We Win!: The Inaugural Celebration Caps a Victory in the Political Cultural War
It was a moment of victory in the political cultural war that has gripped the United States since the tumultuous days of the 1960s. It came in the middle of the inauguration celebration held at the Lincoln Memorial on Sunday. And its bearer was Garth Brooks. The man who has epitomized country music, the official music of Red-State America, was hailing the election of a man who represents what many people with a Red-State mentality oppose: an America that embraces liberal attitudes of diversity and tolerance, that does not equate Ivy League-style education with effete elitism, and that does not hold on to traditions to block social change and progress. True, Brooks is no rock-ribbed redneck. His 1992 song, "We Shall Be Free." essentially endorsed gay marriage. But when he performed the old Isley Brothers soul classic, "Shout," before a massive crowd of Obama supporters, you could almost hear some Red-Staters wail, "They've turned our Garth into a black guy!" When he finished, Brooks doffed his cowboy hat toward President-elect Barack Obama, who sat with his family to the side of the stage.
The show at the Lincoln Memorial contained other moments signaling that the cultural civil war that began with the civil rights crusade, the movement against the Vietnam War, and the rise of hippie-dom was doneat least for nowand that the libs had won. Toward the end of the HBO-aired event, Bruce Springsteen, once a greaser-rocker, brought out folk music hero and activist Pete Seeger, once derided by conservatives as a commie, and Seeger led the crowd in "This Land Is Your Land." This song is the liberal national anthem, written by Woody Guthrie in 1940 as a populist-minded response to Irving Berlin's "God Bless America," which was too rah-rah for Guthrie's liking. (Beyoncé then hit the stage and belted out "God Bless America.")
Earlier in the day, minutes before HBO threw the on-switch for its taping, gay Episcopal bishop Gene Robinson delivered an invocation that probably would be considered heretical by many fundamentalists. He began:
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Continued From Above
Bless us with tears--for a world in which over a billion people exist on less than a dollar a day, where young women from many lands are beaten and raped for wanting an education, and thousands die daily from malnutrition, malaria, and AIDS.
Bless us with anger--at discrimination, at home and abroad, against refugees and immigrants, women, people of color, gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people .Bless us with freedom from mere tolerance--replacing it with a genuine respect and warm embrace of our differences, and an understanding that in our diversity, we are stronger.
Take that, Rick Warren.
During the show that followed, the Washington Gay Men's Chorus performed "My Country, 'Tis of Thee"--appearing on the same stage as military honor guards. Gays and the military--it was all part of this "We Are One" extravaganza. Had John McCain and Sarah Palin (and their America) won in November, there would have been no such coming together. And no U2 singing "Pride (In the Name of Love"), its anthem-tribute to Martin Luther King Jr., for the new president the day before Martin Luther King Jr. Day (a federal holiday that had been opposed by some Red-Staters, including McCain).
In the United States, culture is politicsand vice versa. Obama's election helped defineor redefinewhich currents and sensibilities are ascendant. And Obama made this victory possible with his skills as a political communicator. He has deftly blocked the right's traditional assaults on hisand, by extension, his supporter'spatriotism. In fact, he has masterfully embraced America's mythologysuch as when he praises the drafters of the Declaration of Independencewhile recognizing the past and present flaws of the nation.
On Saturday, in Philadelphia, as Obama began a train ride to Washington, DC, he delivered remarks that were better than many inaugural addresses of the past. Celebrating the revolution that gave birth to the United States, he said, "The American Revolution was--and remains--an ongoing struggle in the minds and hearts of the people to live up to our founding creed. Starting now, let's take up in our own lives the work of perfecting our union."
Politicians and others often smugly cite the nation's founding fathers and their accomplishments in a self-satisfied manner and as an act of (national) self-validation. Obama references the country's civic icons as an argument for national betterment. Before hopping on that train, Obama proclaimed, "People who love this country can change it."
That is the opposite of the old slogan used by the right when the political culture war began: "America, love it or leave it." No, the protesters of that time countered, America, make it better. The expansive view of Americathat it is ever-changing, that it always can be improved, that it embodies a wide assortment of people and viewswas on display beneath Lincoln's marble gaze on Sunday. More important, it had helped propel the electoral wave that landed Obama in office.
No victories are permanent. Shifts, backlashes, reversals are always possible. But for the moment, via Obama's election, a great debate has been decided. The times have a-changed.
For a different review of the show, click here.
Flickr photo from the Presidential Inaugural Committee used under a Creative Commons license.
Comments
"Bless us with freedom from mere tolerance--replacing it with a genuine respect and warm embrace of our differences, and an understanding that in our diversity, we are stronger."
Wonderful sentiment. I would assume this mature and tolerant approach would apply to the priest's and author's view of Conservatives as well.
Alas... Immediately after quoting the bishop, Mr. Drum slaps Pastor Rick Warren. I guess Drum's view of tolerance is a one-way street...not unlike what he and many of his kind accuse the Conservatives.
Is this hypocrisy in action?
When Pete Seeger got on stage, to perform before and in honor of a president, my wife and I talked about what a big moment that was. Conservatives may complain that it's awful the lefties won, but no one can say it's a conservative country, at least not when we remember to mention who led "This Land is Your Land".
Obama on Pot: Before and After Election
Obama is offering voters "change" on his policy regarding the insane War on
Drugs.
"The war on drugs has been an utter failure. [W]e need to rethink and
decriminalize our [nation's] marijuana laws."
-- Barack Obama --
January 2004
"President-elect Obama is NOT in favor of the legalization of marijuana."
-- Change.com --
Obama's post-election blog
Source: Paul Armentano, NORML:
www.alternet.org/blogs/peek/113384/
Yes We Can! ... sing One song to American Liberals and Libertarians while we're seeking their votes, and sing an entirely Different one after we've attained the nation's highest office, where we might actually be able to do something about an atrocity such as the Drug War.
And for those who were wondering what "Change We Can Believe In" actually meant: There You Have It.
Barack Obama - A refreshingly NEW kind of politician.
...Not!...
"Bless us with anger--at discrimination, at home and abroad, against refugees and immigrants, women, people of color, gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people"
Jesus didn't preach crap like that, love and tolerance and all that commie bs. Any hardcore conservative will tell you that!
David, you know that there is no change. Big business kept its mitts firmly on the essential levers: Treasury, the Fed.
Rahm Emanuel (the only man in the Illinois congressional delegation to vote Yes to the war on Iraq), moving on to Hillary Clinton (another Yes on the war), Robert Gates, and the whole economic team. What is Obama's progressive base getting by way of reward? The pickings are very slim. The whole raison d'etre of Obama's campaign in the primary phase the period when the progressive constituency has to be allured was to turn the page not only on Bush time but on Clinton time, to move on.
wolf in sheeps clothing says: i would love to believe that obama will abide to what he has stated concerning the drug war.
Yeah, but which time?
The time 5 years ago, when he was running for Senate, when he said we need to rethink and decriminalize our nation's marijuana laws, or the satement he has his office making now, when he's actually in a position to exert some leadership and make that previously stated position happen?
You know, the "President-elect Obama is NOT in favor of the legalization of marijuana" statement?
Yes Mr. Corn. "We Win!", if the WE culture you're talking about happens to be the beltway-business-as-usual crowd.
Regarding the marijuana law:
This is an instance where the exact wording DOES make a difference.
DECRIMINALIZED means it cannot be legally sold or distributed - you just don't have felony charges associated with it.
LEGALIZED means R.J. Reynolds (and anyone else)can sell packs of pot just like cigarettes.
BIG DIFFERENCE.
Garth, Willie and the Dixie Chicks are not all of country music. It's a piece, though. We're getting some cultural 'hellos' (especially including 'non-believers' in the holy roll call of the religious), but I agree with Cockburn (is it THAT Coburn) that the financial plutocracy is firmly in the saddle.
Gays in the military may be OK, but intervention in Afghanistan is where they are going to send them. One step forward, two steps back.
However, I think Obama's election unnerved the Israeli Center-Right enough to get them to pull out of Gaza ... for the time being.
No Fred T, America didn't lose, YOU LOST, and every stinkin' bigoted, right-wing, war-mongering, global warming denying, greed sucking pig along with you. Now is the time you should be waving your flag proudly, because today we have finally achieved unity and integration. And, for once, stupidity, including Fred, are the minority again. Go back to your Fox News cave.
I didn't vote for Obama, but I considered it (some of his associates really gave me pause.) I have mixed feelings about him and I disagree that his win signals a permanent shift in economic and political loyalties among the public. Many, many voters wanted to ratify fear of the current situation and their disgust with Bush, not with conservativism or centristism. As for style, I am preparing for the prospect of a very authoritarian, hard-bitten management style by Obama, which has some benefit but maybe a considerable downside, too. It will be fascinating to see the package unwrapped over the next four or eight years.
It's a shame that thousands of Americans didn't get the opportunity to see these defining moments because of HBO's exclusive broadcast rights. Most of us are just trying to keep food on the table right now and cable is a luxury many can't afford. We are one? Really?
In a word no! Conservatism does not deserve any toloerance or compassion due to the lack thereoff. Essentially conservatism is this: authority is truth. Conservatives are basically unable to reflect on even mundane moral issues preferring to be ordered about by the wealth elite they so ardently worshp.
The conservative elite permit working class conservatives prejudice and ignorance, since the elite know they can march the workers off to war with no complaints.
No ther is no room in the " window of tolerance, " for you. You are the problem unable to stand up on your own moral accord, unable to reflect at the level of 10 year old, clinging to myth and dogma.
I used to think being reasonable was the key, but not with unreasonable people. are to be shunned. Your kind brought 8 years of a criminal cartel that plundered this country's and the world's wealth. I hate you and your kind.
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