HOME  ARCHIVE  SEARCH  DV NEWS SERVICE  LETTERS  ABOUT DV  CONTACT  SUBMISSIONS
 




Presidential Campaign Fever:
Too Much “Vision” Without Hearing

by Norman Solomon

www.dissidentvoice.org
January 15, 2004

Send this page to a friend! (click here)

 

 


The father of President Bush the Second called it “the vision thing” -- which he was widely presumed to lack. By early 1987, Time magazine reported, George H. W. Bush was using that phrase “in clear exasperation.” Then, as now, journalists seemed to clamor for presidential candidates to seem visionary.

Many politicians have grandly quoted from the Book of Proverbs: “Where there is no vision, the people perish.” The biblical invocation plays into the media-fed notion that great leaders succeed when they persevere according to their own lights.

But such popularized concepts of political leadership -- encouraged by countless journalists -- are long on vision and short on hearing. With apparent self-assurance, politicians often have a way of filtering out the messages they don’t want to hear, even from their own supporters.

President Lyndon Johnson epitomized the alpha and omega of a leader’s visionary determination. To his enormous credit, he pushed hard for civil rights legislation soon after becoming president. But meanwhile, he plunged ahead with the Vietnam War -- and he didn’t want to hear what many people, including some in his own administration, were trying to tell him. Johnson had “the vision thing” down, all right -- and, as a result, Vietnam became a place of mass carnage.

The news media are at their best when telling leaders what they don’t what to hear. But candidates for president rarely seem to be good listeners. On the contrary, the preoccupations with polls and focus groups are about searching for buzzwords and facile images.

Candidates attaining mass-media favor are up the rungs in efforts to appear visionary and “presidential.” Yet a capacity to be caught up in one’s own vision tells us nothing about the quality of leadership -- which should include an eagerness to hear.

For decades, one of the most important public voices of clarity has come from Ralph Nader. First known as a “consumer advocate” in the 1960s, his focus soon broadened to include the fundamental imperatives of fighting corporate power and promoting genuine participatory democracy. When he ran for president in 1996 and more vehemently in 2000, he seemed to embody a cause much greater than himself. Nader was a leader with a keen sense of hearing ordinary people -- including activists strategically at work to improve our country.

But now, Nader seems to be so transfixed with his own vision that he’s much less inclined to be listening. Many who supported his previous presidential campaigns (myself included) are opposed to a 2004 Nader race -- and aghast that he’s on the verge of deciding to go ahead with it.

Last month, Nader announced that he won’t seek the Green Party presidential nomination but may run as an independent. He plans to make a decision by the end of January.

Early this month Matthew Rothschild, the editor of The Progressive magazine, wrote that “above all, today there is a recognition, even among many Greens, that the risk of another four years of Bush may be too great to bear.” Referring to Nader’s prospective independent presidential campaign, Rothschild added: “There is no groundswell of grassroots support for such a move; it is almost totally individualistic.”

In politics, with media coverage devoting an inordinate amount of attention to individual personas, mainstream news outlets frequently present the individual as the engine that pulls history forward. But progressive leadership can’t be successful when it is out of sync with social movements.

Often it’s much more difficult to challenge those you hold in high regard than those you disdain. So far, many progressive leaders and journalists who don’t think twice about denouncing George W. Bush or criticizing Democratic presidential candidates have hesitated to make public their private negative views of a Nader presidential campaign this year.

Overall, we’re acculturated to perceive stubbornness -- adherence to a “vision” -- as a sign of strength. Sometimes it is. But at other times it is a weakness. Allies can assist us to distinguish between the two. That’s what friends are for -- to help us understand when we might be truly visionary and when we’re just seeing things.

Norman Solomon is Executive Director of the Institute for Public Accuracy (www.accuracy.org) and a syndicated columnist. His latest book is Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn’t Tell You (Context Books, 2003) with Reese Erlich. He can be reached at: mediabeat@igc.org

 
Other Recent Articles by Norman Solomon

 
* Dixie Trap for Democrats in Presidential Race
*
Running On Empty: Ralph Nader Shouldn’t Run in 2004
* George Will’s Ethics: None of Our Business?
*
The Unpardonable Lenny Bruce
*
Announcing the P.U.-Litzer Prizes for 2003
*
Smoking Gun: Former British Intel Employee Faces Imprisonment for Exposing US Spying
*
Breakthrough and Peril for the Green Party
*
Dean and the Corporate Media Machine

* Pew Poll on “Trade” Doesn’t Pass the Sniff Test

* Linking the Occupation of Iraq With the “War on Terrorism”
* Media Clash in Brazil: A Distant Mirror
* War, Social Justice, Media and Democracy
* The Iraq Trap: Watch Out What You Ask For
* The Steady Theft of Our Time
* Cracking the Media Walls

* The Politics of Media Filtration          
* Brand Loyalty and the Absence of Remorse
* Media Tips for the Next Recall
* Unmasking the Ugly “Anti-American”
* California's Populist Revival
* “Wesley & Me”: A Real-Life Docudrama
* The Get-Rich Con: Are Media Values Better Now?
* Triumph of the Media Mill
* The Political Capital of 9/11
* The Quagmire of Denouncing a “Quagmire”
* The Ten Commandments: Are They Fair and Balanced?
* Dean Hopes and Green Dreams: The 2004 Presidential Race
* If Famous Journalists Became Honest Rappers

* Schwarzenegger Run May Trigger Tremors in GOP
* NEWS FLASH: This is Not a "Silly Season"
* Too Err is Human, To Truly Correct is Divine
* US Media Are Too Soft on the White House
* Green Party Taking the Plunge for 2004
* Media’s War Boosters Unlikely to Voice Regret
* Summertime . . . and the Politics of Money is Easy
* Tilting Democrats in The Presidential Race
* The Politics of Impeachment

 

HOME

 

 

 

 

FREE hit counter and Internet traffic statistics from freestats.com