Thoughts on Last Night’s State of the Union Address


This year I bothered to watch the State of the Union address and the Republican response, which I would normally just read later or on the following morning, and I don’t think I gained much from the viewing. There were some briefly amusing moments. At one point, Obama called for comprehensive immigration reform, the camera switched to McCain, and McCain wasn’t applauding. He just sat there stone-faced. That tended to be the way most of Obama’s micro-proposals were greeted on the right side of the chamber, which isn’t all that surprising.

Like many others, I found the attempt to compare national unity to the discipline of a military unit to be unnerving and strange. Unfortunately, if the military is one of the very few institutions that the public trusts and respects, the idea that everything else should be more like the military might start to catch on, which would be a far worse mistake than the more common error of thinking that the government should function just like a business. The idea that “we” should all put aside our differences for the sake of “the mission” assumes that “we” all know what “the mission” is, and it also takes for granted that none of “us” can opt out of “the mission” but must simply do our part in making sure that “the mission” is successful.

Those sections of the speech were quite illiberal. I fear that this is one of the side-effects of perpetual war: civilian leaders become so accustomed to being “at war” (whether there is a legal state of war or not) that they start to forget about the dangers of militaristic rhetoric or militarized policies. One of the most unfortunate developments of the Bush years was the refrain that one heard from hawkish Republicans that George Bush was “our” Commander-in-Chief, as if all citizens were all in the military and owed him unquestioning allegiance. That, too, was complete nonsense, but it was part of the general atmosphere of those years in which criticism of Bush’s blunders and bungled handling of major decisions was treated as a sort of mutiny.

Mitch Daniels’ response was a good one for him in that it was instantly forgettable. He didn’t make any big mistakes, and he delivered the speech about as well as one would expect under the circumstances. He fared better than Jindal. It was his standard speech on themes of debt and fiscal responsibility, which was fine, but there was not much in it that is going to generate any interest outside of the small circle of Daniels boosters.

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2 Responses to “Thoughts on Last Night’s State of the Union Address”

  1. It might be best for Obama that while the SOTU was OK, it was not memorable. Memorable SOTUs tend to be that for the wrong reasons. In 1994, Bill Clinton told both houses of Congress and the home audience that unless they came to him with a comprehensive health care reform legislation, he would be forced to use his veto pen and veto any half-measures. Later that year, during a time of peace and economic stability, Clinton lost both houses of Congress by huge margins. In 2002, we had Bush’s Axis of Evil line in the SOTU, and the result of that was a splintered Iraq, a nuclear North Korea, and an empowered Iran.

  2. “This year I bothered to watch the State of the Union address and the Republican response, which I would normally just read later or on the following morning, and I don’t think I gained much from the viewing.”

    I did just the reverse. Whereas in prior years, I would have watched the entire speech, last night I watched just 10 minutes before turning off the TV.

    “Like many others, I found the attempt to compare national unity to the discipline of a military unit to be unnerving and strange.”

    What I found especially hilarious was Obama hailing the end of our Iraq involvement and then giving some general statement about how our military adventures had added to Americans’ security.

    “Last month, I went to Andrews Air Force Base and welcomed home some of our last troops to serve in Iraq. Together, we offered a final, proud salute to the colors under which more than a million of our fellow citizens fought – and several thousand gave their lives.

    We gather tonight knowing that this generation of heroes has made the United States safer and more respected around the world. For the first time in nine years, there are no Americans fighting in Iraq. For the first time in two decades, Osama bin Laden is not a threat to this country. Most of al Qaeda’s top lieutenants have been defeated. The Taliban’s momentum has been broken, and some troops in Afghanistan have begun to come home.”

    As I seem to recall, Obama earned an undeserved reputation for being a man of peace for opposing the Iraq war as a “dumb war.” To see him now hail that “dumb” war as somehow adding to Americans’ security seems rather dumb, if not outright dishonest. It would be equally absurd to claim that our long and unended war in Afghanistan has somehow made Americans more secure. The generals in the audience were certainly lapping up the undeserved praise.

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