Machiavellian And The War of Words


For the past two weeks there has been a word that keeps cropping up in the talks of the Republican attack dogs and in the right leaning media types discussions of Senator Obama. I find it striking that so many of them have coincidently begun using the same word in the criticisms of the Senator. The reason that I think it is important to point out this coincidence is because they are actually code-speak for white males. The word that keeps cropping up is Machiavellian. I first heard it on CNN Newsroom last week when the anchor person was discussing Senator Obama’s speech at a church on Father’s Day and his call for black fathers to step up and become more involved in raising their children.

The reason this particular episode stuck out to me was that I was watching the show at my folk’s house and while they are fairly intelligent people they never attended college so they were never exposed to the book, “The Prince” by Niccolò di Bernardo dei Machiavelli; an Italian diplomat. For those who also may not be familiar with the author or the book, it is basically a story of how to gain and maintain political power through in many cases dubious and ruthless means. The gist of the story is that the ends justifies the means and in politics most all behavior is fair. My father asked me what did that word “Machiavellian” meant right after the announcer said it. Even though he didn’t know what it meant, he could tell that it wasn’t used in a complimentary manner.

In my explanation of the word and the history surrounding it I made the mistake of saying the author was French instead of Italian. I explained to them that basically it was a story of how one gains political power through devious means. My father then responded, “So he is saying don’t believe what Obama is saying because he is a ni**er?” I said not exactly but you could come away with that impression.

Machiavelli's best known book is The Prince, in which he describes the arts by which a Prince (a ruler) can retain control of his realm. He focuses primarily on what he calls the "new prince", under the assumption that a hereditary prince has an easier task since the people are accustomed to him. All a hereditary prince needs to do is carefully maintain the institutions that the people are used to; a new prince has a much more difficult task since he must stabilize his newfound power and build a structure that will endure. This task requires the Prince to be publicly above reproach but privately may require him to do immoral things in order to achieve his goals. Wikipedia

This little incident in and of itself would not have caused me great alarm except as the week progressed I began to hear the term more and more in the same sentence with Senator Obama. It’s as if the talking points of the Republican attack machine for the week was this Machiavellian thing. It was being echoed across the airwaves. And then in today’s New York Times one of the chief Republican apologist op-ed columnist David Brooks is echoing the same tune. The code is not that Obama is black and therefore untrustworthy although there will be those who come away with that impression. No the code is far more nefarious than that, it is that he is in reality saying that he is for change, but the truth is that he is an ambitious black man who wants to tilt the table towards blacks. Thus reinforcing the fear of many angry white men who believe that this is the beginning of their losing their “rightful” place in America.

This guy is the whole Chicago package: an idealistic, lakefront liberal fronting a sharp-elbowed machine operator. He’s the only politician of our lifetime who is underestimated because he’s too intelligent. He speaks so calmly and polysyllabically that people fail to appreciate the Machiavellian ambition inside. NY Times

In the discussion on CNN following the speech the announcer stated that though he could not speak to what was in Senator Obama’s heart, it was still his job to ask the question. I’m sorry but where in his job description or any reporters job description does it say that questioning the hearts of other men was part of their job duties? Would this same reporter ask the Pope if he truly believed in God? Of course not, but for some reason to question the faith of Senator Obama is fair game. What they are really saying is that he is not grounded in faith but in a selfish desire to rule and that he would use anything including God to accomplish this goal. As if God were a requirement for the office that he seeks. Where were these “faith checkers” during the Bush administration when Mr. Bush was proclaiming his faith and that Jesus was his role model while he sent young men and women to their deaths in a war that was not only unnecessary but based on lies?

SANCHEZ: But here's the question. This guy's there trying to sound or sounding or being sincere. I'm not getting into his heart. I'm not going to read what he's actually doing.

I guess the question to you as an analyst is: Is this really Barack Obama sharing something with him that's very real and very personal, or is this a politician taking a Machiavellian step to try and get voters he otherwise wouldn't get? Media Matters

SANCHEZ: Let's go now to the debut of Preston on politics. CNN political editor Mark Preston is joining us live.

Mark, let's do this. Let's talk first about the politics side of this faith angle. Listen, I don't want to sound jaded and some are going to criticize me for it, but I guess it's part of my job. So let me just ask you straight out.

He does this in an effort to cut into that sizable John McCain white male lead, doesn't he? I mean, this is a values play by Barack Obama. He says trust in the Lord. When was the last time you heard a Democrat in church using language like that?

MARK PRESTON, CNN POLITICAL EDITOR: It's a couple of different things there, Rick. First of all it is political. Everything Barack Obama does now until now November is political. Everything John McCain does from now until November is political. In the end, it's very unlikely Barack Obama is going to win a majority of these evangelical voters, these conservative evangelical voters.

But what they're looking for is they're trying to reach out and hit those moderate voters. Those moderate evangelicals who are fed up with the Republican Party. CNN

First Senator Obama catches hell for going to the wrong Church for 20 years, then he gets it for saying that he relies on faith in God when times get tough. As a Christian myself I can understand where he is coming from. There are times when all I can do to hang on and keep from going crazy in this world is to rely on my faith in God. There is a passage in the Bible that states,” To the pure, all things are pure, but to those who are corrupted and do not believe, nothing is pure. In fact, both their minds and consciences are corrupted.*” In other words if my heart is corrupt then I believe that everyone else’s is corrupt as well and I can justify my behavior no matter how despicable based on that belief.

*Titus 1:15

The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie -- deliberate, contrived and dishonest -- but the myth -- persistent, persuasive and unrealistic - John F. Kennedy

The Disputed Truth


Forgiven June 22, 2008 - 10:55pm

This is an important post and I encourage all our readers here to think about the ramifications. The Machiavelli meme is just one of the many contorted narratives employed my the right-wing smear machine. This one gets gets interwoven with "elitism" and "the Chicago Machine" which in political mythology is the American version of Machiavellian politics, oh my!

Take Michael Powell's hit job in the NY Times for example. Yes the same joker (but it's no joke) who I indicted in my last post for pushing the narrative of Michelle Obama as an "angry black woman."

Michael Shaw at the Bag provided a terrific analysis of Powell's piece titled; The Machiavellian Mystery Man: Michael Powell's Spin on Barack Obama.

Mr. Obama studies his chosen world like a Talmudist, charting trends and noting which rivals are strong and which are weak. His politics are liberal but his instincts are accommodationist; he cultivates older, powerful mentors, Democratic and Republican, and he made his peace with the Chicago Democratic machine. An old Chicago hand notes that Mr. Obama seems to have read his Niccolo Machiavelli.

In the end I think Forgiven's father nailed it, the Rethug's ultimate narrative comes down to base racism.

“So he is saying don’t believe what Obama is saying because he is a ni**er?”

Yup, that's what he's saying. A Machiavellian, elitist, ultra-liberal, power-hungry, lying, cheating, radical Muslim, Cosmopolitan (they're not sure why this is bad but it is), African, ni**er! And just in case that's not enough, he's married to an "Angry Black Woman!"

Back in January I noted that Karl Rove publicly began providing the racially coded language for how the Right-wing should frame Obama. Let's not forget, these memes had not yet surfaced in mainstream media. Obama was still held up as "the post-racial messiah of American politics." But many of us realized, Rove or no Rove, it was just a matter of time.

Her remarks helped wash away the memory of her angry replies to attacks at the debate's start. His trash talking was an unattractive carryover from his days playing pickup basketball at Harvard, and capped a mediocre night.

The Powell piece above also includes a photo of Obama playing basketball with the caption; "with the intensity of a bloodhound."

These memes, visual trickery and coded language are so pervasive that most of the time we don't even see or hear them. A warning flag went up the first time I saw the Machiavelli/Chicago Machine reference. Now its evident that this is yet another subtlety coded narrative in the right-wing dirty bag of tricks.

Good work Forgiven. Everyone else pass it along. The best defense we have against these false narratives is to go on offense and expose them and those who perpetrate them early and often.

stuart noble June 23, 2008 - 2:30am

I'm ready to bet that McCain is gonna be a Dole repeat.

creativelcro June 23, 2008 - 1:31pm

I think he should appoint people to the FCC who will yank the broadcast licenses for ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC.

Jonathryn June 23, 2008 - 7:14am

...

creativelcro June 23, 2008 - 1:29pm

while out and about in Texas.

"I'm afraid of Obama because of his links to Al Qaeda."

"He'll take everything you own."

"Those leftist types always descend into totalitarianism. If he wins that might be the last election ever."

Kind of like the pot calling the kettle black.

I did inhale.

Don June 23, 2008 - 8:03am

and so not "credible" twice over.....

and then of course there's "effete"


1."George Washington did not cross the Delaware for Capitalism," -Shmuley Boteach.
2.The Dems haven't punished the GOP enough, so you're going to reward the Republicans?

nymole June 23, 2008 - 8:54am

Obama Camp Closely Linked With Ethanol

on Page 1 of the NYT today.

Obama's support for ethanol is contrasted with that of the (unmentioned in the article) newly 'evolved', (current offshore-drilling enthusiast) John McCain.

I certainly don't think that Obama can argue any longer that ethanol is an unproblematic long-term substitute for oil, given its now recognized negative impact on the amount land available to grow food.

What I object to is the Times decision that this piece (or any of the promoted mixed info-op blog pieces, including any annointing Obama) is a first-page-worthy Times news article.

"The candidates’ views were tested recently in the Farm Bill approved by Congress that extended the subsidies for corn ethanol, though reducing them slightly, and the tariffs on imported sugar cane ethanol. Because Mr. McCain and Mr. Obama were campaigning, neither voted. But Mr. McCain said that as president he would veto the bill, while Mr. Obama praised it."


1."George Washington did not cross the Delaware for Capitalism," -Shmuley Boteach.
2.The Dems haven't punished the GOP enough, so you're going to reward the Republicans?

nymole June 23, 2008 - 10:03am

He is the junior Senator from Illinois. It's a farm state, I hear.

(FWFTN is a billboard in the Calif central valley, where LA steals our water.)

“The Playboy reader invites a female acquaintance in for a quiet discussion of Picasso, Nietzsche, jazz, sex.” - Hugh Hefner

Tonsure Wimple June 23, 2008 - 8:06pm

Agreed. Information and Communications policy seems to be the only area where Obama shows any real inclination towards a progressive agenda. The FCC would be the obvious place to start. But I won't hold my breath on any license revoking. But if independent media got a few small breaks from the FCC it could have profound consequences on the overall media environment.

stuart noble June 23, 2008 - 10:21am

To the pure, all things are pure, but to those who are corrupted and do not believe, nothing is pure. In fact, both their minds and consciences are corrupted.

When you use that to buttress your argument, you get in return a true measure of the heart.

GOPers suffer from CHIDS (Chronic Humor and Irony Deficit Syndrome), prounced 'kids' with that parental sigh

stumpy June 23, 2008 - 10:25am

lol

stuart noble June 23, 2008 - 10:43am

Had a lot to say about change (and how hard it is to make change).

Synoia June 23, 2008 - 11:31am

Just this morning I followed a link given by Oliver Willis to the Conservative site HumanEvents.com and it gives credence to your observation. It is about Obama and titled "The Changeling". As soon as I read your post this link popped back in my head. You can read it here.

There can be little doubt that this is the latest strategy to come out of the GOP's Rovian braintrust. It is just too pervasive of late and seems to have just popped out of the woodwork. It is no doubt the latest trial balloon to see if they can get something to stick. And the corporate media are certainly picking up the ball and running with it, just as we should have expected.

"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity"

Mike-in-Ohio June 23, 2008 - 11:42am

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