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Tiger Woods, Man of the Year (Political Satire)

Home › Forum Online Discussion › General › Tiger Woods, Man of the Year (Political Satire)

  • This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 15 years, 10 months ago by Michael Winn.
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  • December 20, 2009 at 6:28 pm #32835

    Michael Winn

    note: for humble cultivators, the moral of the story so savagely put to point below is that the safest models to follow are NOT those of this culture. Safer to follow the model of Lao Tzu and the simple Taoists invisibly cultivating the Life Force. Those are the real heroes, who will never get named Man of the Year. – Michael

    TIGER WOODS, PERSON OF THE YEAR
    By Frank Rich
    New York Times
    December 20, 2009

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/20/opinion/20rich.html

    As we say farewell to a dreadful year and decade, this much we can agree
    upon: The person of the year is not Ben Bernanke, no matter how insistently
    Time magazine tries to hype him into its pantheon. The Fed chairman was just
    as big a schnook as every other magical thinker in Washington and on Wall
    Street who believed that housing prices would go up in perpetuity to support
    an economy leveraged past the hilt. Unlike most of the others, it was
    Bernanke’s job to be ahead of the curve. Yet as recently as June of last
    year he could be found minimizing the possibility of a substantial economic
    downturn. And now we’re supposed to applaud him for putting his finger in
    the dike after disaster struck? This is defining American leadership down.

    If there’s been a consistent narrative to this year and every other in this
    decade, it’s that most of us, Bernanke included, have been so easily
    bamboozled. The men who played us for suckers, whether at Citigroup or
    Fannie Mae, at the White House or Ted Haggard’s megachurch, are the real
    movers and shakers of this century’s history so far. That’s why the obvious
    person of the year is Tiger Woods. His sham beatific image, questioned by
    almost no one until it collapsed, is nothing if not the farcical reductio ad
    absurdum of the decade’s flimflams, from the cancerous (the subprime
    mortgage) to the inane (balloon boy).

    As of Friday, the Tiger saga had appeared on 20 consecutive New York Post
    covers. For The Post, his calamity has become as big a story as 9/11. And
    the paper may well have it right. We’ve rarely questioned our assumption
    that 9/11, “the day that changed everything,” was the decade’s defining
    event. But in retrospect it may not have been. A con like Tiger’s may be
    more typical of our time than a one-off domestic terrorist attack, however
    devastating.

    Indeed, if we go back to late 2001, the most revealing news story may have
    been unfolding not in New York but Houston — the site of the Enron scandal.
    That energy company convinced financial titans, the press and countless
    investors that it was a business deity. It did so even though very few of
    its worshipers knew what its business was. Enron is the template for the
    decade of successful ruses that followed, Tiger’s included.

    What makes the golfing superstar’s tale compelling, after all, is not that
    he’s another celebrity in trouble or another fallen athletic “role model” in
    a decade lousy with them. His scandal has nothing to tell us about race, and
    nothing new to say about hypocrisy. The conflict between Tiger’s
    picture-perfect family life and his marathon womanizing is the oldest of
    morality tales.

    What’s striking instead is the exceptional, Enron-sized gap between this
    golfer’s public image as a paragon of businesslike discipline and focus and
    the maniacally reckless life we now know he led. What’s equally striking, if
    not shocking, is that the American establishment and news media — all of
    it, not just golf writers or celebrity tabloids — fell for the Woods myth
    as hard as any fan and actively helped sustain and enhance it.

    People wanted to believe what they wanted to believe. Tiger’s off-the-links
    elusiveness was no more questioned than Enron’s impenetrable balance sheets,
    with their “special-purpose entities” named after “Star Wars” characters.
    Fortune magazine named Enron as America’s “most innovative company” six
    years in a row. In the January issue of Golf Digest, still on the stands,
    some of the best and most hardheaded writers in America offer “tips Obama
    can take from Tiger,” who is typically characterized as so without human
    frailties that he “never does anything that would make him look ridiculous.”

    Perhaps the most conspicuous player in the Tiger hagiography business has
    been a company called Accenture, one of his lustrous stable of corporate
    sponsors. In a hilarious Times article, Brian Stelter described the extreme
    efforts this outfit is now making to erase its six-year association with its
    prized spokesman. Alas, the many billboards with slogans like “Go On. Be a
    Tiger” are not so easily dismantled, and collectors’ items like “Accenture
    Match Play Tiger Woods Caddy Bib” are a growth commodity on eBay.

    From what I can tell, Accenture is a solid company. But the Daily News
    columnist Mike Lupica raised a good point when I spoke with him last week:
    “If Tiger Woods was so important to Accenture, how come I didn’t know what
    Accenture did when they fired him?” According to its Web site, Accenture is
    “a global management consulting, technology services and outsourcing
    company,” but who cared about any fine print? It was Tiger, and Tiger was
    it, and no one was to worry about the details behind the mutually
    advantageous image-mongering. One would like to assume that Accenture’s
    failure to see or heed any warning signs about a man appearing in 83 percent
    of its advertising is an anomalous lapse. One would like to believe that
    business and government clients didn’t hire Accenture just because it had
    Tiger’s imprimatur. But in a culture where so many smart people have been
    taken so often, we can’t assume anything.

    As cons go, Woods’s fraudulent image as an immaculate exemplar of superhuman
    steeliness is benign. His fall will damage his family, closest friends,
    Accenture and the golf industry much more than the rest of us. But the
    syndrome it epitomizes is not harmless. We keep being fooled by leaders in
    all sectors of American life, over and over. A decade that began with the
    “reality” television craze exemplified by “American Idol” and “Survivor” —
    both blissfully devoid of any reality whatsoever — spiraled into a
    wholesale flight from truth.

    The most lethal example, of course, were the two illusions marketed to us on
    the way to Iraq — that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and
    some link to Al Qaeda. That history has since been rewritten by Bush alumni,
    Democratic politicians who supported the Iraq invasion and some of the news
    media that purveyed the White House fictions (especially the television
    press, which rarely owned up to its failure as print journalists have). It
    was exclusively “bad intelligence,” we’re now told, that pushed us into the
    fiasco. But contradictions to that “bad intelligence” were in plain sight
    during the run-up to the war — even sometimes in the press. Yet we wanted
    to suspend disbelief. Much of the country, regardless of party, didn’t want
    to question its leaders, no matter how obviously they were hyping any
    misleading shred of intelligence that could fit their predetermined march to
    war. It’s the same impulse that kept many from questioning how Mark
    McGwire’s and Barry Bonds’s outlandishly cartoonish physiques could possibly
    be steroid-free.

    In the political realm, our bipartisan credulousness has also been on
    steroids in this decade, even by our national standards. Many Democrats
    didn’t want to see the snake-oil salesman in John Edwards, blatant as his
    “Two America” self-contradictions were if you cared merely to look at him on
    YouTube. Republicans incessantly fell for family values preacher politicians
    like David Vitter, John Ensign and Larry Craig. Fred Thompson was seen by
    many, in the press as well as his party, as the second coming of Ronald
    Reagan. Karl Rove was widely hailed as a mastermind who would assemble a
    permanent Republican majority. Bernie Kerik was considered a plausible
    secretary of homeland security. Eliot Spitzer was viewed as a crusader of
    uncompromising principle.

    But these scam artists are pikers next to the financial hucksters. I’m not
    just talking about Bernie Madoff and Enron’s Ken Lay, but about those titans
    who legally created and sold the securities that gamed and then wrecked the
    system. You’d think after Enron’s collapse that financial leaders and
    government overseers would question the contents of “exotic” investments
    that could not be explained in plain English. But only a few years after
    Enron’s very public and extensively dissected crimes, the same bankers,
    federal regulatory agencies and securities-rating companies were giving
    toxic “assets” a pass. We were only too eager to go along for the lucrative
    ride until it crashed like Tiger’s Escalade.

    After his “indefinite break” from golf, Woods will surely be back on the
    links once the next celebrity scandal drowns his out. But after a decade in
    which two true national catastrophes, a wasteful war and a near-ruinous
    financial collapse, were both in part byproducts of the ease with which our
    leaders bamboozled us, we can’t so easily move on.

    This can be seen in the increasingly urgent political plight of Barack
    Obama. Though the American left and right don’t agree on much, they are both
    now coalescing around the suspicion that Obama’s brilliant presidential
    campaign was as hollow as Tiger’s public image — a marketing scam designed
    to camouflage either his covert anti-American radicalism (as the right sees
    it) or spineless timidity (as the left sees it). The truth may well be
    neither, but after a decade of being spun silly, Americans can’t be blamed
    for being cynical about any leader trying to sell anything. As we say
    goodbye to the year of Tiger Woods, it is the country, sad to say, that is
    left mired in a sand trap with no obvious way out.

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