Victor Davis Hanson commentary: Obama's legacy will be soapbox of the left
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In fact, he went on to deride Americans for a list of supposed transgressions ranging from the Vietnam War to environmental desecration to the 19th century treatment of Native Americans.
"If you're in the United States," the president said, "sometimes you can feel lazy and think we're so big we don't have to really know anything about other people."
The attack on supposedly insular Americans was somewhat bizarre, given that Obama himself knows no foreign languages. He often seems confused about even basic world geography. (His birthplace of Hawaii is not "Asia," Austrians do not speak "Austrian.")
Obama's sense of history is equally weak. Contrary to his past remarks, the Islamic world did not spark either the Western Renaissance or the Enlightenment. Cordoba was not, as he once suggested, an Islamic center of "tolerance" during the Spanish Inquisition; in fact, its Muslim population had been expelled during the early Reconquista over two centuries earlier.
Obama returned to his theme that ignorant Americans "typically" become xenophobic and racist: "Typically, when people feel stressed, they turn on others who don't look like them."
Most recently, Obama seemed to praise backup 49ers quarterback and multimillionaire Colin Kaepernick for his refusal to stand during the National Anthem, empathizing with Kaepernick's claims of endemic American racism.
What is going on in Obama's home stretch?
Apparently Obama is veering even further to the left, in hopes of establishing a rhetorical progressive legacy in lieu of any lasting legislative or foreign policy achievement. Turning the presidency into an edgy soapbox is seemingly all that is left of Obama's promise to "fundamentally transform" the country.
The Affordable Care Act, born of exaggeration and untruth, is now in peril as insurers pull out and the costs of premiums and deductibles soar.
Even presidential nominee and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is not really defending the Obama administration's past "red line" in Syria, the "reset" with Vladimir Putin's Russia, the bombing of Libya, the Benghazi tragedy, the euphemistic rebranding of Islamic terrorism as mere "violent extremism," the abrupt pullout from (and subsequent collapse of) Iraq, or the Iran nuclear deal that so far seems to have made the theocracy both rich and emboldened.
The U.S. economy — with its record-low growth over eight years, near-record labor non-participation rates, record national debt and record consecutive years of zero interest rates — is not much of a legacy either.
Racial relations in this country seem as bad as they have been in a half-century.
Given the scandal involving Hillary Clinton's use of a private, unsecured email server for official State Department communications, the politicization of the IRS, the messes at the GSA and VA, and the current ethical confusion at the FBI and Justice Department over Clinton's violations, Obama has not made good on his promise of a transparent, efficient and honest government.
Near energy independence through fracking is certainly a revolutionary development, but it arrived largely despite, not because of, the Obama administration.
The sharper the sermon, the more Obama preps himself for his post-presidency as a social-justice warrior, akin to the pre-political incarnation of Obama as a community organizer.
Following the Clinton model, a post-presidential Obama will no doubt garner huge fees as a "citizen of the world" — squaring the circle of becoming fabulously rich while offering sharp criticism of the cultural landscape of the capitalist West.
What, then, is the presidential legacy of Barack Obama?
It will not be found in either foreign or domestic policy accomplishment. More likely, he will be viewed as an outspoken progressive who left office loudly in the same manner that he entered it — as a critic of the culture and country in which he has thrived.
But there may be another, unspoken legacy of Obama, and it is his creation of the candidacy of Donald Trump, an angry populist, fueled by the promise that whatever supposed elites such as Obama have done to the country, he will largely undo.
Obama's only legacy seems to be that "hope and change" begat "make America great again."
Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at Stanford University's Hoover Institution.
author@victorhanson.com
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