Never have so many hoped for so much because of rollicking
rhetoric and pulsating platitudes. A tsunami of hope has plunged America into
electoral euphoria. In its path is the wreckage of critical thinking about what
ails the US and what bold, revolutionary actions are needed.
Barry Obama has accomplished semantic alchemy, turning
justified but grim distrust and outrage with government and politics into
hallelujah hope. But most hope never materializes and is a terrible predictor
of reality.
Think about the prevalence of hope: sports teams heading
into a championship game, research scientists envisioning a Nobel Prize, people
in the criminal justice system awaiting trial, entrepreneurs starting a new
business, people starting off on a long-awaited vacation, American Idol
contestants, college seniors dreaming of becoming superrich, and all those
supporters of Ron Paul, Dennis Kucinich, and other presidential candidates that
will not reach the White House.
Hope produces far more losers than winners. Hope is
enjoyable until failure hits. But most people do not give up on hope, just move
on to the next hope.
Obama hoped that he could tap into the national desire for
change from the awful conditions produced by the Bush administration by selling
hope to voters rather than his experience and accomplishments. Like a political
snake oil slalesman, he has succeeded as a compelling seller of hope, better than
the best infomercial charlatan.
His proof that hope works is his life story and political
campaign. This resembles a con man selling a real estate scheme by showing
pictures of his yacht, estate and Rolls Royce. Millions of consumers succumb
because of their hope that riches can be obtained by following the quack’s
advice and formula. Such false hope succeeds because people buy into wrong or
deceitful information. False hope can be revealed through objective examination
of the facts, assumptions or promises used by the hope purveyor.
Delusional hope is much more insidious. The trick behind
delusional hope is that recipients of the hope message supply their own
justifications and rationalizations for taking ownership of the hope. As much
as delusional hope comes from the hope messenger, it is also self-inflicted to
a large degree. In fact, the hope messenger may be honest and authentic, like
Obama, truly believing in his hope message. Those who embrace the hope message
have many possible reasons and motivations for doing so.
It may be therapeutic by offsetting depression, stress or
anger. It makes people happier, feel good and have something positive to look
forward to in an otherwise dismal world. It provides comfort and some sense of
security. Delusional hope is exactly like a placebo, producing an apparent
positive result without any valid reason for doing so, except satisfying the
desire for a positive result.
Obama has produced an epidemic of contagious delusional hope
for a population rightfully disgusted with ordinary politics and politicians.
Like an excellent magician, people are mesmerized by the trick of promising to
turn YOUR hope into HIS success.
What happens if President Obama does not actually deliver
any real, substantive changes and reforms in government and public policy? Who
will be blamed? Hope-happy Obama or a nation of hope-losers for electing him?
This mass delusional hope befits our delusional democracy
with its delusional prosperity. Rather than the usual lies, Obama offers hope
for change, as if the ruling plutocracy will fade away and stop using their
considerable influence over government to funnel an obscene fraction of the
nation’s income and wealth to the richest Americans and corporations.
Money is key to seeing Obama for what he really is -- an
insider politician. He has backed away from his clear promise to use public
financing for the general election, as John McCain also promised to do. His
broken commitment results from his ability to raise enormous sums from hope addicts.
Besides many small contributors, he has received enormous financial support
from a number of business sectors. He provided about $700,000 to other
politicians in the past year to get their support. When it comes to money,
Obama seems much too much like an ordinary politician.
What is the audacity of hope? The confidence that most
Americans will eat the political narcotic hook, line and sinker. Welcome to the
Obama rapture.
Contact
Joel S. Hirschhorn through www.delusionaldemocracy.com.