bttt
Worth your time to read.
bttt
Please follow the link in my #6. It's long - but Vietnam is a long story. Very impressive and inspiring work by Freeper marron.Hey, thanks for pointing me to that thread! It was great - I wish everybody in this country would read it.
23 posted on 07/28/2005 7:07:24 AM EDT by
GadareneDemoniac
Yeah. I have it bookmarked, and tend to link it into any thread about the tragedy of Vietnam.A Noble Soldier, Not a Great Soldier
NRO ^ | July 22, 2005 | Mackubin Thomas Owens
thank you for an insightful post. I was a child during Vietnam and never understood the issue well. To me it points out the desperate need for those of us who remain here at home to fight the war on the domestic front, the intellectual and moral front...which is IMHO, the principle role of Freerepublic.
Marron, your last paragraph is as near as I get to your answer for the cynicism against hope in mom and apple pie. The following excerpt is on the same theme but in a different corner. It's Neuhaus from First Things.
Philip Rieff has died at age 83, in Philadelphia. We never met, but he would write from time to time, usually a brief note on something or the other that appeared in First Things. I forget what it was that I had written some years ago, but he responded, if memory serves, I almost wish I could be so hopeful. That stayed with me. I take it he thought I was a mite naïve. He had a very grim view of our cultural circumstance.He was a sociologist, but the kind of sociologist once more-frequently encountered, taking on the really big picture of the world and our place in it. With his 1959 book, Freud: The Mind of the Moralist, he was recognized as a thinker to be reckoned with. It was, however, The Triumph of the Therapeutic: Uses of Faith After Freud that made a really deep impression. The title and the phrases therapeutic society and psychological man have become part of the intellectual air we breathe.
Truth, tradition, morals, and manners have been kicked aside to make way for the dogma of dogmas: It all comes down to me, and how I feel about me. Rieff did not usually put matters so bluntly. His writings bristled with sometimes cranky eccentricities. His last book, published this past January and intended to be the first of four on related themes, is Sacred Order/Social Order: My Life Among the Deathworks: Illustrations of the Aesthetics of Authority.
I have been reading it with great interest. Reviewers say it is both difficult and rewarding. But of course. Thats Philip Rieff. Well be doing something with the book in First Things. The obituary in the New York Times says that he dazzled his students at the University of Pennsylvania with multi-layered but always authoritative lectures that blended philosophy, theology, economics, history, literature, psychology, and dashes of poetry and Plato like ingredients in a sociological mulligatawny. The last, in the event you did not know, is a Tamil soup of chicken stock sharply seasoned with pepper and curry. Great fun.
For all the intellectual panache, however, there was something more sobering about Philip Rieff, for which the right word may be prophetic. While we were preoccupied with our therapeutic games, it went largely unnoticed that our culture died some while back; the ideas, habits, and traditions that sustained and vivified it have been shattered and cant be put back together. Culture began with renunciation and ended with the therapeutic renunciation of renunciation.
Rieff, a Jew, believed that Christianity supplied the best bet for a sustainable culture, but thats all gone now. In a 2005 interview with the Chronicles of Higher Education, he says he does not believe that an authentic religious culture could be resurrected, no matter how hard we might try. Following Marx, Weber, and Freud, he argues that modern prosperity, cities, bureaucracy, and science have completely transformed the terrain of human experience. People who try to practice orthodox Christianity and Judaism today, he says, inevitably remain trapped in the vocabulary of therapy and self-fulfillment. I think the orthodox are role-playing, he says. You believe because you think its good for you, not because of anything inherent in the belief. I think that the orthodox are in the miserable situation of being orthodox for therapeutic reasons.
Im still reading the last book, but I think Rieff is saying that its all over. I dont think hes right about that. I hope hes not right about that. But he could be right about that. At the very least, it is a possibility to be considered when proposed by one so thoughtful as Philip Rieff. Christ never said of Western Civilization that the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
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Here are pieces of an interview Rieff did with The Guardian on December 5, 2005.
Its been three decades since your last book. Why the long silence? Rieff: I saw no reason to publish. Im not sure why Im publishing now.The interviewer notes that Rieff as a sociologist is a cross-disciplinarian and unorthodox. But he is indelibly marked by the conservative ethos that was dominant in the University of Chicago in the postwar years, producing thinkers such as Leo Strauss, Milton Friedman, Edward Shils, Allan Bloom, and Saul Bellow, who chronicles some of those days in the novel Ravelstein.What do you mean by deathworks? Rieff: James Joyce mounted a deathwork against the novel and the European tradition. Picasso certainly mounted a deathwork against painting in the European tradition. So, in photography and more recently, did Robert Mapplethorpe.
What the term deathwork implies, in Rieffs analysis, is deadendedness. They are instances of artistry that perversely annihilate the possibilities of artand with it, life. If, as Freud contended, there are two basic drives in human civilization, eros and thanatos, life and death, the current triumph of deathwork marks the triumph of thanatos.
Rieff: It is a critique intended to stop a certain way of writing. Joyce, Picasso, and Mapplethorpe are deathworkers against the kinds of psychologies that were practiced before them. And deliberately so. Their deathwork hasnt actually stopped anyone, but I think such artists have intended, and achieved, a massive attack on the foundations of literature and art.
What can people of goodwill do? They can become inactivists. Theyll do less damage that way. Inactivism is the ticket.
Rieff has been the most cross-grained of American neo-Freudians. He believes the psychoanalytic therapeutic culture, far from curing ills, has brought our world to its third, and terminal, stage. There are three successive cultures or ideal types. Rieff: The first, historically, is the pagan, or pre-Christian world. The second, the Christian culture and all its varieties. And finally, the present Kulturkampf, which is the third culture. Are we, then, in a state of barbarism? Rieff: No, were not. But were near it because we treat the past with considerable contempt. Or nostalgia. One is as bad as the other.
Is there any way back or around the barriers that confront us? Rieff: I dont know whether what Ive called the second culture can survive as a form that is respected and practiced. And is the third culture the end of the road? Rieff: I dont know. It remains to be seen.
What is it that is so ominous about the third culture? Rieff: Its characterized by a certain vacuity and diffidence. The institutions which were defenders of the second world, or second cultureI think cultures are world creationshave not offered the kind of defense or support that would have been more powerful than therapeutic forces. So Christianity becomes, therapeutically, Jesus is good for you. I find this simply pathetic.
So are you a pessimist? Rieff: I dont know that Im pessimistic. Therapies are better than nothing.
Youre welcome. Just thought your day could use a little sunshine.
Did you ever show it to him?
"Well, look, if that's the criteria by which we are making decisions on the deployment of U.S. forces, then by that argument you would have 300,000 troops in the Congo right now where millions have been slaughtered as a consequence of ethnic strife which we haven't done. We would be deploying unilaterally and occupying the Sudan, which we haven't done. Those of us who care about Darfur don't think it would be a good idea."My response to that was reply #8:
It's perfectly true, as Obama points out, that we (Republicans or Democrats) haven't undertaken to use military force to prevent/stop every genocide in Africa. That is a fact.And that put me in mind of this thread, so I linked my reply to this thread. Upon reflection, I reread this thread - and was struck by the fact that I had not pinged you all to it. So I'm doing so now. It is a long article - but it is a keeper.It is more than a little different, however, to say that we should therefore not factor the possibility of a genocide as a result of our military decision into our decision to pull the military out of a space it currently occupies. And that is doubly so in consideration of the fact that people in Iraq have staked their reputations and their own and their families' lives on the reliability of the US.
The single most objectionable thing about Democrats is their willingness to ask for the trust of people, and then to betray that trust. Which is nowhere more amply and objectionably illustrated than by the Kennedy/Johnson policy of enmeshing our military in Vietnam, and the Kerry/(Ted) Kennedy policy of betrayal of everyone who trusted that committment in Southeast Asia - our own servicemen not excepted.
Marron, I am at work so I cannot read this, but it looks like a great post...I was pinged to it by Conservatism is Compassion...
Will read later.
BTTT! Great read! Very thoughtful. Lot’s of information on how the left destroys nations and its citizens.