I was not going to post this, but send it privately.
However, upon reading some of the recent post on
the up coming elections I thought some of you would
find this interesting.  Many of the statements in this
article are from liberal democrats and maybe the trend
at the poles.
Kasey

John Leo (archive)
(printer-friendly version)
October 28, 2002
The left has lost its moral bearings
Everywhere you turn these days, someone on the left is denouncing President
Bush as Hitler, Satan, a terrorist or a tyrannical emperor. A Yale law
professor said Bush is "the most dangerous man on Earth." A famous editor
referred to Bush as "a lawn jockey" and "Pinocchio."
Some of the angry rhetoric flirts with the fringe idea that the United States
planned the terrorist attacks. A Purdue professor said "there is no ground to
be certain" that America and Israel aren't behind the 9/11 attacks. A Columbia
law professor compared 9/11 to the Reichstag fire in Nazi Germany -- Bush is
not responsible for 9/11, he said, but he exploited a national disaster to
suspend civil liberties, just like Hitler. A Berkeley professor helpfully
pointed out that some Indonesian groups think the U.S. planned the Bali
bombing.
The rhetoric accurately reflects the current condition of much of the left --
bitter, stymied, alienated, politically impotent, full of loathing for America
and the West, and totally unable to address the crisis wrought by 9/11, except
to imply (or say) that the U.S. deserved to be attacked.
The left has lost its bearings, Michael Walzer, the political philosopher,
wrote in the spring issue of Dissent, the leftist magazine he edits. His
article, "Can There Be a Decent Left?" deplored "the barely concealed glee" of
the left's reaction to 9/11, and the lack of "any visible concern" about how
to prevent terrorism in the future.
"Many left intellectuals live in America like internal aliens," he wrote,
"refusing to identify with their fellow citizens, regarding any hint of
patriotic feeling as politically incorrect. That's why they had such
difficulty responding emotionally to the attacks of Sept. 11 or joining in the
expressions of solidarity that followed."
The favorite posture of many American leftists, Walzer said, is "standing as a
righteous minority, brave and determined, amid the timid, the corrupt and the
wicked. A posture like that ensures at once the moral superiority of the left
and its political failure." He said the left needs to discard its "ragtag
Marxism" and its belief that America is corrupt beyond remedy.
Solidarity with people in trouble is the most profound commitment that
leftists make, he wrote, but even the oppressed have obligations, and one is
to avoid murdering innocent people. "Leftists who cannot insist on this point,
even to people poorer and weaker than themselves, have abandoned both politics
and morality for something else."
An example of that abandonment came two weeks ago (EDITOR: Oct. 12-14) at the
University of Michigan's pro-Palestinian conference, which could not bring
itself to criticize suicide bombings. Save us from moral appeals that leave
room for blowing up families in supermarkets.
Journalist Christopher Hitchens caused a bigger hubbub than Walzer when he
resigned from The Nation magazine after 20 years, citing its anti-war stance
on Iraq. Saddam Hussein, he wrote in his farewell column, is "a filthy menace"
and "there is not the least doubt that he has acquired some of the means of
genocide and hopes to collect some more." He thought The Nation had become
"the echo chamber of those who truly believe that John Ashcroft is a greater
menace than Osama bin Laden."
In another article, Hitchens wrote: "I can only hint at how much I despise a
left that thinks of Osama bin Laden as a slightly misguided anti-imperialist.
... Instead of internationalism, we find among the left now a sort of
affectless, neutralist, smirking isolationism" and "a masochistic refusal to
admit that our own civil society has any merit."
Ron Rosenbaum of the New York Observer said Hitchens' departure from The
Nation was sad because he "forced a lot of people on the left to confront
their blind spot, their on-bended-knee obeisance to anyone in the Third World
who posed as a 'liberator,' from Mao to Castro to Arafat and the Taliban."
Rosenbaum's comments came in an article on his own defection, "Goodbye, All
That: How Left Idiocies Drove me to Flee." One trigger: a well-respected
academic said he welcomed 9/11 because it gave Americans a chance to reassess
their past honestly, as Germans did in the 1960s. "I couldn't take it any
more," Rosenbaum wrote. "Goodbye to all that ... the inability to distinguish
between America's sporadic blundering depredations" and Hitler's Germany.
Goodbye, he said, to the refusal to admit that "Marxist genocides" slaughtered
some 20 million to 50 million people in Russia, China and Cambodia. And
goodbye to the "peace marches" like the one in Madrid where women wore
suicide-bomber belts as bikinis. "'Peace' somehow doesn't exclude blowing up
Jewish children," Rosenbaum wrote.
We owe a debt to Walzer, Hitchens and Rosenbaum. Now will they make any
difference to our hyperalienated left?
Contact John Leo | Read his biography
)2002 Universal Press Syndicate




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