Politics
Kevin Hilke
It’s likely that many within the Bush Administration—especially now, when the effects of its philosophical and practical failings, and Americans’ readiness to be rid of it, are so palpably felt—have undergone, are undergoing, or will undergo variations on that experience: losing faith in a leader who not only isn’t as positively transformative as he appeared, but is dishonest and disingenuous to boot. But McClellan’s must be the one of the worst. For four years, he was paid to be the cipher of Bush’s duplicity. He wasn’t just deceived; he was deceived into deceiving, and all while deceiving himself that nothing of the sort was afoot, trusting in the long-compromised yet somehow still compelling integrity of the men and women he served.
Politics
Kevin Hilke
A President Huckabee, despite espousing wrongheaded “family values” proposals similar to those of George W. Bush, could find himself with a cultural legacy diametrically opposed to that of our current president. Such a legacy would be inadvertent, that of a president who made our a more pluralistic and empathetic society by revealing to the religious right and the secular left, entirely by accident, that their core beliefs are versions of one another, that they are and always have been animated by a shared injunction to humanitarian charity that finds roots in the classical and the Christian alike.
Politics
Kevin Hilke
Our misguided taboos about talking about race in this country perversely prevent us from trumpeting how important Obama can be as a symbol—as though to say his blackness could be a boon to him would be to take away credit from him personally; as though that would be a sort of affirmative action, which, at least in this form, we are all, disadvantaged whites and condescended-to minorities alike, supposed to despise.
Politics
Kevin Hilke
Sublimating our sex into our advertising allows us to constantly preoccupy ourselves with sex without the compunctions that should, for those who consider themselves morally upright in the Judaeo-Christian tradition, come with such delightfully dirty preoccupations: if “sex” is in all spheres of culture besieging the subject, he need not assume that he is the generative source of his sexual impulses, and thus isn’t forced to confront any guilt attending them. Spitzer is but the latest in a string of such national lightning rods: our continued existence as a Christian capitalist nation and the persistence of our individual senses of sexual propriety require that we force him to resign.
Culture
Kevin Hilke
At the end of our fourth-grade field trip, the pioneers stripped off their costumes, toweled off some stinky sweat, scrubbed their hands and faces in the portable miniature Old-West-style well, loaded themselves into two Ford F-150s, a Chevy Malibu and a Toyota Supra, assured the administrators that someone would be back for the large prefab log cabins, and left.