
America Divided? It's Only the Blabocrats
Beyond Michael Moore vs. Rush Limbaugh
By
JOE KLEIN

Sunday, Aug. 08, 2004
"People are really hating right now," Jim Lehrer, public television's
lion of civility, said a few weeks ago. "Our e-mails and our phone
calls reflect not a lot of open minds out there." Well, it certainly
seems soand especially last week, as the friends and fanatics of
John Kerry and George W. Bush mobilized themselves for the general
election. A flying squad of Vietnam veteransnot directly related to
the Bush campaignlaunched a slime attack on John Kerry's war
record. A flying squad of pop musiciansnot directly related to the Kerry campaignannounced that they would
launch a massive October concert tour to save the nation from
President Bush. The people of Missouri voted overwhelmingly against
gay marriage. And, of course, there was the usual array of screechers
and squawkers polluting the airwaves, dominating public discourse,
drowning out any stray hints of moderation or reason.
We are a divided nation, it is said. There is a cultural chasm
between the red states and the blue, between the religious and the
secular, between Michael Moore's America and Rush Limbaugh's. The
"culture war" has become a pillar of the conventional wisdom. But is
it real? Is it possible that the great partisan divide is a
media-induced mirage, little more than an exaggerated case of
squeaky-wheelism? There is plenty of evidence that the very real
disputes pushed by political activists and chair-throwing media
yakkerscall this the Anger-Industrial Complexare being carelessly
extrapolated to include a far less vehement populace.
Take the Moore/Limbaugh divide. A new Annenberg poll shows that the
two infotainers are little more than postmodern tribal leaders: an
estimated 8% of Americans saw Fahrenheit 9/11 in July, and an
estimated 7% listened to Limbaugh. Their tribes are hilariously
antithetical on a range of issues83% of Rushites support the way
Bush is handling Iraq, 87% of Mooreists are opposed; 85% of Rushites
support Bush's handling of the economy, and 82% of Mooreists don't.
And yet, these extremist clumps throw disproportionate weight in the
public square. Dick Cheney appears on Limbaugh's show; Moore appears
in Jimmy Carter's box at the Democratic Convention. But even if you
generously double their numbersas some experts like Andrew Kohut of
the Pew poll dothat leaves 70% of the public unaccounted for. What
about the rest of us?
Maybe we're just busy living our lives. A new book by the Stanford
political scientist Morris Fiorina, Culture War? The Myth of a
Polarized America, argues that a closely divided nation isn't
necessarily a deeply divided nation. Fiorina cites polling data that
show minuscule differences between red- and blue-state voters on most
issues (for example: 64% of blues and 62% of reds believe
corporations have too much power). Even on ballistic issues like
abortion, the "never" and "always" believers tend to be a distinct
minority; the vast American middle says, reluctantly, "sometimes."
And while gay marriage may still be a bridge too far, as the results
in Missouri demonstrate, Fiorina and Kohut agree that attitudes
toward homosexuality (anti discrimination against gays) and racial
issues (pro interracial dating) have become far more tolerant over
the past 20 years.
There is a problem with Fiorina's data, though. Most were collected
before Sept. 11, 2001. "In 2000, average voters were having a hard
time telling the difference between the presidential candidates on
most issues," says Kohut. "That's not the case this year. There are
real anxieties, real differences on the big issuesthe war and the
economy. The cultural issues are less important now. The partisan
differences between the political activists are the greatest I've
ever seen." But again, what about the rest of us? "If one-third of
the public are activists, another third are leaners," Kohut says,
adding that the final third are only vaguely interested, if at all. "What we're seeing in our most recent surveys is that the leaners are
being affected by the passions of the partisans."
Affected or infected? Fiorina believes the public debate has been
hijacked by political "purists"like the abortion-rights activists
at naral and the gun lovers at the N.R.A.who find that taking the
most extreme positions is the most efficacious way to solicit money,
and also by the corruption of journalism by partisan blowhards like
Moore and Limbaugh. And he has a point. In a world where Islamist
terrorism and globalization-induced economic anxiety were distant
clouds, single-issue fanatics had a clear field to pollute the public
square. Scream journalism Crossfire, Hannity and Colmes, the various
"gangs" and "groups" of Washington blabocrats assaulting our
senses was always nauseating, but it was more understandable in a
world where the most important issue was the definition of the word
is. It was the only way to scare up an audience in those days. But
this is a different world now. And we are being forced to examine the
most serious, complicated sorts of issueswar and solvencythrough
an anachronistic, irresponsible political-media lens created for more
trivial times. So I guess I'm one of Lehrer's haters too: I hate the
Anger-Industrial Complex.
Email the Columnist | More Columns By Joe Klein
Joe Klein is a senior writer for TIME Magazine based in New York and Washington, D.C. He wrote the critically-acclaimed novel "Primary Colors." [more]
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