![]()
|
|
Jewish World Review Sept. 8, 2005 / 4 Elul, 5765 Decade of Illusions? By Bob Tyrrell
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |
It is now becoming ever clearer that the last
decade of the 20th century could go down in history as the Decade of
Illusion. There was the tech bubble whose detumesence was predicted by some
of the very same engineering geniuses who had created the technological
marvels that it was based on, for instance, Bob Metcalfe, inventor of
Ethernet and a major force in the creation of the Internet. He predicted the
bubble's burst almost to the day.
Another of the illusions of the 1990s was that with the fall of
Communism barbarism vanished. The world would be safe. Our military budget
could be trimmed. All that was necessary to deal with those quaint Islamic
zanies across the sea was an occasional cruise missile sent their way,
preferably when our aggrieved president was about to appear before a grand
jury or be impeached. There was also the illusion that a chief executive's
lies were harmless and perhaps even a private matter.
Now some of the liars of the decade have been sentenced to long
stretches in the calaboose. Their lies conduced to corporate collapse and
the loss of millions to investors and to pension funds. This week with the
suspension of Rafael Palmeiro from Major League Baseball, many of the
baseball records racked up in the 1990s are suspected of being illusory.
Quite probably, many of them were the product of illegal steroid use. The
baseball heroes of the 1990s simply lied about their performances. What
other revelations will be coming from the Decade of Illusions?
Palmeiro flunked a drug test sometime in recent months, though
he continued to thrill his Baltimore Orioles fans before his positive test
for steroids was made public. On July 15 fans and teammates celebrated his
3000th hit with gaudy fanfare. Major League Baseball took out newspaper ads
congratulating him, though it is reported that League officials were aware
he had tested positive for steroids. Palmeiro graciously accepted all the
laudations. How could he do this while knowing that officials were wise to
him? In the 1990s we called this "compartmentalizing." It was approved by
journalists and public figures alike. President Bill Clinton
executed his presidential tasks exuberantly day in and day out while
retaining subpoenaed documents from prosecutors, coaching witnesses to
deceive, and lying brazenly to his staff and the public. He
compartmentalized and to this day there are public figures who admire his
sang-froid . They would agree with John Harris'
assessment of him in Harris' recent encomium, The Survivor, as being one of
"the two most important political figures of their generation" the other
being, who else, Hillary.
One of his most memorable statements that will ring down from
the Decade of Illusions is: "I want you to listen to me. I'm going to say
this again. I did not have sexual relations with that woman . Miss
Lewinsky." The Boy President said that glaring into the cameras on national
television and pointing his finger for emphasis. Later he failed his drug
test or rather his DNA test. Yet he is still arguing that the statement is
somehow true.
Palmeiro is one of Clinton's finest students. Under oath before
a Congressional Committee on March 17 he declared: "I have never used
steroids, period. I do not know how to say it more clearly than that.
Never." He too glared and pointed his finger emphatically. Now that he is
suspended after that failed test he argues with Clintonian indefatigability:
"I've never intentionally used steroids. Never. Ever. Period." The New York
Times reports that the steroid he tested positive for is stanozolol. It is
unimaginable that an adult would not know that he was taking it. Use of it
in 1988 cost Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson his Olympic gold medal.
Tom Knott, the superb sports writer for the Washington Times,
suspects that Palmeiro's hitting feats owe something to his teaming up with
Jose Canseco in the Decade of Illusions. Knott further seems to suspect that
many of the home-run marvels of the 1990s were fueled by steroids. Think of
it, a whole decade of baseball records thrown into a twilight of doubt
because the rules were compartmentalized. Slowly but steadily, those who
cast doubt on the marvels of that decade are being vindicated.
Every weekday JewishWorldReview.com publishes what many in in the media and Washington consider "must-reading". Sign up for the daily JWR update. It's free. Just click here.
JWR contributor Bob Tyrrell is editor in chief of The American Spectator. Comment by clicking here. © 2005, Creators Syndicate |
Arnold Ahlert | |||||||||||