rhetoric


Worth keeping tabs on this one – New York, via its next gubernatorial candidate, Andrew Cuomo, filed an antitrust action against Intel.  From NY Times:

The lawsuit charges that Intel violated state and federal laws by abusing its dominant position in the chip market to keep its main rival, Advanced Micro Devices, at bay. Intel has faced similar lawsuits in Asia and Europe, and in May the European Commission fined the company a record $1.45 billion for antitrust violations.

These cases have largely revolved around deals Intel had struck with computer makers and retailers that, regulators said, pressured them into picking the company’s microprocessors — which serve as the central chip inside personal computers and servers — instead of competing products from A.M.D.

Speaking of Intel, am I alone in finding their latest ad campaign pompous?  The USB’s co-inventor walks into a room to wild adoration: “Your rock stars aren’t like our rock stars.”  A guy makes – a + and giggles: “Your jokes aren’t like our jokes.”  And then, a bunch of efficient hummers alertly offer the Intel jingle.

Compare the theme to several other recent ad campaigns.  Bank of America shows a bunch of folks (an attempt at a sort-of visual quilt of American workers) walking forward to suggest that we, collectively, are moving past the financial pits.  Mac-guy is supposed to represent everyman – or, hip everyman – excluding only the red staple holders of America.  PC (Microsoft) celebrates over-achievers and they are a bit neo-geeky, but the commercials includes the audience as a potential member of the “I’m a PC (and saving the world with smart-_____ )” club.

So Intel took a new turn with such explicit elitism.  It makes some sense – we want elite technicians making our microchips.  But, the ads leave a sour note.  They are almost funny, and could have kept the same theme.  I think their failure is the Our ___ are not like your ___.   That’s just off-putting and mean.

As noted a few days ago, Lily’s post on partisan rhetoric brought to mind the antebellic gem of a speech, delivered by Edward Livingston during the heat of nullification debates.  Having now read through most of the speech, I can attest to several themes that make reading the thing entirely worthwhile.

- 40 years after the Constitution went into practice, the leading figures in the Senate, over the period of a couple months, delivered what must have been several-hours-long speeches on the very nature of the Constitutional government.

- The questions of federalism, and the energy of our National government that so split Hamilton’s audience splat also these Senators in 1830, as they split us today.

- Livingston manages to bring us within the passionate debate on the structure of the Union, while providing still poignant warnings against passionate rhetoric.

- And he does that while delivering sometimes hysterical hyperbole.

In the last post, I quoted some of his language on blown-out rhetoric.  Here, I’ll quote his summary of the debate’s heart: nullification.  A few things to note.  Nullification was the notion that a state could basically veto a federal law, which, to then pass, the Nation would then need to ratify as a Constitutional amendment.   That political issue was the manifestation of the debate that raged (has raged) since the Nation’s inception: to what extent are the federal government and state governments sovereign?  Livingston begins this segment with some hyperbole, but I suppose it is deserved hyperbole:

I now approach a graver subject, one, on the true understanding of which the Union, and of course the happiness of our country, depends. The question presented is that of the true sense of that Constitution which it is made our first duty to preserve in its purity. Its true construction is put in doubt—not on a question of power between its several departments, but on the very basis upon which the whole rests; and which, if erroneously decided, must topple down the fabric, raised with so much pain, framed with so much wisdom, established with so much persevering labor, and for more than forty years the shelter and protection of our liberties, the proud monument of the patriotism and talent of those who devised it, and which, we fondly hoped, would remain to after ages as a model for the imitation of every nation that wished to be free. Is that, Sir, to be its destiny? The answer to that question may be influenced by this debate. How strong the motive, then, to conduct it calmly; when the mind is not heated by opposition, depressed by defeat, or elate with fancied victory, to discuss it with a sincere desire, not to obtain a paltry triumph in argument, to gain applause by tart reply, to carry away the victory by addressing the passions, or gain proselytes by specious fallacies, but, with a mind open to conviction, seriously to search after truth, earnestly, when found, to impress it on others. What we say on this subject will remain; it is not an every day question; it will remain for good or for evil. As our views are correct or erroneous; as they tend to promote the lasting welfare, or accelerate the dissolution of our Union; so will our opinions be cited as those which placed the Constitution on a firm basis, when it was shaken or deprecated, if they should have formed doctrines which led to its destruction.

With this temper, and these impressions of the importance of the subject, I have given it the most profound, the most anxious and painful attention; and differing, as I have the misfortune to do, in a greater or less degree, from all the Senators who have preceded me, I feel an obligation to give my views of the subject. Could I have coincided in the opinions given by my friends, I should most certainly have been silent; from a conviction, that neither my authority nor my expositions could add any weight to the arguments they have delivered.

My learned and honorable friend, the Senator near me, from South Carolina, (Mr. Hayne) comes, in the eloquent arguments he has made, to the conclusion, that whenever, in the language of the Virginia resolutions, (which he adopts) there is, in the opinion of any one State, “a palpable, deliberate, and dangerous violation of the Constitution by a law of Congress,” such State may, without ceasing to be a member of the Union, declare the law to be unconstitutional, and prevent its execution within the State; that this is a constitutional right, and that its exercise will produce a constitutional remedy, by obliging Congress either to repeal the law, or to obtain an explicit grant of the power which is denied by the State, by submitting an amendment to the several States; and that, by the decision of the requisite number, the State, as well as the Union, would be bound. It would be doing injustice, both to my friend and to his argument, if I did not add, that this resort to the nullifying power, as it has been termed, ought to be had only in the last resort, where the grievance was intolerable, and all other means of remonstrance and appeal to the other States had failed.

In this opinion I understand the honorable and learned chairman of the Judiciary Committee substantially to agree, particularly in the constitutional right of preventing the execution of the obnoxious law.

The Senator from Tennessee, in his speech, which was listened to with so much attention and pleasure, very justly denies the right of declaring the nullity of a law, and preventing its execution, to the ordinary Legislature, but erroneously, in my opinion, gives it to a Convention.

My friend from New Hampshire, of whose luminous argument I cannot speak too highly, and to the greatest part of which I accord, does not coincide in the assertion of a constitutional right of preventing the execution of a law believed to be unconstitutional, but refers opposition to the unalienable right of resistance to oppression.

All these Senators consider the Constitution as a compact between the States in their sovereign capacity; and one of them, (Mr. Rowan) has contended that sovereignty cannot be divided, from which it may be inferred that no part of the sovereign power has been transferred to the General Government.

The Senator from Massachusetts, in his very eloquent and justly admired address on this subject, considers the Federal Constitution as entirely popular, and not created by compact, and, from this position, very naturally shows, that there can be no constitutional right of actual resistance to a law of that Government, but that intolerable and illegal acts may justify it on first principles.

However these opinions may differ, there is one consolatory reflection, that none of them justify a violent opposition given to an unconstitutional law, until an extreme case of suffering has occurred. Still less do any of them suppose the actual existence of such a case.

Lily’s post on Federalist 24 sparked some good discussion on- and off-line on partisan rhetoric.  From Hamilton’s penning that his political opponents’ arguments regarding a standing army must have been the work of deliberate mischief or overzealous irrationality, we looked into the his accusatory grounds; and into the debate on that particular issue as penned by the fairly rational and, at that time, friendly Jefferson and Adams.

Studying the history of partisan rhetoric might be disquieting (if we have never broken from sloganeering, ignorant, talking-point, and line-drawing rhetoric, will we ever?); but, for not altogether tangible reasons, I find it a bit warming.  Tangibly, I think we have greater potential for intellectually elevated discussion.  We have at our disposal every bit of information that lawmakers have, and thinking people can gather information and, if they are willing, can compare what they value in the available information with the values of a peer.  So the means are there for more elevated discussion than possible before.

In any event, that’s not what I wanted to talk about.  Rather, continuing in our theme, I remembered something that Jon Meacham mentioned in his biography of Andrew Jackson – a speech that Senator Edward Livingston delivered during the 1830 Webster-Hayne debate that broke out, rather spontaneously, on the nature of the U.S. Constitution.  Meachum wrote that Senator Livingston’s speech turned out to be a call to dispassionate political discussion.

So, why not add it to our scope?  I’m going through it now – here’s a key bit:

These, Mr. President, were some of my reasons for speaking of the history of party under our Government. I had another. It was to mark the difference between the necessary, and, if I may so express it, the legitimate parties existing in all free Governments, founded on differences of opinion in fundamental principles, or an attachment to, or dislike of, particular measures and particular men; between these and that spirit of dissension into which they are apt to degenerate: to throw the weight of my experience, and the little my opinions may have, in the scale, and lift up a warning voice against the indulgence of the passions which lead to them, the allusions that irritate, the personal reflections that embitter debate, and the altercations that debase it. The spirit of which I speak originates in the most trifling as well as the most important circumstances. The liberties of a nation or the color of a cockade are sufficient to excite it. It creates imaginary, and magnifies real causes of complaint; arrogates to itself every virtue—denies every merit to its opponents; secretly entertains the worst designs—publicly imputes them to its adversaries: poisons domestic happiness with its dissensions; assails the character of the living with calumny, and, invading the very secrets of the grave with its viperous slanders, destroys the reputations of the dead; harangues in the market place; disputes at the social board; distracts public councils with unprincipled propositions and intrigues; embitters their discussions with invective and recrimination, and degrades them by personalities and vulgar abuse; seats itself on the bench; clothes itself in the robes of justice; soils the purity of the ermine, and poisons the administration of justice in its source; mounts the pulpit, and, in the name of a God of mercy and peace, preaches discord and vengeance; invokes the worst scourges of Heaven, war, pestilence, and famine, as preferable alternatives to party defeat: blind, vindictive, cruel, remorseless, unprincipled, and at last frantic, it communicates its madness to friends as well as foes; respects nothing, fears nothing; rushes on the sword; braves the dangers of the ocean; and would not be turned from its mad career by the majesty of Heaven itself, armed with its tremendous thunders.

This is an amazing statement on irresponsible political rhetoric, spoken in 1830.  I am curious if his speech will offer guidance still helpful today.

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