Jay Ambrose: Americans need change, but not the empty kind

It may be fetching to some voters, but the theme of “change” so embraced by so many candidates in this year’s presidential contest is vacuous, an idea with absolutely no content in and of itself.

We need change, we are nevertheless told: Change, change, change, as if any kind of change would be ipso facto wonderful.

But change obviously can be bad as easily as it can be good. And in a land with more liberty, justice, opportunity and prosperity than could scarcely be dreamed of before it was made a reality by America’s founders — and then by a mighty force of self-governing, self-correcting people — you should be careful not to change in the wrong way.

That, it seems, is what a lot of these candidates want to do: Lead us to more governmental encumbrance instead of to enlarged possibilities.

You come to that conclusion when you get a glimmer of the often vague, sometimes slight content they inject in their talk about change. To be fair, some of the change rhetoric does address real problems, which always exist but can, as a matter of non-platitudinous fact, be ameliorated without sweeping transformation. But much of it is hallucinatory gibberish, as in the imaginings of Democrat John Edwards, who seems to think America is imperiled by a plutocracy.

In a New Hampshire debate among the Democratic candidates, Hillary Clinton pushed Edwards to be specific about some concrete, beneficial change he had brought about. Of course he couldn’t, but he did talk ominously about the terrible, awful threat of the status quo, of special interests, of corporations. He said that for him it was a personal thing, and that on his first day in the Oval Office as president, he would stand up to these threats.

Suddenly you saw it all in your mind’s eye: Fast-Talking Edwards, over here behind the desk, and over there in the big, black cape is The Phantom of Evil.

That’s Edwards in a nutshell: He has the showmanship of a pro wrestler along with the fakery. We would be a Third World country without the corporations he vilifies, or without their executives — mostly fine, decent, talented people.

Barack Obama does not sink as low as Edwards, but what is this jabber about Americans coming together to fight the special interests? Who does he think these interests are, Martians?

They are in fact American business leaders, educators and others who have already come together to petition their government, as is their right and maybe even their duty. And they often bring needed expertise to the table and at least now and then protect the general interest while protecting their own.

Obviously, their policy successes can sometimes be detrimental to the common good, but so can majority opinion, which is more successful. Democracy is not a business of certain truth jumping up and announcing itself.

A Gallup poll shows 84 percent of Americans are happy with their lot these days, as they should be considering their extraordinary economic and other blessings.

Candidates in both parties do bring up such legitimate concerns as the difficulty some have in obtaining health insurance, but even here they often dodge how their schemes will work. Obama talks about finding the funds by ending governmental waste, a nice idea that never gets accomplished.

Meanwhile, virtually all the candidates are hiding out from the single most pressing domestic issue the federal government faces: How to keep Social Security and Medicare alive without oppressive taxation.

The real change we need in America is a change from political chicanery to political honesty.

Examiner Columnist Jay Ambrose is a former Washington opinion writer and editor of two dailies. He may be reached at [email protected]

Related Content