I am 
going to start with three beloved movies of my childhood, and end with a
 suggestion of why liberals will probably never be able to come to grips
 with what they winningly call “inequality.” The three movies I have in 
mind—”National Lampoon’s Animal House,” “Caddyshack,” and 
“Ghostbusters”–were all written or directed, in whole or in part, by the
 great Harold Ramis, who died last week, and whose work was 
That seems about right, doesn’t it? Each of 
the films I mentioned features some prudish or strait-laced patriarch 
who is spectacularly humiliated by a band of slobs or misfits or smart 
alecks. With their dick jokes and cruel insults, these movies 
represented, collectively, the righteous rising-up of a generation 
determined to get justice for the little guy. That’s why a group of 
prominent Democrats showed up at Ramis’ funeral. It’s why 
movies routinely speak of their liberating power.
So,
 the political equation is obvious, right? We of the left own the 
imagery of subversion and outsiderness. It’s ours. Every time a stupid 
old white guy gets humiliated in a TV commercial for choosing Brand X, 
we know it’s because the people at Brand Y secretly support universal 
health insurance and a nice little pop in the minimum wage. Right?
Well,
 no. And with that acknowledgement, let me advance to my bold 
hypothesis: The dick joke is not always what it seems to be. The dick 
joke is not always your friend.
Start
 with the first really great movie Ramis had a hand in writing, 
“National Lampoon’s Animal House.” Watching it again today, I didn’t 
think so much of righteous defiance, or underdogs and outsiders; I 
thought of Wall Street. This particular iteration of Ramis’ martinet vs.
 slob theme pits—as everyone knows—a prissy, militaristic college 
fraternity against a fraternity where the boys like pleasure, which is 
to say, where they drink beer and throw parties and actually enjoy 
getting laid. If this basic formula doesn’t strike you as particularly 
rebellious or even remarkable, that’s because it isn’t: in its simple 
anarchic assertion of appetite, it’s the philosophy of the people who 
rule us. Everyone is a fraud in this world; learning is a joke; sex 
objects are easily conned; Kennedy-style idealism is strictly for 
suckers; and in one telling moment, fratboy 1 remarks to fratboy 2, who 
is crying over the trashing of his borrowed automobile by fratboy 1 and 
company, “You fucked up. You trusted us.” What popped into my mind when I
 heard that line was that other great triumph of the boomer generation: 
the time-bomb investments of 2008; Goldman Sachs peddling its “shitty 
deals” to the naive and the credulous.
Drink, take and lie: 
translate it into Latin and it could be the motto of the One Percent. It
 is no coincidence that P. J. O’Rourke, who was editor of National 
Lampoon when “Animal House” was made and is currently a wisecracking 
critic of liberalism at the Cato Institute, recently declared that the 
release of the movie in 1978 marked the moment when his generation “took
 over” and started to make the world “better.” (That O’Rourke chose to 
write this for the 
American Association of Retired Persons
 is a particularly poignant detail.) It is also no coincidence that the 
fraternity at Dartmouth which served as one of the models for “Animal 
House” has of late become 
a kind of pipeline into the
 investment-banking industry, nor should it surprise anyone that Wall 
Street is home to a secret Animal House-style fraternity of its own, a 
place where the anarchic captains of finance come together to slurp 
likker and 
howl their admiration for their beau ideal: the self-maximizing asshole . . . who got bad grades in college.
The
 second of the Ramis comedies eulogized by Obama was the 1980 cult 
classic “Caddyshack,” which took on the great movie theme of the 
Seventies—class antagonism—over a game of golf. The martinet this time 
is a country-club grandee, depicted by veteran blowhard Ted Knight; the 
slob confronting him is a real-estate developer of hilariously garish 
taste played by Rodney Dangerfield; between them stands the American 
worker in all his nobility—meaning, specifically, a teenaged caddy at 
the country club who must decide whether to be true to his blue-collar 
self or to kiss the grandee’s ass in order to go to college. The movie 
unfolds as a series of set pieces in which WASP prigs blow gasket after 
gasket upon beholding some infringement of their Prussian 
sensibilities—absorbing one of Dangerfield’s jokes, or seeing caddies 
frolicking in the pool, or hearing someone using the word “sucks,” or 
finding a car parked on the lawn, or picking up the saucy strains of a 
Journey song as it wafts across the greensward. Boom: Apoplexy! Watch 
the patriarchs go berserk!
And that makes for a pretty liberal 
film, right? I mean, who else makes fun of country club grandees except 
for us lefty authority-questioners?
Well, free-market 
conservatives do. Google the phrase “Country club Republican” and what 
you will find, by and large, are right-wing types using it as a synonym 
for “RINO”: fake Republicans who are in it for the snobbery—not out of 
faith in the relentless, disruptive forces of capitalism.
These 
same conservatives are also the most likely to understand class conflict
 in the way “Caddyshack” does: as a rivalry between WASP old money and 
differently pedigreed new money. In fact, this is one of the themes of 
George Gilder’s 1981 book “Wealth and Poverty,” the manifesto of the 
“supply-side” revolution, and of countless wealth-celebrating books that
 followed. That’s why “Caddyshack” seems in retrospect like a piece of 
crypto-Reaganite social commentary. Rodney Dangerfield’s character, for 
example, is a clear symbol of the crude power of markets—proudly showing
 off one of his tasteless billboards and announcing that he only cares 
about the “snobatorium” country club because he wants to build condos 
there. The choice before the white, working-class caddy boils down to 
the Harvard-proud WASP snob and the earthy, joke-cracking businessman; 
the side he eventually chooses is the same one that millions of 
real-life blue-collar workers were also choosing in those confused days.
There is nothing “crypto” about Ramis’s 1984 hit, “Ghostbusters”: Its Reaganism is fully developed, as 
numerous critics have pointed out.
 Here the martinet is none other than a troublemaking EPA bureaucrat; 
the righteous, rule-breaking slobs are small businessmen—ghost-hunting 
businessmen, that is, who have launched themselves deliriously into the 
world of entrepreneurship. Eventually, after the buffoon from the EPA 
gets needlessly into the businessmen’s mix and blunders the world into 
catastrophe, the forces of order find they must outsource public safety 
itself to the hired ghost-guns because government can’t do the job on 
its own.
Both Reagan and his closest advisers were transfixed by the film, 
Sidney Blumenthal tells us;
 “Ghostbusters” fit nicely into their idea of an America guided by 
“fantasy and myth.” And while the film itself piled up its stupendous 
box-office returns in that summer of ‘84, Jack Abramoff and his College 
Republican pals got together a troupe of “Fritzbusters” to warm up the 
crowds at Republican events, mocking Democratic presidential candidate 
“Fritz” Mondale with an offensive take-off on the catchy “Ghostbusters” 
theme song. And why not? What Mondale was promising—yes, 
promising—was to raise taxes, balance the budget, get responsible, and close down the party. What a Niedermeyer.
Harold
 Ramis was a sort of poet of the rude gesture, of the symbolic 
humiliation. Our reaction to his work, both now and when it was fresh, 
is almost mechanical: We see the square on the screen get shamed, and 
our mind shouts liberation. It is almost Pavlovian. Our culture-masters 
have been gleefully triggering this kind of reaction for nearly fifty 
years now—since the rude gesture first became a national pastime during 
the 1960s—and in that time the affluent, middle-class society that 
produced the Boomer generation has pretty much gone the way of the 
family farmer.
These two developments are not unconnected. One small reason for the big 
economic change, I think, is the confusion engendered by the 
cultural
 change. The kind of liberation the rude gesture brings has turned out 
to be not that liberating after all, but along the way it has crowded 
out previous ideas of what liberation meant—ideas that had to with 
equality, with work, with ownership. And still our love of simple, 
unadorned defiance expands. It is everywhere today. Everyone believes 
that they’re standing up against unjust authority of some imaginary kind
 or another—even those whose ultimate aim is obviously to establish an 
unjust authority of their own. Their terms for it are slightly different
 than the ones in “Animal House”—they talk about the liberal elite, the 
statists, the social engineers, the “ruling class.” But they’re all 
acting out the same old script. The Tea Party movement believes it’s 
resisting the arrogant liberal know-it-alls. So did Andrew Breitbart, in
 his brief career as a dealer in pranks and contumely. So do the people 
who proposed that abominable gay marriage discrimination law in Arizona.
 Hell, so do the pitiful billionaires of Wall Street—even 
they think they’re standing bravely for Ayn Rand’s downtrodden job creators.
Maybe
 the day will come when we finally wake up and understand that insults 
don’t always set us free. But until that happens, my liberal friends, 
don’t ask for whom the bird flips: 
the bird flips for thee.
 
Drink, take and lie: translate it into Latin and it becomes the motto of the One Percent.
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