Unfortunately Jonah Goldberg, for the life of him, cannot think of anything 
 good to say
about Teddy Roosevelt and the original Progressives. This is a serious (  
major ) limitation
in his political philosophy. However, this said, the man knows how to punch 
 holes
in the insipid arguments made by all-too-many on the Left. I just wish that 
 he would
do more to offer criticisms of the Right than an occasional tip-of-the-hat  
to the effect 
that, "yes, conservatives also have their problems." Anyway, here is his  
latest blast
and it is persuasive.
 
Billy
 
 
=================================================
 
Washington Post
 
Top five cliches that liberals use to avoid real  arguments
By Jonah Goldberg
April 27, 2012
One of the great differences between conservatives and liberals is that  
conservatives will freely admit that they have an ideology. We’re kind of 
dorks  that way, squabbling over old texts like Dungeons and Dragons geeks, 
wearing  ties with pictures of Adam Smith and Edmund Burke on them. 
But mainstream liberals from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama — and the  
intellectuals and journalists who love them — often assert that they are 
simply  dispassionate slaves to the facts; they are realists, pragmatists, 
empiricists.  Liberals insist that they live right downtown in the “
reality-based community,”  and if only their Republican opponents weren’t so 
blinded by 
ideology and  stupidity, then they could work with them. 
This has been a theme of Obama’s presidency from the start. A couple of 
days  before his inauguration,_Obama proclaimed_ 
(http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-4730806-503544.html) : “What is 
required is a new declaration  of 
independence, not just in our nation, but in our own lives — from ideology  
and small thinking, prejudice and bigotry” (an odd pronouncement, given that 
 “bigoted” America had just elected its first black president). 
In _his inaugural address_ 
(http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/documents/Obama_Inaugural_Address_012009.html)
 , he explained that “the 
stale  political arguments that have consumed us for so long no longer apply. 
The  question we ask today is not whether our government is too big or too 
small, but  whether it works.” 
Whether the president who had to learn, in his own words, that there’s _“
no such thing” as shovel-ready projects _ 
(http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/10/bernstein_draft.html) — 
after blowing  billions of 
stimulus dollars on them — is truly focused on “what works” is a  subject for 
another day. But the phrase is a perfect example of the way liberals  speak in 
code when they want to make an ideological argument without conceding  that 
that is what they are doing. They hide ideological claims in rhetorical  
Trojan horses, hoping to conquer terrain unearned by real debate. 
Of course, Republicans are just as guilty as Democrats when it comes to  
reducing arguments to bumper stickers. (Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin has 
written  that “the president’s economic experiment has failed. It is time to 
get 
back to  what we know works.”) But the vast majority of Republicans, Ryan 
included, will  at least acknowledge their ideological first principles — free 
markets, limited  government, property rights. Liberals are terribly 
reluctant to do likewise.  Instead, they often speak in seemingly harmless 
cliches 
that they hope will  penetrate our mental defenses. 
Here are some of the most egregious examples:  
‘Diversity is strength’  
Affirmative action used to be defended on the grounds that  certain groups, 
particularly African Americans, are entitled to extra help  because of the 
horrible legacy of slavery and institutionalized racism. Whatever  
objections opponents may raise to that claim, it’s a legitimate moral  
argument. 
But that argument has been abandoned in recent years and replaced with a 
far  less plausible and far more ideological claim: that enforced diversity is 
a  permanent necessity. Lee Bollinger, the president of Columbia 
University,  famously declared: “Diversity is not merely a desirable addition 
to a 
well-run  education. It is as essential as the study of the Middle Ages, of 
international  politics and of Shakespeare.” 
It’s a nice thought. But consider some of the great minds of human history, 
 and it’s striking how few were educated in a diverse environment. Newton,  
Galileo and Einstein had little exposure to Asians or Africans. The genius 
of  Aristotle, Socrates and Plato cannot be easily correlated with the 
number of  non-Greeks with whom they chatted in the town square. If diversity 
is 
essential  to education, let us get to work dismantling historically black 
and women’s  colleges. When I visit campuses, it’s common to see black and 
white students  eating, studying and socializing separately. This is rounding 
out everyone’s  education? 
Similarly, we’re constantly told that communities are strengthened by  
diversity, but liberal Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam has found the 
opposite. 
 In a survey that included interviews with more than 30,000 people, Putnam  
discovered that as a community becomes more ethnically and socially varied, 
 social trust and civic engagement plummet. Perhaps forced diversity makes 
sense,  but liberals make little effort to prove it. 
‘Violence never solved anything’  
It’s a nice idea, but it’s manifestly absurd. If violence never  solved 
anything, police would not have guns or nightsticks. Obama helped solve  the 
problem of Moammar Gaddafi with violence, and FDR helped solve the problem —  
far too late — of the Holocaust and Hitler with violence. Invariably, the 
slogan  (or its close cousin “War is not the answer”) is invoked not as a 
blanket  exhortation against violence, but as a narrow injunction against the 
United  States, NATO or Republican presidents from trying to solve threats 
of violence  with violence. 
‘The living Constitution’  
It is dogma among liberals that sophisticated people understand  that the 
Constitution is a “living, breathing document.” The idea was largely  
introduced into the political bloodstream by Woodrow Wilson and his allies, who 
 
were desperate to be free of the constraints of the founders’ vision. Wilson  
explained that he preferred an evolving, “organic,” “Darwinian” 
Constitution  that empowered progressives to breathe whatever meaning they 
wished 
into it. It  is a wildly ideological view of the nature of our political 
system. 
It is also a font of unending hypocrisy. After the attacks of Sept. 11, 
2001,  conservatives argued that the country needed to adapt to a new 
asymmetrical  warfare against non-state actors who posed an existential threat. 
They 
believed  they were working within the bounds of the Constitution. But even 
if they were  stretching things, why shouldn’t that be acceptable — if our 
Constitution is  supposed to evolve with the times? 
Yet acolytes of the living Constitution immediately started quoting the  
wisdom of the founders and the sanctity of the Constitution. Apparently the  
document is alive when the Supreme Court finds novel rationalizations for  
abortion rights, but when we need to figure out how to deal with terrorists,  
suddenly nothing should pry original meaning from the Constitution’s cold, 
dead  hands. 
By the way, conservatives do not believe that the Constitution should not  
change; they just believe that it should change constitutionally — through 
the  amendment process.  
‘Social Darwinism’  
Obama this month denounced the Republican House budget as  nothing more 
than _“thinly veiled social Darwinism.” _ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/post/what-obama-meant-by-social-darwinism/2012/04/04/gIQAKlZLvS_blog
.html) Liberals have been  trotting out this Medusa’s head to petrify the 
public for generations. It does  sound scary. (After all, didn’t Hitler 
believe in something called “social  Darwinism”? Maybe he did.) But no matter 
how popular the line, these liberal  attacks have little relation to the ideas 
that the “robber barons” and such  intellectuals as Herbert Spencer — the “
father” of social Darwinism — actually  followed. 
Spencer’s sin was that he was a soaked-to-the-bone libertarian who 
championed  private charity and limited government (along with women’s suffrage 
and  
anti-imperialism). The “reform Darwinists” — namely the early-20th-century 
 Progressives — loathed such classical liberalism because they wanted to 
tinker  with the economy, and humanity itself, at the most basic level. 
More vexing for liberals: There was no intellectual movement in the United  
States called “social Darwinism” in the first place. Spencer, a 
19th-century  British philosopher, didn’t use the term and wasn’t even a 
Darwinist 
(he had a  different theory of evolution). 
Liberals misapplied the label from the outset to demonize ideas they didn’t 
 like. They’ve never stopped. 
‘Better 10 guilty men go free . . .’  
At least until _George Zimmerman _ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/george-zimmerman-to-be-charged-in-trayvon-martin-shooting-law-enforcement-off
icial-says/2012/04/11/gIQAHJ5oAT_story.html) was in the dock, this was a  
reflexive liberal refrain. The legendary English jurist William Blackstone — 
the  fons et origo of much of our common law — said, “Better that 10 guilty 
persons  escape than that one innocent suffer.” In fact, this 10 to 1 
formula has become  known as the “Blackstone ratio” or “Blackstone’s 
formulation.” 
In a brilliant study, _“n Guilty Men,”_ 
(http://www2.law.ucla.edu/volokh/guilty.htm)  legal scholar Alexander Volokh  
traced the idea that it is 
better to let a certain number of guilty men go free  — from Abraham’s argument 
with God in Genesis over the fate of Sodom, to the  writings of the Roman 
emperor Trajan, to the legal writings of Moses Maimonides,  to Geraldo Rivera. 
As a truism, it’s a laudable and correct sentiment that no reasonable 
person  can find fault with. But that’s the problem: No reasonable person 
disagrees with  it. There’s nothing wrong with saying it, but it’s not an 
argument 
— it’s an  uncontroversial declarative statement. And yet people say it as 
if it settles  arguments. It doesn’t do anything of the sort. The hard 
thinking comes when you  have to deal with the “and therefore what?” part. 
Where do we draw the lines? If  it were an absolute principle, we wouldn’t put 
anyone in prison, lest we punish  an innocent in the process. Indeed, if 
punishing the innocent is so terrible,  why 10? Why not two? Or, for that 
matter, 200? Or 2,000? 
Taken literally, the phrase is absurd. Letting 10 rapists and murderers go  
free will almost surely result in far more harm to society than putting one 
poor  innocent sap in jail. 
When you hear any of these cliches — along with “I may disagree with what 
you  say, but I would defend to the death your right to say it,” which is 
another  personal favorite — understand that the people uttering them are not 
trying to  have an argument. They’re trying to win an argument without 
having it at  all.

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