Posted on 11/26/2001 7:05:07 AM PST by Mr. Mulliner
John Leo
November 26, 2001
Out-of-step classes are taking a fall
The chattering classes are sullen. The president they were sure was a foolish bumbler is doing rather well. He has been patient and forceful. He glued together a coalition that includes a Labor prime minister of Britain, a Russian president and a Pakistani dictator. A number of prominent Democrats admitted -- anonymously, of course -- that they are relieved that Bush is president, not Gore.
Here in New York, the news for the chatterers is almost as bad: Rudy Giuliani, the mayor they derided for so long as a reckless demagogue, has emerged as the American Churchill. How irritating.
The big picture is galling, too. Leading roles on the national stage haven't been played by the thinking elite but by the semi-disdained non-chatterers who act physically in the real world: the military, the police, firefighters, agents of the CIA. And the values of the non-chatterers -- heroism, patriotism, self-sacrifice -- are on the rise. Crowds aren't lining the streets and holding up "Thank you, chatterers" signs as pundits and professors drive by.
Journalist Andrew Sullivan has been sharp in detecting the anguish of the chatterers. "Not a sentence of celebration" appeared in The New York Times after the Northern Alliance broke through, and the same gloom prevails at the BBC and National Public Radio, he wrote. Why? Sullivan thinks the media chatterers of the left feel disempowered by the war. They are used to being in charge. They played a big role in ending the Vietnam War and ousting Nixon. But in this war, Sullivan wrote on his Web site: "The pundits and editorialists and cable executives have been knocked down a few pegs in the social hierarchy. They have much less power than they had before Sept. 11." As a result, Sullivan thinks angry media elites will get even angrier and will soon step up efforts to disparage and undermine the war.
Lawrence Summers, the new president of Harvard, had something to say about the elites, too. "The post-Vietnam cleavage between the coastal elites and certain mainstream values is a matter of great concern and has some real costs," he said. He urged the academic world to rethink its attitudes toward patriotism, which must have sent hundreds of his professors into a swoon. He said Harvard has a responsibility to support all public servants, especially "those who fight and are prepared to die."
These sentiments are ordinary in most of America, but amazingly bold on most campuses. Consider Summers' comment a polite warning that chatterers can expect to lose influence if they keep moving away from the mainstream at a time of crisis.
None of the elite's wartime moves have worked. The effort to avoid U.S. retaliation for Sept. 11 by calling in the United Nations was a non-starter. The attempt to demonize the "racial profiling" of Muslims at airports fell flat, rejected by huge majorities, including a large majority of blacks. The left's mind-boggling attempt to turn the anti-globalization crusade into a '60s-style "campaign against war and racism" also collapsed. Even more amazing was the refusal of the feminist movement to support any show of force against the Taliban. Let's see, who shall we support? America or fanatics who deny all rights to women and whip them on the street if they walk too noisily? Hmmm. Too close to call.
Multiculturalism, the unofficial religion of the chatterers, looks very different since Sept. 11. So does the identity politics that downgrades assimilation and common values. "Being an American means nothing to me," an eighth-grader at a Muslim school told The Washington Post. "I'm not even proud of telling my cousins in Pakistan that I'm an American."
This kind of comment echoes the multicultural playbook. Diversity curriculums routinely depict the United States as a sort of game board on which different "peoples" (not the American people) work out their tribal destinies, with no particular allegiance to the nation as a whole. Another bit of multicultural dogma, that each culture is correct on its own terms and no culture is superior, looks pitiful in the wake of Sept. 11. Elites alienated from their own traditions concocted this stuff in calmer times. Will mainstream America keep buying it now, or just throw it out of the schools?
In his 1995 book, "The Revolt of the Elites," the late social critic Christopher Lasch wrote that the new bicoastal elites were seceding from the common life of America. He said the elites "have lost faith in the values, or what remains of them, of the West" and now tend to think of "Western civilization" as a system of domination and oppression. This attitude helps explain why so many in the elites seem offended by a war of self-defense and why their resistance won't fade as the war goes on.
And I was right. As soon as the NA broke through, they stopped bothering to cite Bush's poll numbers. The hoped-for decline became an impossible dream at that point.
If you have dedicated your professional life to looking "where things are the worst" you have blinded yourself to the glue of society--the doers. That makes you anticonservative before you even decide to go to j-school. Objectivity is a fantasy.
I don't.
Nothing but unconditional surrender from the left.
I feel exactly the same. I didn't think I would see the day when the media and cultural elites would seem irrelevant, but I also never thought I'd see an act of terrorism that prompts us to all-out war.
Unfortunately -- and I hate to put a damper on things -- the most recent elections had mixed results. If the public really is listening to a different drummer, then we should see some effect in the voting booth. May it happen and happen big in 2004!
Here in Washington (the state), property tax limitation passed overwhelmingly state wide while at the same time the House went Democrat because of an off year election in the Seattle Metro area (some people just never learn).
The battle has been joined both in Afghanistan and here. We will win in both places.
The left never quits. It pauses, it changes course from time to time, it adopts different tactics, different "truths", but it never, ever gives up. It tends to be quite good at moving fast while taking the longterm view, too; witness the democrats' ability to seize the moment and create 28,000 new federal employees in airports across the nation. Why can't conservatives think ahead (and act quickly and decisively) in similar fashion?
The left probes constantly for weak spots; it tries this line, it tries that line, all the while with the active connivance of the press. The lies which don't work are all conveniently forgotten, the lies that resonate with the focus groups create the new direction of the moment.
Hitlery is down for the moment, but don't count her out. If at all possible, she will find a method to connive her way into the Presidency at some time in the future, and the press and the Ivy League-powerful will boost her at every turn.
I am very grateful for the response of many of the American people to the current crisis, but I am still concerned for the future. The left will twist this around to their benefit somehow if they can find a way. They are looking everywhere for their next move and trying out different tactics and buzzwords as we write.
Conservatives have the great advantage in many ways and especially in America where we've enjoyed an extremely blessed history, conservatism should be winning out handily. Well, we are doing better than conservatives in Europe, Australia or New Zealand, but we are at a disadvantage simply because we have principles and stick to them.
Another factor, of course, is that many people in this country are "cottage conservatives," people who basically don't care for politics, but don't want major changes. The left is terrific at promising thse naive types exactly what they want, but all along giving them something completely different.
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