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Deranged Narcissists In A Hall Of Mirrors - ClassicalLib17 - 03-24-2010 At last, an opinion that The Majority of the American Public recognizes as fact. A Tale of Two Cities Washington and Hollywood, both tone-deaf to American attitudes 23 March 2010 Washington, D.C. and Hollywood are two cities suffering from the same condition: theyâve not only become completely alienated from the people theyâre meant to serve, theyâre bizarrely blind to the fact of that alienation. Like deranged narcissists in a hall of mirrors, both our lawmakers and our culture-makers blow kisses at their own reflections, see a million kisses coming back their way, and think, âOh, look, they love meâlove me!â For glaring proof in Washington, we have the passage of the health-care bill. Recently the Washington Post ran an op-ed by former Carter pollster Pat Caddell and former Clinton pollster Douglas E. Schoen expressing their amazement that Obama and the Democrats would go forward with this bill in the face of overwhelming evidence that the public doesnât want it. Caddellâa moderate Democrat who sometimes sports a T-shirt reading IâM GRUMPY BECAUSE YOUâRE DOPEYâand Schoen are baffled that the Democrats continue to grow and grow and grow the government despite polls that show Americans feel the federal apparatus is now an immediate threat to their civil rights and is no longer operating with the consent of the governed. And yet, even after losing a Senate seat in blue-on-blue Massachusetts almost entirely because of the health care and big government issues, the Democrats plunged forward, certain that weâre going to like what theyâre forcing us to eat. To get a sense of the psychology behind this self-destructive self-deception, letâs take a look at a similar act in D.C.âs ideological sister city, some 3,000 miles away. Here, Universal studios recently released Green Zone, a $100 million antiâIraq War movie, despite the box-office failures of over a dozen similarly themed films. Matt Damon stars as the soldier who discoversâthough in reality, this is provably untrueâthat the Bush administration lied about Saddam Husseinâs weapons of mass destruction in order to drag us into war. Operation Shock and Awe was nothing compared with the way this picture bombed. HBOâs World War II series, The Pacific, also did only modest business, its chances possibly poisoned by executive producer Tom Hanksâ idiotic remarks that America had âwanted to annihilate [the Japanese] because they were different,â and that this made the war in the Pacific similar to todayâs wars against Islamic terror. As a result of these two failures, showbiz trade magazine Variety ran an almost hilariously purblind article saying that Hollywood was calling a âtruceâ on making war films because âwith U.S. troops embroiled in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, American audiences continue to suffer from war fatigue.â Yeah, that must be it. It couldnât be that weâre nauseated by a bunch of showbiz yahoos depicting our troops and leaders as evil while theyâre in the field defending us. Or wait, maybe it is: the one filmâthe single filmâthat, while taking no political position on these wars, nonetheless treated our military with deep honor, respect, and patriotismâHBOâs brilliant Taking Chanceâwas one of the networkâs signal successes despite the mainstream mediaâs blithering negative reviews. Hereâs the thing. The American people want government that acts in keeping with our principles of free markets, self-reliance, and individual liberty. The people want culture that depicts the moral order as we know it is, not as sequestered elites dream it should be. But in Hollywood and in Washington, they canât hear the people because theyâre making too much noise talking to themselves, confirming themselves, and loving themselves. They say that Washington is Hollywood for ugly people. But as long as our leaders and artists are displaying such blindness, arrogance, and narcissism, theyâre all ugly. Andrew Klavan is a City Journal contributing editor and the author of such best-selling novels as Donât Say a Word and Empire of Lies. His new thriller for young adults, The Long Way Home, is out now. EMAIL ARTICLE | PRINTER-FRIENDLY | RESPOND TO |