Peggy Noonan knows why Bridgegate happened, and it's largely the fault of wet-behind-the-ears kids hopped up on HBO:
... political operatives get high on winning. They start to think nothing can touch them when they're with a winner. They get full of themselves. And they think only winning counts, because winning is their job.Wait -- Noonan's saying that the things you do at age 40 can be written off as childish behavior you haven't grown out of yet? How old do you have to be to be a responsible adult, according to Noonan? And yes, Bridget Anne Kelly is 41. But David Wildstein is 51 -- as is Christie.
The ones who are young lack judgment, but they don't know they lack judgment because they're not wise enough. So they don't check themselves....
Young operatives are ... acting out what they see in a million other movies and shows -- "Scandal," "The Good Wife."
There's a twist on this you can see in the Christie story. You read the emails and texts his operatives were sending, and you realize: This is TV dialogue. It's movie dialogue. They get everything off the screen, not real life, and they're imitating the sound of tough guys.
Those emails and texts, they were "Sopranos" dialogue. "Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee" is pure Tony. "Got it" is pure Silvio. "I feel bad about the kids," is druggy Christopher, or maybe Adriana. "They're the children of Buono voters" is Paulie Walnuts, in all his aggression and stupidity.
Christie operatives are not the only ones in politics who talk this way. And they all do it not because they're really tough but because they think that's how people like them -- rock-'em sock-'em operatives -- would talk. They don't have the brains, heart or judgment of people who've lived a life because they haven't all lived a life. They're 30 or 40 and came of age in a media-saturated country. They saw it all on TV. They saw it on a screen.
And if this kind of tough talk is all HBO's fault, then where did the Watergate plotters -- the guys famously described by Stewart Alsop as "the phony-tough" and "the crazy-brave" -- get their dialogue? Old episodes of The Untouchables? Jim Thompson novels?
(I suppose the guy at the top, Dick Nixon -- who was a youthful 58 at the time of the Watergate break-in -- got the tough attitude from watching movies like Patton.)
All this is like blaming violent video games for mass shootings, despite the fact that millions of people, especially in other, less gun-saturated countries, play violent video games without ever shooting up a grade school, just as millions of people watch The Sopranos and Breaking Bad without ever brutalizing their enemies.
Hey Peggy, whatever happened to personal responsibility?
Nixon's goons?
ReplyDeleteYeah, Jim Thompson, and/or Dashiell Hammett, and/or Raymond Chandler.
Christie's nonyouthful aides are products of a bad environment, probably went to liberal colleges, had all that moral relativism shoved down their throats.
ReplyDelete/sarc
Didn't Gustav Hasford come up with "the phony tough and the crazy brave" for The Short-Timers?
ReplyDeleteActually...
ReplyDeletePeople in less gun saturated countries don't play the same games we do. So stop saying that.
First person shooters don't sell in Japan, they fucking hate them. However Japan does sell rape simulators and games that involve molesting high school girls. Guess what, those games don't sell in the US... and Japan does have a problem with groping women on trains and up skirt photos... which are things you do in those games.
Compare Western RPGs to Asian RPGs, they aren't the same at all either.
Don't get me wrong, you'll pry my video games from my cold dead hands and one of the reasons I will never vote for Hilary is her past issues with video games... but don't pretend the rest of the world plays games like us. But let's get real, murder simulators and first person shooters don't sell in Asia and are an American thing. That might be a reflection of us or it might be helping to drive it. Just keep in mind that the video games a group of people play are directly related to what their culture finds fun.
In the USA we like to shoot people, in Japan they like to molest school girls.
Though my personal favorite are fighting games. Street Fighter, Guilty Gear, Blaze Blue, King of Fighters, all that good stuff. Guess what though, I box, and I enjoy combat sports.
Pegs is the one who's watching too much TV.
ReplyDeleteI ask only one thing – the exclusive franchise , worldwide, to sell legally whatever it is Peggy Noonan is smoking.
ReplyDeleteSecond choice: I'll take what Geese Howard is smoking.
Very Crankily yours,
The New York Crank
Hey Peggy, whatever happened to personal responsibility? = "Mistah Reagan - he dead."
ReplyDeleteHey Peggy, whatever happened to personal responsibility? = "Mistah Reagan - he dead."
ReplyDeleteOnly a fictional mobster would write "got it" in an e-mail.
ReplyDeleteCapiche?