Libertarian Freedom: Sarah Palin Lies Because....

by: Paul Rosenberg

Sat Jul 04, 2009 at 14:00


Sarah Palin Resigns In A Mega-Blizzard of Lies--Revealing A Crucial Difference Between Libertarians and Liberals

It was a slow newsday, Friday before a holiday, so why shouldn't Sarah Palin suck up all the oxygen in five continents?  If only that stupid Michael Jackson fellah hadn't died the week before, she could have totally pulled it off.  As it was, she did pretty damn well for a couple of hours there.  Her big secret?  Same as it ever was: she lied.  Seven ways from Sunday.  She lied about being cleared in all the Alaska investigations; she lied about their cost; she lied about wanting to serve the people of Alaska; she lied about fulfilling her goals; she lied about people attacking her son Trig; she lied about being like a point guard; she lied when she said "and" and "the".  She spoke, therefore she lied.

Why does Sarah Palin lie?  She lies to get out of trouble; she lies to shift blame; she lies to get even; she lies to get ahead; she lies to hurt her enemies; she lies to amuse her friends; she lies to relieve boredom; she lies to have some fun; she lies because truth is bother; she lies as a key to strategy; she lies because she has no plan; she lies to confuse anyone trying to keep track; she lies to make sense to those not keeping track; she lies for power; she lies because lying works for her; she lies just for the hell of it; she lies because she can; she lies because that's how she expresses her freedom--a very libertarian idea of freedom, I might well add.

Liberals and libertarians are both about freedom, but their concepts of freedom are radically different, and Sarah Palin's compulsive, multipurpose lying is as a good a way as any to approach understanding the differences between them.

In sharp contrast, liberals characteristically express their freedom by telling the truth, inconvenient truths, as Al Gore put it.  Truths about racism and war, such as Martin Luther King told, when speaking truth to power. Truths about the social order and tradition that are not supposed to be said.

Paul Rosenberg :: Libertarian Freedom: Sarah Palin Lies Because....
One way to clarify this difference is my old favorite, Robert Kegan's levels of cognitive development.  Liberalism has a natural affinity for level four, characterized by autonomy/self-authorship, stepping outside the level-three socially-constructed self and the world it knows, and passing independent judgment.

Libertarian freedom rejects that world as well, but it does so from a point of view of not understanding, of arbitrary rejection.  It does so from level two, the level at which one is one's point of view.  "You're not the boss of me" is its snot-nosed twelve-year-old battle cry.  Which is perfectly fine, for a twelve year old.  Twelve-year-olds lie a lot.  It works for them...or at least it seems to, for a while.  But then they turn thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, they start growing up, or at least most of them do.  Bit by bit they start learning to see the world from multiple points of view, until the day dawns when they no longer are their point of view any more.  Instead, they have a point of view, and that means they can have a mature discussion with others, each with their own point of view.

This is what Sarah Palin can't do.  This is why everything reduces to personality clashes with her.  From the Vanity Fair article by Todd Purdum, here's a view from John Bitney, a friend of Palin's from high school and one of the key people who helped her become governor, who subsequently was fired for becoming romantically involved with (later married to) the estranged wife of another close Palin friend:

When I ask Bitney what he makes of the whole Palin phenomenon, he sighs. "What do I take away from this?" he asks. "Oh, I don't know. I don't know. It's just a lot of emotions and stuff. I find it's frustrating dealing with Sarah, because it seems we're always dealing with emotional crap and we never seem to be able to focus on the business at hand that needs to be done. I don't know whether to blame her or pity her for all this emotional upheaval that we're always going through with her. Now we all get to listen to Levi and Bristol. Check my feet for horseshoes if I have to sit there and listen to another talk show. I got involved in helping her become governor because we needed to change some policy directions. Teen abstinence is not why I waved signs for her."

Kegan's explanation of level two consciousness, as I draw on it above, seems to me to be far and away the most parsimonious way to explain the upheaval that Bitney talks about, and that in turn seems the most parsimonious way to explain Sarah Palin in toto.  There's nothing wrong with level two consciousness per se.  It's just a stage of development.  Without it, one could advance to more sophisticated stages.

The problem comes in dealing with matters that are too complex for it, matters more complex than a twelve-year-old's world.  Such as high school.  Some folks do fine in high school despite being stuck in their twelve-year-old mindset.  This goes especially for those at the top of their cliques.  These kids don't have to learn their socialization lessons.  They don't have to learn to respect, or even understand the existence of other people's points of view.  It's up to others to understand them.

At one level, the character Cordelia Chase in Buffy, The Vampire Slayer is a perfect embodiment of this attitude, except for the fact that occasionally she lets slip that she's profoundly aware of her existential condition.  ("What, I can't have layers?" she says, in a somewhat different context.)  For Cordelia, other people exist only as objects.  They have no interiority, no point of view that she can recognize apart from her own.  If they agree with here, then they're cool, because they share her point of view.  They validate her.  Otherwise, she has no use for them.  Sound familiar?

Significantly, what spurs Cordelia to begin evolving is her lust for Xander despite the fact she sees him as a social leper, while he sees her as totally vacuous.  But that's a topic for another day.  Suffice it to say, some form of Force Majeure is needed to break out of this state for those arrested in it.

But Palin is utterly immune to Force Majeure--which is why she is such a mega-hero to her worshipful supporters.  Indeed, in her mind, she herself is Force Majeure.  And the same is essentially true of all pure libertarians.  Their simple grasp of essential truth makes them immune to everything else the world has to offer.  "Essential truth" confirms them in the splendid isolation of their own unquestionable point of view.

Level four liberals also elevate their individual points of view above the dictates of social convention.  But what differentiates them from level two libertarians is that they know what they are rejecting, and why.  Which means they often reject only partially or not at all.  One need not reject just because one can reject. They also respect that others may choose to reject or accept differently than they do.  The interiority of others is not the total mystery it is to level two libertarians.

As we celebrate this day of freedom, we would do well to reflect on how different the meaning of freedom is between level four liberals and level two libertarians.  They are not the only two positions in the world, to be sure. But they do constitute a sharp distinction, the contemplation of which can shed considerable light on both the profound truths and petty details of our shared political lives.


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Cordelia (4.00 / 1)
At one level, the character Cordelia Chase in Buffy, The Vampire Slayer is a perfect embodiment of this attitude, except for the fact that occasionally she lets slip that she's profoundly aware of her existential condition...

Cordelia and Buffy are actually the same character.  If you go back to the original movie script, you'll see that it is basically Cordelia gets superpowers, forcing her to grow up.  Once Whedon decided to start the show after the events of the movie (more or less) he needed to create Cordelia to show the same change.

Too bad Sarah never had to grow up.  Even worse, though, is what a large percentage of the population likes her because of her lack of maturity.


I'm NOT a Josh Whedon fan (0.00 / 0)
I never watched a single episode of Buffy, thought Firefly mildly amusing, Dr. Horrible unbearably stupid, and Dollhouse unbearably self-indulgent, even making allowances for the constraints of popular entertainment. It may be that I have a tin ear, or that my taste for offhand pop-culture references to the deep subtexts of our cultural heritage was nurtured in another era, but I don't think that Sarah Palin deserves all the fuss. She's an epiphenomen at best, and at worst, something to scrape off your shoe.

If we want icons, titans of the everyman-brought-low genre, epic working-class distillations of all the ills of modernity, Michael Jackson serves us far better. So does John McCain, for that matter, or even Hillary Clinton.

As for libertarians, they're happy enough eating honey and locusts, and preaching to lizard-strewn hunks of sandstone. Why disturb them?


[ Parent ]
Dr. Horrible (4.00 / 1)
Didn't you find it interesting that Whedon could accomplish in 45 minutes what George Lucas could not over three full movies?

But I understand what you are saying.  You have to be willing to accept the starting premise.  You have to like superheros to even have a chance of liking Dr. Horrible.  But it was very much not stupid, which would require the lack of intelligence.


[ Parent ]
Wet behind the ears (0.00 / 0)
That's my judgment. As for George Lucas, I have no idea what to say, except run away, run away.... What it comes down to, I guess, is de gustibus non est disputandem. I repent here and now, in front of God and everybody, of my injudicious provocation.

Anyway, it being the 4th and all, I gotta go cook for the multitudes. Crab cakes and hush puppies, which have garnered a modest following among my non-Southern friends. I can't say it's been justly earned -- I'm no Justin Wilson, let alone Paul Prudhomme, but there'll be flags, I presume, and plenty of beer.

A happy day to all, and amid all the flags, please give a thought to the yellowing documents in glass cases which are really what all American patriots should carry in their hearts, no matter what abominations have been perpetrated in our names since they were first committed to paper.


[ Parent ]
Oh, My Poor Boy! (4.00 / 1)
I know it's useless to argue these things.

My sister's got very good taste, generally.  I just know to ignore the genres I'm not into.  But Margret Drabble, no less, called her "the perfect reader," which for an English prof is the best kind of cred, IMHO.  Still, she doesn't even begin to entertain the idea of Buffy.  So if she doesn't, what chance do you have?

Still, I must explain: this is best damn writer working in television today.  More moral complexity than almost anyone else ever dreamed of.  Jane Espenson, co-executive producer of Battlestar Galactica--another show notable for moral complexity--was a Whedon protege who really came into her own writing for Buffy.  She was also a student of Lakoff's at UC Berkeley.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
Yeah, well, I asked for it, din't I.... (0.00 / 0)
Battlestar Galactica? Moral complexity? (I did give them a brief thumbs up for stealing from Mario Savio, and the reprise of LBJ's swearing in was delicately done, etc., etc., but Christ-on-a-crutch, what a mess they made of it in the end.)

I should quit while I can still walk away. In fact, I'm going to. Right now....


[ Parent ]
If you don't see moral complexity in BSG you are tone deaf. (0.00 / 0)
imho.

[ Parent ]
Yes, what you're talking about is easy to see, (0.00 / 0)
because it invariably has Moral Complexity™ stamped on it somewhere. This isn't exactly moral complexity as I understand it; it's more like using a six-pound sledgehammer to kill flies. If you must look for moral complexity in a popular TV show, try The Wire.

[ Parent ]
You're Being A Bit Too Cryptic For Me, Mark (4.00 / 1)
Cordy & Buffy are clearly related (we all know Joss loves Shakespearean doubling), but I'm not following the detail here.  

Obviously, the system works in large part by fostering immaturity.  Even worse than Palin's tweenage mentality fanbase are those fixated around 5-7 or so.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
Same Character (4.00 / 1)
What I meant by saying Buffy and Cordelia are the same character is Cordelia at the beginning of the TV series is the same is Buffy at the beginning of the movie.  They have the same background and represent the same world view.  They were both the lead cheerleaders for their schools, for example.

During the course of the movie (script at least, leaving the actual film out of it) Buffy moves from level 2 to 3.  She is forced into a larger world and must change accordingly.

For the TV show, Whedon chose to start after the events of the movie, not from the very beginning.  She shows up already the Slayer and already at level 3, even though she would prefer to return to her previous life.  Therefore Whedon couldn't use the Buffy character to show that progression.

Thus, he created Cordelia.  Cordelia as a character is exactly like Buffy before she became the Slayer.  So now we get to see Cordelia go through the same growth.

If the TV show started from the beginning I doubt there would be a Cordelia character.   There would be no need as Buffy herself could show this journey.  Instead, we would have Harmony, almost a third copy of the same starting character (though not as smart), who never makes that journey in High School.  (Once vamped, Harmony eventually, sort of makes that journey on Angel, but only barely.)


[ Parent ]
Okay (0.00 / 0)
I never read the original script.  Always sort of meant to, knowing how bummed Joss was at how the movie turned out. I follow you now, but don't know if I'd agree, in light of what I said about Joss's thing for doubling--which, as you note, gets amplified with Harmony as well.

Considering Harmony's a vampire from graduation day on, the fact that she evolves at all is pretty remarkable.  Spike's the only other souless vampire who evolves, and he's driven to it quite against his will.

One thing that sort of threw me off a bit is that one thing pushing Buffy to evolve is not so much her calling, but her desire to escape it, to be a good daughter, hence, please her mother, which is what first leads her to seek out Willow, thus setting everything else in motion.  And, of course, there's a whole different doubling going on with Buffy and Willow, as Willow actually develops more, covering a broader arc than either Buffy or Cordelia do.  (Course, it doesn't hurt that AH is much the best actor of the three.)

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
Close, but no cigar (0.00 / 0)
You give Sarah entirely too much credit. She lies about lying but does not even do that very well. I find it odd that she, in her own warped manner, is more transparent than Obama claims to be.  

Credit? (4.00 / 2)
Where did I say she was good at it?

Persistent? You betcha!

But convincing?  Not so much.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
and that makes her not dangerous because ... (0.00 / 0)
The commentary all seems to center on how this impacts the Palin's presidential prospects and the other Republican Party contenders, reveling in the likelihood that her presidential chances are zilch.  But there are other possibilities.

Yes, she could get indicted and go to prison, where she would have time to write something like Mine Camp.

Or she might be free to run off to Argentina with soul-mate Sanford.

Or she could form a new organization, like Independent Teabaggers for America, going forth to sign up all the teabaggers and anti-immigrant folks and her slack-jawed beady-eyed true believers from the campaign who understand that Obama is a Muslim, and get the support of those in high places who understand that war with Iran is inevitable (the American Hindenburgs) and that the collapse of the American economy may unfortunately call for harsh measures, and that the collapse of the American empire was caused by liberal traitors in high places.  Palin may be only level two, but in whipping up these level zero people, that may be an advantage.

Yes, we know all about the dead-enders, the Republican 20%.  But the liberal blogosphere is so fixated on elections that it can only see the world in electoral terms.  What possibilities arise for the right if they step outside the electoral framework?  If the dead-enders have a leader sexier than Limbaugh, and an organization that is neither the church nor the Republican Party.

I don't know the answer to this.  But the possibilities are chilling.  And what is more chilling is that American liberalism is completely incapable of even thinking along these lines.


Good Point (0.00 / 0)
I've tried to write about this before, when writing about hegemonic struggle, how the right sees things like elections and normal politics in terms of war, going back to the warrior roots of aristocratic culture--though, of course, the Palin appeal is to the Scots-Irish rabble, who came from a very different world, as Albion's Seed makes plain.

Still, the sheer messiness of this implosion implies a level of instability that while certainly dangerous also appears to be significantly self-sabotaging, which could be the biggest blessing here.

I doubt she could pen anything compelling on her own, even in prison.  She's a performance artist, not a writer.  And if she were as disciplined as Laurie Anderson, then she'd be really dangerous.

Thank goodness, she's not.  From Lawyers, Guns and Money:

Palin on "Endurance"

The now funniest line from Palin's ridiculous Runner's World interview:

    I betcha I'd have more endurance. My one claim to fame in my own little internal running circle is a sub-four marathon. It wasn't necessarily a good running time, but it proves I have the endurance within me to at least gut it out and that is something. If you ever talk to my old coaches, they'd tell you, too. What I lacked in physical strength or skill I made up for in determination and endurance. So if it were a long race that required a lot of endurance, I'd win.

Of course you would.



"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"

[ Parent ]
Mine Camp was hopefully a joke (0.00 / 0)
... but with her you can't assume too much.

It's the instability that makes her dangerous.

By the way, did you notice that her statement had no "you betcha's" and such, no hockey mom accent at all?


[ Parent ]
Yes, I Chuckled At That (4.00 / 1)
But though the title was a joke, I took the point to be serious.  And, really, it's hard to see any prison letting her communicate with her legions in any other form. So what's left?

By the way, did you notice that her statement had no "you betcha's" and such, no hockey mom accent at all?

Did I notice?  You betcha!  Alaskan bloggers have commented on her in-and-out accent at least since last summer.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
Palin has declared her independance (4.00 / 4)
from the United States of I'm Not the Boss of Me! Freedom! Freedom! Freedom! To be a patriotic American is to be free to rant incoherently, break one's pledges and abandon all responsibility, to one's constitutents, fellow citizens, the truth, to SANITY! Freedom!

You go, girl! Lie like your life depended on it, Sarah. Lie, Sarah, LIE!

Dammit, wouldn't you know it, Colbert's on vacation next week.

The liberal soul shall be made fat. He who waters shall be watered also himself. (Proverbs 11:25)


I wish it were that black & white (0.00 / 0)
but we all have our own shibboleths; it's a part of our human nature.

You Undersell Complexity, My Friend (0.00 / 0)
I have a post in progress that touches on this.  Because each level transition involves breaking away from previous preconceptions, each is more enlightened than the one before.

This is not negated by the fact that there's a next level beyond that's more enlightened still.  Both are true.

"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


[ Parent ]
Perhaps this affliction (0.00 / 0)
is one of humanity's common bonds. I'm afraid that's not terribly uplifting, LOL.

[ Parent ]
Basically, libertarianism has no appreciation of social fabric (4.00 / 1)
In its purest form, its philosophy proceeds with the questionable premise that we will all abide by and play the free market game and the losers will remain steadfast to the "morality" of that game and silently die, if necessary, without fighting back against a system that is destroying them.  Sorry kids, we are going to have to starve to death becoz your daddy is not as able and smart as the winners.  But hey, at least we will die moral.  In an era with abundant resources ... such as in the 1800s ... this could fly but only becoz the resources themselves were the safety net and even if you "lost" you could go out in the country and build yourself a cabin, shoot a deer and get some fish and survive.  But that's not the case anymore and when there is an shortage of resources people will fight for them to survive.  

The first phase in the end game of pure libertarianism in today's world is anarchy as social order is usurped by people's desperate instinct to survive.  Since the system is destroying them, they must usurp it to survive.  This leads to tribal warfare as people join tribes, which internally is a form of socialism, to pool their resources and use them to acquire whatever else they may need to survive.  And once raw power becomes the ultimate arbitrator, this unleashes the worst tendencies of human nature, which is greed, which leads to despots and tyrants since systems and social orders that would have prevented them have now been destroyed by the consequences of libertarianism.  Sudan is an example of what would happen in today's world if we tried to strictly follow the libertarians' credo.

So, in societies without an abundance of resources,  libertarianism leads to anarchy as the human instinct to survive usurps system stability.  From there, people join tribes to pool their resources to survive.  Tribal warfare reins and the most ruthless tribes win.  Then raw power rules and you end up with tyrants and despots.

Z  


How does Sarah spell freedom? (0.00 / 0)
F-R-E-E-D-U-M-B!

Except that that the brand of dumb that she's poised to sell to her self-lobotomized fanbots will hardly be free. Would you like some freedumb fries with that, Mr. & Mrs. Gomer?

The title of her upcoming book?

You're Not the Boss of Me, Obama!


The liberal soul shall be made fat. He who waters shall be watered also himself. (Proverbs 11:25)

"Why does Sarah Palin lie? She lies to..." (0.00 / 0)
Great post!

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