There actually are more like 14 lies to contend with, but this is a really  
good start.
 
The problem with the Right isn't lies, BTW, it is myths and knowledge  
deficit,
but that's a subject for another time.
BR
 
 
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Christian Post
 
 
Four Lies on the Left that Make it Tough to Change the  Culture





 
By _David French_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/david-french/) , CP 
Guest Contributor
August 26, 2013|9:57 am
And now comes my semi-regular plug for Jim Geraghty's "Morning Jolt" 
e-mail.  Sign up! As a culture/politics junky, it's easily the daily read I 
most  
anticipate. As I've said before, come for the politics, stay for the 
cultural  commentary.



 
Earlier this week, Mr. Geraghty triggered an interesting online 
conversation  when he highlighted recent culturally conservative comments from 
high-profile  celebrities like Ashton Kutcher and Bono. Kutcher now-famously 
exhort
ed  teenagers to embrace hard work and to essentially redefine "sexy" as 
something  more approaching "virtuous." Bono made the entirely accurate and 
(one 
would  wish) common sense observation that foreign aid and welfare are a 
"band-aid" for  poverty, but "free enterprise is the cure." In the great 
desert of pop culture,  these comments represented a tiny oasis, a place for 
some 
replenishment and hope  before venturing back out into the pitiless wastes. 
In the battle for culture (in which I'm an enthusiastic but talentless  
participant; I can't sing, dance, make movies, play an instrument, write a book 
 anyone will read, or model athletic wear, but I did try out for Survivor 
once!),  we've got to overcome four key lies the secular Left has sold 
successive  generations since the Baby Boom. These lies are particularly 
difficult 
to defeat  because they pull off the perfect con - convincing young people 
they can feel  virtuous without being virtuous. They can feel good while 
being  bad.



 
First, you can rebel through conformity. Did you know that our great 
centers  of artistic expression, rebellion, and learning are less ideologically 
diverse  than your typical Evangelical mega-church? It's true. Check out the 
voting  patterns of the urban centers of San Francisco, Washington, D.C., 
Boston, and  New York City (excepting Staten Island) versus the percentage of 
the Evangelical  vote that goes to Republican presidential candidates. Entire 
liberal cities are  less diverse than a religious group centered around the 
same, rather specific  theology. And as ideologically uniform as our cities 
are, they're diversity  festivals compared to our elite colleges and 
universities. Rebellious  conformity, what a great gig. 
Second, you can feel virtuous without acting virtuous. Think Republicans 
and  red-staters are less compassionate than the Left? Think again. 
Republicans give  more to charity and volunteer their time more than Democrats, 
and 
the religious  (those nasty people!) donate and volunteer most of all. For far 
too many  Americans, their virtue is in their attitude and their vote, and 
they delegate  the messy business of actually, you know, helping people to 
others. Another  great deal. 
Third, your sexual self-expression is brave. If there's one virtue that  
virtually all Americans agree upon, it's valor. We admire bravery. So what is  
bravery? Well, according to Lady Gaga, and her "Born Brave Bus Tour," it's  
basically doing whatever the heck you want, especially if it involves sex. 
I  grow especially weary of Hollywood's insistence on honoring its own 
"courage"  for making movies that "trangress boundaries" - meaning that the 
sexuality  shocks some rube in Alabama– even as they bask in each other's  
applause.



 
Fourth, you get to feel morally superior to people who exhibit actual 
virtue.  Why be better when you can simply feel better? We live in an 
upside-down 
world,  where the people who do next to nothing lord their presumed 
morality and virtue  over those who actually get out their checkbooks and get 
their 
hands dirty for  the "least of these" in our culture. Faithful Christians - 
far more despised in  pop culture than, say, the Muslim Brotherhood - prop 
up the world's largest  private relief agencies and give far more time and 
money to the poor than they  ever do to the causes they're allegedly 
"obsessed" with - like same-sex  marriage. 
Those four quite seductive lies play to our innate selfishness while  
convincing us that we're also somehow brave and selfless. The conservative  
project to reclaim culture - a far more important project than reclaiming the  
White House - has to relentlessly and creatively expose these lies while also  
demonstrating the attractiveness of true virtue. I fear we're better at the 
 former than the latter and thus succeed mainly in making people feel bad, 
not in  inspiring them to do good. 
How can we inspire? I would love to hear your  thoughts

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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