Fearless: The return of initiative and excellence
Fiorina, Haley and Whitman bring a shift; they bring a new political culture. The political generations can be identified by buzzwords. In the rising 1980s, the words were “leadership and excellence.” A best-seller back then, In Search of Excellence set the theme. Progress was made then; houses were built, families nurtured and the entrepreneurial spirit transformed America. But in time, the phrase “leadership and excellence” became so hackneyed that James A. Baker, secretary of State under George H.W. Bush, rigged the White House computers so that keyboards would balk when someone typed in the phrase.
In the 1990s, America consolidated. With the rise of the Clintons, a new phrase, “diversity and globalization,” replaced “leadership and excellence.” But that age is yielding today as China looks inward, Canada and Israel begin to go their own ways, and border states in Central Asia like Kyrgyzstan ask Russia to come back in. It was a time of broadest unification and consolidation: Picture Paul McCartney singing “Hands across the waters” or an arena full of women and children holding candles and singing that Barry Manilow Coke song (“I’d like to buy the world a home and furnish it with love … I’d like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony”) or a World Cup tournament; but not like the match in 1964 when 300 fans were killed in fights or the one in 1968 when 70 were beaten bloody and killed by thugs with clubs and bottles or the one in Hillsborough in 1989 when 96 fans were stomped to death, one where everyone — winners, losers, terrorists — each gets his own little trophy.
But it was not a time of excellence. John Kenneth Galbraith called it a “Culture of Contentment.” It was the age of the G-7; the well-fed government and municipal worker, unionized and heavily pensionized, fat and happy with that totem animal of the horde, the penguin, idolized in a desk calendar and a Starbuck’s mocha double latte with extra foam in hand. It was a time when presidential races resembled “American Idol.” When anyone could be secretary of State or vice president. When anyone could be president and it was un-American to think otherwise.
But quality and substance suffered. As President Obama is finding out in the BP Gulf disaster, eventually giving speeches literally from mountaintops is not enough and the country needs imagination and management.
Pretty soon we are going to need some new buzzwords. The women rising now to new achievement in last week’s primary resemble the leaders of the earlier day; the bygone days of “leadership and excellence.” Politics, like electromagnetism, travels in peaks and troughs, the one an equal and opposite counterforce of the other. And we are turning now and beginning our ascent to another peak.
Visit Mr. Quigley’s website at http://quigleyblog.blogspot.com.
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