Why America Is in Dire Need of a Good Hedgehog
August 18, 2011
http://www.huffingtonpost.com
Why America Is in Dire Need of a Good Hedgehog
by Arianna Huffington (August 17, 2011)
What the country needs right now is a good hedgehog.
Back in 1953, British philosopher Isaiah Berlin famously laid out two opposing styles of leadership — hedgehogs and foxes — taking his cue from a line in an ancient Greek poem by Archilochus: “The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.”
According to Berlin, the fox will “pursue many ends, often unrelated and even contradictory, connected, if at all, only in some de facto way.” In contrast, the hedgehog offers an “unchanging, all embracing… unitary inner vision.”
Right now, with the country in crisis mode, the American people are longing for a hedgehog at the helm — even a fanatical, delusional hedgehog like those currently leading the Republican Party. Their “unchanging, all embracing” one big idea will absolutely take the country in the wrong direction, but the unequivocal way they are putting it forward has an appeal to a population that understands — consciously or unconsciously — that our problems are too big to be solved by a fox.
People sense that our problems can’t be solved by spinning, triangulating, slicing and dicing, and tinkering at the edges. They want something big to be done, but right now only one side is responding to that desire. And unless it’s countered, the people might take the Republicans up on it.
We know that President Obama can be a hedgehog — after all, that’s how he won in 2008. But since taking office, he’s largely governed as a fox. There is a world of difference between having a vision and adopting the other side’s vision and trying to mitigate the damage from it. What’s needed isn’t a fox-like plan to lessen the damage from the Republicans’ destructive economic vision. What’s needed is an alternative vision.
And though it obviously would have been better to have offered an alternate vision before this preventable economic misery was allowed to spread so far, it’s never too late. And it appears that there are those in the White House who are arguing for a hedgehoggian approach.
As Binyamin Appelbaum and Helene Cooper report in The New York Times, the White House is “considering whether to adopt a more combative approach on economic issues, seeking to highlight substantive differences with Republicans in Congress and on the campaign trail rather than continuing to pursue elusive compromises.”
Sadly, the foxes in the White House seem to be winning. According to The Times, David Plouffe and chief of staff Bill Daley want to follow a “pragmatic strategy” based on “ideas that can pass Congress, even if they may not have much economic impact.” The administration, we’re told, has “increasingly concluded that the best thing Mr. Obama can do for the economy may be winning a second term, with a mandate to advance his ideas on deficit reduction, entitlement changes, housing policy and other issues.”
This is a profound misreading of the country’s mood. “Playing it safe is not going to cut it,” said Christina Romer, Obama’s former head of the Council of Economic Advisers. “Not proposing anything bold and not trying to do something to definitively deal with our problems would mean that we’re going to have another year and a half like the last year and a half — and then it’s awfully hard to get re-elected.”
Or, as Calculated Risk put it, referring to the fact that “tax incentives” were the big idea being put forth by the bolder side inside the White House, “it sounds like the debate is between doing nothing and doing very little.”
And doing very little can be very dangerous. People aren’t gravitating toward the GOP message because of its economic logic, but because it’s big and bold. In fact, that message has continued to resonate even as it has become increasingly nonsensical.
At the same time the White House is adopting the GOP message that debt reduction is the path to a good economy — instead of the other way around — growing numbers on the Republican side, including Reagan economic adviser Martin Feldstein and George W. Bush’s Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, are calling it out as risky and wrong-headed.
As PIMCO’s Bill Gross put it in The Washington Post: “An anti-Keynesian, budget-balancing immediacy imparts a constrictive noose around whatever demand remains alive and kicking. Washington hassles over debt ceilings instead of job creation in the mistaken belief that a balanced budget will produce a balanced economy. It will not.”
Reinforcing the idea that this is a time for boldness and not small fixes is the fact that discontent with economic austerity is worldwide. “From Athens to Barcelona, European town squares are being taken over by young people railing against unemployment and the injustice of yawning income gaps,” wrote Tom Friedman, “while the angry Tea Party emerges from nowhere and sets American politics on its head.”
Friedman summarizes what these young people want with one of the slogans from the recent protests in Israel: “We are fighting for an accessible future.” A future that, as Friedman notes, is increasingly “out of their grasp.”
Though there are, of course, many factors that led to the riots in the UK, the closing off of that future is certainly one of them. David Goodhart, founder of Prospect Magazine, connected the dots on Fareed Zakaria’s CNN show: “We have a lot of deep problems in our inner cities. The economic boom over the last 10 or 15 years has partly covered that up… This idea that you cannot make it in straight society, so violent transgression is really the only thing to do.”
In other words, when the future is not accessible — when you can’t find a job, can’t pay your bills, can’t take on the responsibilities of adult life — you are more likely to feel that you have no stake in society and turn against it.
In times of deep crisis like our own, it’s very hard for foxes to prevail over hedgehogs — even dangerously wrong-headed ones. But right now there are no other hedgehogs in the picture.
While House Minority Leader Lawrence F. Cafero Jr., R-Norwalk, pictured standing, far right, speaks, colleagues Rep. Barbara Lambert, D-Milford and Rep. Jack F. Hennessy, D-Bridgeport, play solitaire Monday night as the House convened to vote on a new budget. (AP)
Sounds familiar. We too need a hedgehog in Malaysia.”Our problems can’t be solved by spinning, triangulating, slicing and dicing, and tinkering at the edges” (Arianna). We have too many foxes running around in Putrajaya, and like cooks, they too will spoil the economic broth, politics aside.–Din Merican
dinobeano - August 18, 2011 at 10:47 pm
Mongkut Bean and Frank,
Remember this : “Those were the good old days. It was a time when all of us can sit in the same coffee shops and restaurants and drink and talk shop minus the racial and religious rants. Look at the contrast! No thanks to these pseudo-champions of their race and religion, they have turned hypocrisy and lying into an art.”–Din Merican
dinobeano - August 18, 2011 at 11:15 pm
Yup, Dato. Parallels aplenty, but we are tropicalized and used to it.
In our case, its the buaya and the ular.
The former will swallow up any carcass and clamp down on anything within reach of its jaws; while the latter slinks all over the place with a forked tongue to no discernible purpose. The reptilian brain can only do so much.
For more than 3 decades we are unable to free ourselves from the bondage of the Buaya, which is totally focused on eating it’s own young. While the huge Ular we have hasn’t even sorted out a shadow cabinet and remain slithering all over the place, intent on swallowing its own tail. It is said: One big lie, trumps many little lies on the road to Perdition.
_________
CLF,
Yes, the buaya (UMNO-BN) and the Ular (PKR-led PR). We do not have much choice…thanks to our reptilian brain…we are prisoners of nature.So shall it be in our politics–Din Merican
C.L. Familiaris - August 18, 2011 at 11:28 pm
Spinning, triangulating, slicing and dicing, and tinkering? Well, they haven’t done the korek, korek, korek yet.
Mr Bean - August 19, 2011 at 12:43 am
eiz235 - August 19, 2011 at 5:24 am
This comment has been removed–Din Merican
eiz235 - August 19, 2011 at 11:30 am
Was watching CNN just now and saw senior economic writer of AWSJ saying: “There is no leadership around the world today.” He meant America too.
“Where are the Margaret Thatchers, the Ronald Reagans?” he asked.
I am sure Din and friends agree.
Jeff the Man - August 19, 2011 at 12:37 pm
Din
How I envy the joys you had then. Just like the Summertime Song when life was easy. Sigh.
Jeff the Man - August 19, 2011 at 12:39 pm
Din,
How can we sit in the same kopitiam, served by (us) loud-talking Hainanese men (KOPI-O NOH!!) when we can’t even have our Muslim friends drink from the cups we serve from? As though we drink liquor or lard from them, and as though we don’t wash our cups. Sadly, Malays today have become so ‘enlightened’ that we are considered so dirty somehow.
Sorry for the rant.
And yes, I am Hainanese although not in the kopi-tiam business.
barry - August 19, 2011 at 1:31 pm
Jeff,
Here they are
A Picture Worth Trillions of $$’s. Please
If you had any doubt in your mind just how stressful it has been on so called USA Congressmen and Senators, take a look below at just a sampling and then see if you can see straight ever again!
This picture is worth a trillion $$
While House Minority Leader Lawrence F. Cafero Jr., R-Norwalk, pictured standing, far right, speaks, colleagues Rep. Barbara Lambert, D-Milford and Rep. Jack F. Hennessy, D-Bridgeport, play solitaire Monday night as the House convened to vote on a new budget. (AP)
The guy sitting in the row in front of these two….he’s on Facebook, and the guy behind Hennessy is checking out the baseball scores.
semper fi - August 19, 2011 at 2:35 pm
sorry the picture didn’t go through. Have forwarded to bloghost to post.
semper fi - August 19, 2011 at 2:37 pm
Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan as leaders???
Wait till the economic history of the past five decades is written. Many will take their watch as the start of the downslide.
Isa Manteqi - August 19, 2011 at 5:30 pm