociopathy... a total lack of empathy for anyone around them.
Professor Lakoff has caputred the essence of the Mommy Party: the belief that our nation is founded in empathy instead of liberty. We are moving toward the United States of Oprah. It's telling that Professor Lakoff doesn't mention pesky things like reason or impartiality in his heart-warming piece. Thank God the feckless Republicans have finally found something meaningful to say: we don't put judges on the SCOTUS to view cases through the prisim of their ethnicity and their feelings. Save it for Dr. Phil, people. This is what happens when a political party becomes femanized. The Democrats have become a bunch of frilly pink princesses with Obama as Prince Charming.
Did you mean "when a political party becomes FEMAnized."?
Hilarious analogy but their actions strike more patriarchal norms. Obama ignores the authentic left. My guess is because he has people like Lakoff and his ilk along with Move On in his back pocket. Either these people are naive or just see incremental advancement as a way of life while crapping on the rest of us.
Conservatives continue their double standard. When George H.W. Bush nominated C. Thomas for the Supreme Court Bush described Thomas as being a man of empathy.Bush meant this as selling point to Congress to get Thomas confirmed.Now conservatives use empathy as a reason to reject Obama's choice for the Supreme Court. Sotomayor was H.W.bush's choice for the Appeals Court and she voted in support of George W. Bush's Gag Rule prohibiting any information on abortion at any U.S.funded Reproductive Clinics in poor countries,even if the girl or woman's life was in danger.Empathy is in the eye of the beholder.