Cinderella vs. the Barracuda
Jonah Goldberg
Friday, December 19, 2008For people
who think there's no cultural divide in this country, consider the
treatment of two women much in the news in 2008.
The first is Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. A woman from very humble roots
and with a very blue-collar life story, she worked with her steelworker
and professional-fisherman husband to provide a life for their large
family. She got involved in the PTA. She became mayor of her small town,
then rose, by dint of her dedication and almost naive fearlessness, to
the job of governor. In a mainstream, almost romantic sense, it's almost
like she was designed by God for a Hallmark movie of the week.
But, when John McCain picked her to be his running mate, the full
fury of the liberal establishment -- and sizable swaths of the
conservative establishment, some of whom dubbed her a "cancer" on the
GOP -- came down on her with a vengeance usually reserved for Klansmen
and pedophiles. Don't get me wrong: There were valid criticisms to make.
But that is quite a different thing than saying all of the criticism was
valid or that the intensity and volume of the criticism was warranted.
Then there's Caroline Bouvier Kennedy, daughter of John F. Kennedy,
sister of John Jr., niece of Senators Ted and Robert Kennedy,
granddaughter of Ambassador Joseph Kennedy, and the cousin of myriad
other Kennedys and Shrivers who've burrowed deep into the timber of the
house of liberalism. A multimillionaire from birth, Ms. Kennedy has
spent most of her life on the charity-benefit and cotillion circuit. A
product of the Brearley School in New York and the Concord Academy in
Massachusetts before she attended Harvard and Columbia, Kennedy has made
the importance of public education her signature cause.
Sweet Caroline (she was the inspiration for the Neil Diamond song)
recently made it known that she would like to be appointed to Hillary
Clinton's vacant Senate seat.
One could say without fear of overstating things that the liberal
reaction to the inexperienced Caroline has been somewhat more gracious
than the reaction to the "inexperienced" Palin. Ruth Marcus of the
Washington Post has devoted two columns in as many weeks to this "fairy
tale" scenario in which Kennedy, our "tragic national princess," is
finally rewarded -- for her years of quiet dignity, selflessly avoiding
scandal and the paparazzi -- with the Senate seat that once belonged to
her uncle Bobby. What's astounding about the normally sensible Marcus'
case for "the Cinderella Kennedy" (New York magazine's phrase) is that
she doesn't really make one, at least not on the merits. Marcus doesn't
even bother. It's all schoolgirl gushing.
The editors of the New York Times, in a more skeptical editorial,
summarized her qualifications thusly: "Ms. Kennedy has much going for
her. As a public figure, she carries the glamour and poignancy of her
family ..." The editors then went on to describe what great liberals her
dad and uncles were. That's it.
This a perfect example of the bowel-stewing self-indulgence of elite
liberalism.
Here's a news flash: Not everyone truckles with doe-eyed awe at
"America's royal family." Some of us don't even like the idea of
American royal families. JFK and RFK had their good points, but they
don't deserve the beatification they receive on a daily basis. As a man,
Teddy Kennedy is hardly a role model, and as a public servant he's not
much better. I, for one, don't think denying poor black kids
private-school scholarships (aka vouchers) is heroic. Nor do I think his
support for alternative energy, except when it might obstruct his
Hyannis Port estate's views with windmills, is admirable.
Simply, the Kennedy clan is no priestly caste, serving as the
conscience of the nation, and its progeny do not deserve eternal
deference.
Now, I know the comparison between Palin and Caroline Kennedy is not
perfect. Each has strengths where the other has weaknesses, and the jobs
of senator and vice president aren't identical (the former actually has
more responsibility, for starters).
But the comparison is nonetheless revealing. Palin's selection
triggered troughs of bile, vomited up from nearly every respectable
liberal quarter. A Florida congressman, and Obama surrogate, insinuated
that Palin was a "Nazi sympathizer" and anti-Semite (she's not, but
Caroline Kennedy's grandfather was). Her by-the-bootstraps story was
ridiculed by nearly every ex-debutante newsreader and avowed "feminist"
in America.
Meanwhile, Caroline, with a resume perfectly suited to being a
Kennedy and little else, is a Cinderella who deserves a Senate seat
because, well, she just does.
Whatever Palin's faults, Sarah Barracuda's America has a lot more
going for it than Sweet Caroline's.
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