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We Shall Overcome (The Belmont Club)
The Belmont Club | February 21, 2005 | Wretchard

Posted on 02/20/2005 6:45:57 AM PST by 68skylark

Martin Peretz in Not Much Left says what many have been saying for a while: that Liberalism is out of ideas. The curious thing about his intelligent and literate essay is that he never manages to explain why this condition has taken place.

I think it was John Kenneth Galbraith, speaking in the early 1960s, the high point of post-New Deal liberalism, who pronounced conservatism dead. Conservatism, he said, was "bookless," ... At this point in history, it is liberalism upon which such judgments are rendered. And understandably so. It is liberalism that is now bookless and dying. ... Liberalism now needs to be liberated from many of its own illusions and delusions. Let's hope we still have the strength. 

Liberalism has lost its books because it has burned them. The campaign to dismiss Harvard President Larry Summers for remarking that women may have less aptitude than men for mathematics and sciences is a case in point. The Boston Globe reports:

Late yesterday, one of Harvard's most famous faculty members, law professor Alan Dershowitz, issued a statement backing Summers's presidency, in which he said the storm of opposition "sounds like the trial of Galileo. In my 41 years at Harvard, I have never experienced a president more open to debate, disagreement, and dialogue than Larry Summers," wrote Dershowitz, adding that "professors who are afraid to challenge him are guilty of cowardice."

Dershowitz noted that he disagreed with Summers's comments last month that innate differences might help explain why more men than women are top achievers in science and math, but he defended the university president's right to raise the proposition. "This is truly a time of crisis for Harvard," he wrote. "The crisis is over whether a politically correct straightjacket will be placed over the thinking of everybody in this institution by one segment of the faculty."

Paradoxically, dogmatism is rooted in relativism more than in the belief that real truth is discoverable. For as long as the truth is believed to be "out there"; it will be sought. When its existence is doubted none will venture into the dark. Under those conditions, we get exactly what Peretz describes: an illogical attachment to old formulations of the 1960s, which can be uttered only because they are hallowed.

It's much easier, more comfortable, to do the old refrains. You can easily rouse a crowd when you get it to sing, "We Shall Overcome." One of the tropes that trips off the tongues of American liberals is the civil rights theme of the '60s. Another is that U.S. power is dangerous to others and dangerous to us. This is also a reprise from the '60s, the late '60s. Virtue returns, it seems, merely by mouthing the words.

But when the world changes -- and it is no longer the 1960s -- Liberalism finds it that cannot, dares not utter anything new; and that is dangerous because it means inaction. Peretz scathingly describes how Liberals attitudes have buried themselves in a time capsule where blacks are forever to be maintained as objects of pity to be defended from Bull Connors. And where no real black Americans can be found to fit the bill, a mountebank will be produced.

The biggest insult to our black fellow citizens was the deference paid to Al Sharpton during the campaign. ... To him can be debited the fraudulent and dehumanizing scandal around Tawana Brawley (conflating scatology and sex), the Crown Heights violence between Jews and blacks, a fire in Harlem, the protests around a Korean grocery store in Brooklyn, and on and on. Yet the liberal press treats Sharpton as a genuine leader, even a moral one, the trickster as party statesman. ...

Any port in a storm, for the men without books, means anyone willing to destroy America. Not out of spite, though there is that, but out a twisted love because "U.S. power is dangerous to others and dangerous to us".

This leaves us with the issue of U.S. power, the other leftover from the '60s. ... Pose this question at an Upper West Side dinner party: What was worse, Nazism or Communism? Surely, the answer will be Nazism ... because Communism had an ideal of the good. This, despite the fact that communist revolutions and communist regimes murdered ever so many more millions of innocents and transformed the yearning of many idealists for equality into the brutal assertion of evil, a boot stamping on the human face forever. ...

It is typologically the same people who wanted the United States to let communism triumph--in postwar Italy and Greece, in mid-cold war France and late-cold war Portugal--who object to U.S. efforts right now in the Middle East. You hear the schadenfreude in their voices--you read it in their words--at our troubles in Iraq. For months, liberals have been peddling one disaster scenario after another, one contradictory fact somehow reinforcing another, hoping now against hope that their gloomy visions will come true. I happen to believe that they won't.

One senses in Peretz the momentary triumph of intelligence over loyalty. He understands the symptoms of the Liberal disease, but his uncertainty over the location of the tumor makes him hesitates to press down on the scalpel. But this does not stop him from denouncing the fake cures offered up by others.

And it is a condition related to the desperate hopes liberals have vested in the United Nations. That is their lodestone. But the lodestone does not perform. It is not a magnet for the good. It performs the magic of the wicked. It is corrupt, it is pompous, it is shackled to tyrants and cynics.

To be trapped in an intellectual desert with a faked lodestone and Al Sharpton for company -- if that were not bad enough -- there is the world phenomenon of Jihadi terrorism. Curiously absent from Peretz's essay is the long shadow cast by radical Islam on Liberalism itself. Islamism has already displaced Marxist Nasserism as the primary ideology of the Middle East and if demographic trends continue will displace the Left in Europe too. How will the aging men without books fare against the youthful adherents of the book which is the Koran? Will it still be possible for them to link arthritic arms and totter around in a parody of militancy?

Paradoxically, the only hope for Liberalism is to reject Liberalism itself. It must regain the idea that the truth is discoverable and not a matter of political correctness; and then a whole succession of insights will follow: who the enemy is; how he may be beaten; what the sound of children playing in the yard really means. For there is no guarantee that it not too late to beat back the tides of darkness; no assurance that we will ever regain the carefree life we took as given. But if Liberals can think again they can sing again, though it may not be "We Shall Overcome"; and however they meet their end it will be one of which books should be written.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: academia; belmontclub; liberalism
The link is here.
1 posted on 02/20/2005 6:45:58 AM PST by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark
Paradoxically, the only hope for Liberalism is to reject Liberalism itself. It must regain the idea that the truth is discoverable and not a matter of political correctness; and then a whole succession of insights will follow: who the enemy is; how he may be beaten; what the sound of children playing in the yard really means.

If liberals take this advice, they'll become more like conservatives. I think liberals would rather die (and take out others with them) than follow this path.

2 posted on 02/20/2005 6:47:42 AM PST by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark
Liberalism has lost its books because it has burned them.

Essentially says it all.

Liberalism has become intolerant and anti-intellectual. It is a parody of the worst it attributes to others.

3 posted on 02/20/2005 6:53:53 AM PST by marktwain
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To: 68skylark
"The biggest insult to our black fellow citizens was the deference paid to Al Sharpton during the campaign. ... To him can be debited the fraudulent and dehumanizing scandal around Tawana Brawley (conflating scatology and sex), the Crown Heights violence between Jews and blacks, a fire in Harlem, the protests around a Korean grocery store in Brooklyn, and on and on. Yet the liberal press treats Sharpton as a genuine leader, even a moral one, the trickster as party statesman. ..."

As a white man (Spit! ... Spit!) I have no right to say anything about Sharpy Sharpton, but I'm glad someone has.

4 posted on 02/20/2005 6:58:02 AM PST by G.Mason (The replies by this poster are meant for self-amusement only. Read at your own discretion.)
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To: 68skylark
Liberalism finds it that cannot, dares not utter anything new; and that is dangerous because it means inaction.

Oddly, inaction is just what some problems call for. The incessant meddling of the Left has achieved little in the way of tangible results, but it HAS created new problems! Conservatism's strength is that it is perfectly willing to maintain the status quo, the methods and ideas that have been proven through decades of use and tradition. In adopting a philosophy that demands constant change, liberalism must continually reinvent itself. Even if by some miracle it found something that worked, it would have to reject it or "improve" it in order to "progress."

However, today's liberals don't have the brainpower to actually invent anything new, or even to evolve the same old party line. So they trot out tired, shopworn cliches and chant them like axioms in the hope that nostalgia will suffice where evidence does not.

5 posted on 02/20/2005 7:31:17 AM PST by IronJack
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To: 68skylark

"How will the aging men without books fare against the youthful adherents of the book which is the Koran?"

That is the billion dollar question. How will the adherants of Islam be made to live in a civilized world. We had better be finding a solution and soon!


6 posted on 02/20/2005 7:41:58 AM PST by KateUTWS (Monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly, monthly)
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To: marktwain

I'm surprised a liberal candidate can still get 48% of the vote in this country. To me, liberalism is a long-dead corpse -- the rot and stink are obvious. But a lot of other Americans looks at the same thing and see something they like.


7 posted on 02/20/2005 7:42:40 AM PST by 68skylark
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To: KateUTWS
Yeah, I agree. Some people (like Mark Steyn) argue that large sections of Europe have already surrendered to radical Islam, and the extremely low birth rate of Europeans in these countries will quickly lock in this surrender as the native population ages and shrinks.

Other countries (like the U.S. and Australia, mostly) seem to have the desire and ability to defend traditional western values against the onslaught. But even these countries are only one election away from the appeasement trap.

8 posted on 02/20/2005 7:47:37 AM PST by 68skylark
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To: G.Mason
"rev" Sharpton is a certified, malicious liar, proven to be so in open court.

Saying that to many blacks will earn their anger, but the facts cannot be denied. Many others will agree with you wholeheartedly.

9 posted on 02/20/2005 8:04:04 AM PST by TheGeezer
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To: TheGeezer

There are so many great black thinkers (like Thomas Sowel). So I don't understand why we have to put up with court jesters like Sharpton and Jesse Jackson as the public face of our fellow citizens who are black.


10 posted on 02/20/2005 8:30:57 AM PST by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark
I'm surprised a liberal candidate can still get 48% of the vote in this country.

Most of that 48% are still getting their information from the MSM. A few are either locked into dependency or have invested so much emotional capital into the Left that they will lie to themselves rather than face reality.

11 posted on 02/20/2005 8:36:30 AM PST by marktwain
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To: marktwain
Evan Thomas assistant managing editor of Newsweek said that the MSM's backing of Kerry was worth about 14 points in the polls. Add that to Bush's 51% and you get a 65% landslide.

The Dems out spent the Republicans by over $100 mil with the MSM wind at their back and they still lost by 3.5 million votes.

12 posted on 02/20/2005 6:51:14 PM PST by Donald Rumsfeld Fan ("Memos on Bush Are Fake but Accurate". NYTimes)
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