We'll Keep the Red FLag Flying Here
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
Ever since FDR made it his campaign song in 1932
while running for office during the Great
Depression, the unofficial anthem of the Democratic
Party has been that Tin Pan Alley classic, "Happy
Days are Here Again." But no matter how often the
old Victor spun, it would not be until well after
Roosevelt's death that happy days would be here
again.
Like Hope and Change, Happy Days are Here Again
was a blandly optimistic and non-specific promise
that good times were coming. Someday the happy days
would arrive, an appropriate enough sentiment for a
song whose pivotal moment came in the movie "Chasing
Rainbows" where it was sung to reassure a cuckolded
husband who is threatening to kill himself. And in
an even more appropriate bit of symbolism, the
actual movie footage of that moment is as lost as
the happy times.
No matter how often the Democratic Party cheats on
the American people, it can always break out a new
rendition of "Happy Days are Here Again" to win them
back. And even if the happy days never seem to
actually arrive, the promise of "So long sad times"
and "Howdy gay times" where "your troubles and cares
are gone" is always a winner.
While the American Democratic Party may not have an
official anthem, the British Labour Party does and
its anthem, "The Red Flag" would be entirely
appropriate for the new Democratic Party that no
longer has anything in common with Thomas Jefferson
or Andrew Jackson.
It might be awkward to imagine Harry Reid or Joe
Manchin trying to make it through verses like, "The
people's flag is deepest red" and the sonorous
chorus, "Then raise the scarlet standard high
/Within its shade we live and die/Though cowards
flinch and traitors sneer/We'll keep the red flag
flying here."
They would probably look almost as awkward singing
it
as Labour Party leader Ed Milliband does, but
you could easily imagine Barack Obama and Valerie
Jarrett belting it out. And that would be only right
because while The Red Flag never gets around to
mentioning Manchester, despite its popularity there,
it does namecheck two cities. "In Moscow's vaults
its hymns were sung/Chicago swells the surging
throng."
These days red flag songs, once mandatory, are
confined to all sorts of vaults in Moscow. The new
Russian anthem is Putin's redress of the old Soviet
one, with lyrics by the same composer. And the
Soviet National Anthem, that secular hymn, has a
familiar pedigree going back to the
Anthem of the Bolshevik Party in 1938, which
took its melody from "Life
is better, Life is fun."
You might be forgiven for thinking that the
Bolshevik Party had borrowed its melody from some
Moscow musical, but that wasn't the case. "Life is
better, Life is fun" was based on a statement by
Stalin: "Life has become better, comrades. Life has
become more fun." The year was 1935 and while it is
impossible to know whether Comrade Stalin had
decided to crib from the Democratic campaign of
1932, the theme was the same. So long sad times.
Happy days were here again.
And just to remind everyone that happy days really
were here again, Stalin began another round of
brutal purges. A year earlier, Uncle Joe, as the
Fireside Chatter liked to refer to one of the
world's bloodiest mass murderers, had arranged for
the murder of Sergei Kirov, who was everything that
Stalin wasn't, and used the murder to begin a purge
of anyone more popular than him, with the support of
red flag wavers in Chicago, New York, London and Los
Angeles.
Unlike Franklin, Stalin's idea of a campaign
involved a lot of firing squads to properly soak the
red flag in the deepest red, while the band played,
"Life is better, Life is fun." After the purges were
wrapped up, Stalin signed a pact with another red
flag waver from Berlin. The Nazis and Communists
might have disagreed on any number of things, but
both of them had inherited the Jacobin fetish for
painting a flag red with blood and then waving it
while calling for more death.
While Moscow might have turned in its red card,
Chicago's "surging throng" is still swelling the
polls, and even though their shirts are purple,
their fingers are red from the strain of repeat
voting. If there is anywhere in the United States
that the red flag has gone on flying, outside of
Marin County, it's Chicago. In its shade,
generations have lived and died, and now generations
have begun living and dying in its shade across the
country as the red flag keeps flying for another
four years over D.C.
The red flags of the post-modern, post-American,
post-British, post-everything revolutionaries aren't
usually as obvious as a gang of wealthy politicians
staggering to a microphone once a year and belting
out, "We'll keep the red flag flying here". It
usually sounds more like the parody of that anthem,
known somewhat sarcastically as the "Battle Hymn of
the New Socialist Party,"
"White collar workers stand and cheer/The Labour
government is here/We’ll change the country bit by
bit/So nobody will notice it." A policy of changing
the country bit by bit so none of the workers who
want their benefits notices that everything else
they value is being dragged away to the rubbish heap
while they sleep may be sneered at by the real reds,
but it's worked quite effectively.
Tony Blair did a masterful job of changing Britain,
leaving behind Neil Kinnock's threats to take the
workers into the streets if the election did not go
his way. (It did not. He did not.) Kinnock proved
good enough for Joe Biden to plagiarize his
biography from, but the future rested with a
sensible left. A New Labour that would talk like
technocrats while importing unprecedented number of
immigrants to change the electoral balance of the
country, so that the red flag would go on flying
here, even if it was green and had a crescent and a
pair of crossed swords in the middle.
Instead of the flying red flag, Tony Blair's New
Labour used D:ream's "Things
can only get better" as its election anthem,
which despite a title that made it sound like
another, "Happy Days are Here" or "Life is better,
Life is fun" was more of a love song to a Labour
messiah promising to cure "prejudice and greed".
"Walk my path/Wear my shoes/Talk like me/I'll be an
angel," New Labour voters were promised and they
fell for it. The age of the Me Generation PM was
here and the new egotism resounded in lyrics like
"Things can only get better/Can only get better/Now
I've found you/(That means me)" that took both
self-help and self-involvement to a whole new level.
But British voters probably should have paid more
attention to warning lyrics like, "I sometimes lose
myself in me".
Bill Clinton was America's Tony Blair, but with
enough Good Old Boy charm to leaven the false
earnestness that led so many to hate Blair. If Blair
was a liar pretending to be an honest man, Clinton
was a liar pretending to be an honest man pretending
to be a liar, a rotten sandwich of a paradox that
you have to be a politician or an observer of them
to properly appreciate. Like Blair, Clinton worked
to change the country bit by bit, appealing to white
collar workers and leaving the red flag in the trunk
next to the road flares and the dynamite.
It's Chicago time now and the red flag is back. Talk
of changing the country bit by bit is done. Now the
country is being changed aggressively, every change
a finger poke in the eye of the people who don't
notice right what is in front of their faces. The
cuckolding is no longer subtle. It's more out in the
open than ever and the country is being bankrupted
and the middle class is being wiped out to a rousing
chorus of "Happy Days are Here Again", when an
entire generation has come of age never knowing a
time when happy days prevailed.
Whatever faults Kinnock and old Labour had, losing
himself in himself wasn't one of them. But the Baby
Boomer and Generation X leaders had the narcissistic
habit of doing just that. Clinton and Blair both
lost themselves in themselves and since then never
appear to have found themselves again. And Barack
Obama never lost himself in himself because he never
stepped out of himself to begin with.
Obama marries the red flag radicalism of the old
left with generational egotism to show us the
spoiled brat as leader, the tyke born with a set of
silver spoons in his mouth who not only waves the
red flag, but who mistakes his shamelessness for
political genius. Where Clinton limited his
shamelessness to his personal life, for his
Democratic successor, in the tradition of both the
hard left and the fellowship of mirror gazers, the
personal has always been political. To the Hope and
Changer, the man is the office, the state is the
man, and the whim is the national agenda.
Stalin famously told his mother that he was the
new Czar, transmuting collectivist revolution into
the egotistical authoritarianism of one man. Obama
has managed the same trick, merging revolutionary
politics with his own brand until there is no longer
a difference between the man and his revolution. FDR
only promised happy days, but Obama has become the
actual incarnation of hope, which may explain why
there is no longer any hope to go around.
There is a flag flying over Washington and it's no
longer the stars and stripes, but the same red flag
that flies over Chicago. It's the red flag under
whose shade misery and tyranny spreads while the
band strikes up the same anthem over and over again.
"Happy days are here again." Life is better, life is
fun." "Things can only get better" and of course
Obama's victory speech promise; "The best is yet to
come."
It might have been more honest if he had instead
admitted, "We'll keep the red flag flying here."