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Obama Will Likely Be
Our Next Lincoln
By LIONEL ROLFE calclass@earthlink.net
http://www.pzaz.net/lionel/

Ultimately I think that Barak Obama will be considered one of the great
presidents. He has the intellectual ability to see what the problems are and
what might be done about them. That’s a big start, compared to the last
president. There’s a problem, however. The nation is awash in religious
fervor and a growing worship of ignorance, not unlike the Middle East and
too many other parts of the world. This is not the way to deal with the
future.
Thinking about this brought me to a
realization that it was a poet associated with Big Sur on the Northern
California coastline early in the last century, a product of Occidental
College in the Eagle Rock section of Los Angeles, who may have had the most
to say about much if not all of it.
Robinson Jeffers is possibly the nation's
most underrated poet.
It’s true that while most great novelists
and essayist are invariably on the political left, some of the great poets
have been on the right. Ezra Pound was a fascist and anti-semite. T.S.
Elliot was a smoother version of the same politics. Sad to say, Jeffers was
another great poet on the political right.
During the Depression, Jeffers hated
Roosevelt. He did not accept the fact that Roosevelt was saving capitalism
for the coupon clippers even as he introduced modifications to the system
involving regulation and planning. He invested heavily in the nation's
infrastructure, building many of its roads, hospitals, post offices,
libraries and the like. This, in turn, paved the way for the country to
emerge from World War II as the most powerful player on the scene.
Old fashioned Republicans like Jeffers
hated Roosevelt, unions, which got a foothold under Roosevelt, and Social
Security, which may have been the New Deal's crowning achievement. If
somehow Obama prevails and gets health care, he would be truly finishing
Roosevelt’s vision of a greater civilization than we have now.
Despite his horrible politics, Jeffers
developed a cosmology in his poetry which won him more devotees behind the
Iron Curtain than in his own country in the '50s. His religion was cold-eyed
and dispassionate, as seems appropriate for the son of a very strict
Protestant minister father. He was religious in that terrible Calvinist way,
which is more dour than mystical and hedonistic. He rewrote Greek tragedies
using the Big Sur landscape, and perhaps for that reason has been written
off as a regional poet, yet he was much more than that. This man was a
political conservative, but he wasn’t an ignoramus.
Now Obama is taking over at a point where
the American Empire, born out of the womb of the greatest revolution for
democracy in history, is more than slipping. It has become an empty shell.
Way back when the nation was becoming an
Imperial Power, our greatest writer, Mark Twain, wept public tears over the
descent of his beloved nation into colonialism. He didn’t like colonialism,
which he associated with decadent old European clergy and monarchy. He
believed in democracy, even as he proclaimed himself ashamed to even be a
human being. He optimistically proclaimed Yankee ingenuity over King Arthur
and his Round Table. Even as he wrote of Monkish frauds all over Europe, he
was embraced by the world as everyone’s Everyman.
The collapse of the American Empire may
have begun with losing Vietnam. Hardly had that war ended, we were slammed
with the great Gasoline Scare of the early '70s. The oil companies
told us how scarce oil was becoming, so we needed to stand in line to pay
whatever price they felt like charging us. They got away with it.
It’s been downhill ever since. By now, it
should be obvious to every sane and even slightly insane person that we have
major structural problems with health, transportation, finance and housing
in our society. There’s a lot of technology lying around, waiting only the
slightest encouragement to blossom. But the old powers -- the oil companies,
the coal companies, the munitions makers, the insurance companies, and the
like -- they want to hold back the tide.
Will they? Ultimately hopefully not.
Will Obama be a much more efficient
administrator of a shrinking empire than the Republicans, whose stupidity
rivaled that of Nero fiddling while Rome burnt. Obama has the problem of a
recalcitrant opposition which seems determined to allow him to do nothing to
deal with our problems.
They seem to studiously avoid his
warnings that China is moving toward the development of wind and solar
power, fast trains and the like on a massive scale, while we are barely
moving forward on these things at all. He points out that if we fail to
compete, the future will belong to them and not to us. The technology will
not develop here. That means America's glory days will be over.
And yet it needn't be that way.
This country has long played an important
role in the development of science and technology while other places were
mired in ignorance and sloth. Obviously, without new forms of energy and
transportation, we are condemned to the past.
In the '60s, when the Russians beat us
into space, an earlier Democratic president, John Kennedy, took the
opportunity to turn the country into the absolute powerhouse of science.
Many amazing technologies came out of what he did, and it brought a lot of
new prosperity to the land. But the grandest culmination came many years
after Kennedy was murdered by the very forces trying to ruin this country’s
future again. The Internet was discovered almost by accident and serendipity
by the Department of Defense, trying to link university research libraries
by computers.
Obama is trying to rekindle the country,
but the forces of superstition and ignorance, abound, in part because they
are financed by the most primitive of our industries-- oil, finance,
insurance. These forces are united in preventing new technologies. If
they succeed, the viability of this country will leave the Chinese in
charge.
The situation is so obviously fraught
with peril and promise. The most revanchist among us are making a spirited
bid to be our rulers, our oppressors, even our enemies, forever. There has
to be a keen sense of science in the land, but instead it is quite the
opposite. Without that, we will not get a handle on our future.
It was the way Jeffers saw the universe,
as a large and great cold entity, a bit indifferent to man’s puny struggles,
that suggests an approach.
There was no sentiment, no cheap shots in
his vision. So he asked, "Then, what is the answer?— Not to be deluded by
dreams."
Great civilizations have broken down into
violence before, he thundered, and "that however ugly the parts appear the
whole remains beautiful ... man dissevered from the earth and stars and his
history ... is an ugly thing."
Jeffers recommended choosing the least
evil faction, but don’t expect much, and don’t be deluded.
I like to take a little more optimistic
view of progress. Indeed, it is an article of faith with me that there is
such a thing as progress, although man has to consciously choose that path.
Jeffers seems to be saying whether there’s progress or not, tyrants will
come, there will be massive breakdowns, and Obama and all of us will be
denied what’s due us. Still, Jeffers give us more to ponder.
Lionel Rolfe is the author several books,
including "Literary L.A." and "The Uncommon Friendship of Yaltah Menuhin and
Willa Cather," which are featured on the Web site,
www.boryanabooks.com.
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