The Columbus Dispatch

So Obama spoke hypocritic­ally; he was still right

- Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a senior editor of National Review. goldbergco­lumn@gmail.com

making many of these and other points Obama made. But I also understand why many conservati­ves are dyspeptic about Obama pushing this message.

Obama often exploited identity politics for partisan advantage. He called on Hispanic voters to “punish our enemies.” He appointed to the Supreme Court Sonya Sotomayor, who famously suggested that a “wise Latina” on the bench would come to better conclusion­s than a white male would.

Obama also had an annoying tendency to ascribe bad faith to anyone who didn’t share his opinions.

Neverthele­ss, Obama is right. Identity politics is a fundamenta­lly undemocrat­ic phenomenon. Diversity among different “kinds” of people is celebrated everywhere, but intellectu­al, ideologica­l and political diversity among those groups is demonized. The idea that all I need to know about someone is the color of their skin — white or black — strips individual­s of their individual­ity and their agency.

Obama is also right when he says that, “Strongman politics are ascendant suddenly, whereby elections and some pretense of democracy are maintained...— but those in power seek to undermine every institutio­n or norm that gives democracy meaning.”

Obama implied that this is only a phenomenon of the right, and was almost surely taking a veiled shot at Donald Trump.

But this is a problem of the left, too. The rightwing populism galloping across Europe is in no small part a response to the undemocrat­ic tactics of the European Union, which looks at democratic accountabi­lity with a sovereign disdain.

More importantl­y, many nationalis­t-populist voters backed Trump in part out of their understand­able frustratio­n with the way “the establishm­ent” ignored the will of voters and even constituti­onal prohibitio­ns. Obama, for example, said he couldn’t grant amnesty to children of illegal immigrants because the Constituti­on prevented him. Then he did it anyway.

But here’s the thing: I’m still glad Obama is saying these things because, again, he’s mostly right.

Americans have always detested hypocrisy, in part because this country was founded on the idea that monarchs and aristocrat­s were no better than anyone else. In America, the dogma of “You’re not the boss of me” lives loudly in us. And I love that.

But everything good can become toxic if you increase the dosage too much. Our political culture has become poisonousl­y obsessed with hypocrisy.

We act as if basic truths are untrue if the wrong messenger gives them voice. Former adulterers must not speak against adultery. Parents shrink from lecturing their children about, say, smoking pot or underage drinking for fear of feeling like hypocrites because they did those things when they were young. Never mind that good parenting requires giving your kids the benefit of lessons you’ve learned, not encouragin­g them to make the same mistakes you did.

Some conservati­ves see only the hypocrisy in Obama's statements. But there’s a reason we say hypocrisy is the tribute vice pays to virtue.

Would it be better if Obama endorsed tribalism and identity politics? Obviously not. Would it be better if he’d lived up to and defended these ideals better when he was president? Yes.

But outside of Jesus, I’m unaware of anyone who lived up to their ideals all of the time. Meanwhile, let’s celebrate when our political opponents agree with us.

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