May 2, 2007

The New Yorker Features Senator Barack Obama

In the current issue of The New Yorker, Larissa MacFarquhar's feature, The Conciliator, discusses Senator Barack Obama's roots and his politics. For people not familiar with Obama, this article provides a well-written overview.
It is not surprising that when it was proposed that America should invade Iraq with the goal of establishing democracy there, Obama knew that it would be a terrible mistake. This was American innocence at its most destructive, freedom at its most deceptive, universalism at its most naïve. “There was a dangerous innocence to thinking that we would be greeted as liberators, or that with a little bit of economic assistance and democratic training you’d have a Jeffersonian democracy blooming in the desert,” he says now. “There is a running thread in American history of idealism that can express itself powerfully and appropriately, as it did after World War II with the creation of the United Nations and the Marshall Plan, when we recognized that our security and prosperity depend on the security and prosperity of others. But the same idealism can express itself in a sense that we can remake the world any way we want by flipping a switch, because we’re technologically superior or we’re wealthier or we’re morally superior. And when our idealism spills into that kind of naïveté and an unwillingness to acknowledge history and the weight of other cultures, then we get ourselves into trouble, as we did in Vietnam.”
If you enjoy MacFarquhar's story, you can learn more about Senator Barack Obama by reading one (or both) of his two books or by looking over the information on his web site.