Markovits is missing the point

Filed under: Uncategorized — Eike @ November 11, 2008 11:55 pm

You may have noticed that I didn’t comment on the US election on this blog, and very little on US politics in general (although you will not be surprised to hear that I like Barack Obama better than the other guy). That’s because I’m pretty busy critizising my own country, I do not even have time to interfere with other peoples business.

But that does not mean I’m not interested in politics and in the relations between the US and the European Union; so I will comment on an article I found via Deborah Lipstadt’s Blog – a post by Andrei Markovits who contends that Europeans are hypocrites for praising Obamas victory, since they would never elect a black man (or a member of a minority) themselves. Markovits knows Europe well, but I still think he misses the point – two points in fact.

One,  he assumes that the joy over Obamas victory is authentic which, as far as as european realpolitik is concerned it certainly isn’t. The nice thing about the Bush Administration was that compared to him practically everybody looked good; no matter how bad your own politics were, you could distract from your own failures by pointing at the US where President Bush would inescapably do something even more stupid (btw. that german politicians could brag about the the well regulated financial sector in germany is due to the fact that they weren’t quite finished dismantling the regulations when the crisis hit. Now the crisis is blamed solely on the US).

As for the second point – well, have you looked at european politics lately? If we like progressive politicians that much then how do we explain Italys Berlusconi, Sarzkozy in France, the dopey duo of Merkel/Steinmeier in Germany?

Talking about Germany: we have anti-terror laws that are every bit as insidious as the laws in the US (and for rather the same reasons, for example they blur the difference between sympathizers,. suspects and criminals) , only we had them for almost 40 years – ever since the days of the RAF, a terrorist faction that killed some 60 people in its 25 year history. On abortion – Germany never had a Roe v. Wade, abortion in Germany is actually illegal. Only there are  a number of cases where abortion (while still against the law) will not be persecuted. In the US there was a scandal when telecommunications companies, in violation of the law,  handed over customer data to the state. This would be impossible in germany, i.e. it would impossible to cause a scandal – telco companys are legally obliged to spy on their customers.[1] Germans usually don’t even know about their own laws (the media is so busy commenting on the backwards US politics, they can’t spare time to educate their readers about the laws at home), but even if they were I strongly suspect a majority would approve.

So the point is not that europeans wouldn’t elect Obama because of this race – we wouldn’t elect him because of his politics. We could possibly deal with a black man[2], but somebody with his views we would call a populist and a damn commie[3], and there, not with the race thing, lies the real hypocrisy.

  1. Just for completeness sake, we do not have separation of church and state either, nor separation of powers - usually members of the government are also members of the parliament.
  2. There is a saying attributed to the late Bavarian prime minister Strauss - "I prefer a right wing foreigner over a leftist german"
  3. After the elections in the german federal country of Hessen Andrea  Ypsilanti, the head of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) in Hessen  was accused of collaborating with the communists, since she wanted to form a minority goverment which was to be tolerated by the left Party Die Linke.  The "communists" in Hessen are mostly former members of the SPD who favour a mandatory minimum wage which the SPD opposes.

3 Comments »

  1. Hallo Johan,

    ich glaube du hast einfach nicht verstanden was ich geschrieben habe. Ich habe mich ganz sicher nicht darüber beschwert dass Barack Obama schwarz ist, ich habe mich darüber aufgeregt dass “die Europäer” immer so scheiss-liberal tun obwohl sie in vielen Hinsichten viel reaktionärer sind als der schlimmste Amerikaner. Vielleicht liest du’s einfach nochmal….

    Comment by Eike — January 2, 2009 @ January 2, 2009 10:12 pm

  2. Ich habe deines Stuck über Obama gelesen, und Ich wurde es toll finden wenn einen “Schwarzen” die Welt eine neue, bessere Wende gibt. Es ist immer einfach, grob weg über Politiker zu schreiben, aber das macht du noch immer in Freiheit, genau ich meine Reaktion auch schreibe. Auch ich bin nicht begeistert über was die Politik uns vorhallt, aber die Zeit ist auch nicht einfach zu managen. Wenn die Welt unter Obama besser wird dann macht Farbe möglich doch ein unterschied, und kann ich da als “Weißer” sehr gut mit leben. Vorerst hat Obama das vorteil meines Zweifels. Ich bin einen Hollander, der lebt in Deutschland, und fuhle mich wohl in deinem Land. Deine Website sieht toll aus, und nehme mich meinen Politische Standpunkt bitte nicht übel, das gehort auch zu Freiheit.

    Comment by Johan — January 2, 2009 @ January 2, 2009 9:58 pm

  3. [...] den verlässlichen Kräften zählen Eike, Diemtar Dath und Helge Schneider. Ersterer, weil er hier etwas sehr Wahres über die deutsche Betrachtung amerikanischer Politik schreibt, letztere, weil sie beide im [...]

    Pingback by Verlässliche Kräfte | fRemade — November 12, 2008 @ November 12, 2008 6:00 pm

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