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Wellstone Democrats -- What we saw at the “memorial service.”
National Review ^ | 10-30-02 | Jonah Goldberg

Posted on 10/31/2002 10:14:20 AM PST by jmstein7

Republicans are mean but sober-minded; Democrats are dopey but kind. There's no need to dwell or expand on these stereotypes because everyone knows they exist. Everyone also knows that while there's certainly a kernel of truth to the stereotype, its utility in dealing with actual people in the real world isn't all that useful. After all, we've all met some achingly dumb Republicans and some astoundingly bitter and nasty Democrats. But at the national level, these stereotypes are useful for defining the broad differences between the so-called mommy and daddy parties. And, from that perspective, the Democrats on display at Paul Wellstone's memorial service represented everything I personally find distasteful, disagreeable, and downright disgusting about the Democratic party (and for similar reasons, I have no doubt that this column will represent much of what Democrats find unpleasant about conservatives).

Let's just get the obligatory, though sincere, caveat out of the way. I respected Paul Wellstone. He was by all accounts a decent person in his private life and honorable in his public one. He inspired loyalty from his colleagues and respect from his opponents. His death — and the deaths of the others in that plane crash — were certainly tragic.

Everyone, Republicans and Democrats alike, say that Wellstone's most-admirable quality was that he was a tireless worker for what he believed in. That's fine. Doggedness and determination are wonderful things when in the pursuit of the noble and good. But, it should be remembered that doggedness and determination alone aren't necessarily admirable qualities. Serial killers and murderous dictators are also dogged in their determination to see their wills done. Hitler prioritized trainloads of Jews bound for death camps ahead of needed trainloads of war materiel bound for the front in his dogged pursuit of what he considered to be right. Saddam Hussein chooses not to feed his people and risk war thanks to his willingness to stick to his convictions.

Now, it would be wrong to compare Paul Wellstone to Hitler or Hussein and I am not doing that. What I am doing is pointing out that conviction without a moral context or motor is merely a white-knuckled grip on an idea without paying heed to what you grip or why. After all, grabbing a sword by the handle is wise, grabbing it by the blade is folly, and normally we do not think the fingerless fool is as proficient as the swordsman and we do not judge the man who uses the sword for murder to be as good as the man who uses the sword to prevent it.

This distinction is not only lost on the Democrats, but they actually celebrate their ignorance of it as a defining virtue of their party. In 2000, Hillary Clinton successfully convinced voters that the campaign should be over "who is more concerned about the issues New Yorkers care about" and not about such petty issues as ideas or qualifications. In other words, the question is not over who is right or wrong, but over who has the stronger feelings. In the Democrats' world, we would choose a plumber over a surgeon to transplant our kidneys so long as the plumber "passionately believed" that your surgery should go well and the surgeon was blasé about it."

Not only is this ideological obsession with passion intellectually insipid, the Democrats lack both the imagination and the intellectual consistency to praise it in their opponents. When first elected, Paul Wellstone bragged that he "despised" Jesse Helms but also that he wanted be known as "the liberal Jesse Helms" — and the liberals loved him for it. But this aspiration was hypocritical on its face since it was Helms's tenacity as much as his ideology that liberals so detested.

Indeed, liberals consider "inflexibility" on the part of conservatives to be at the core of their evilness. When the quintessential Democratic intellectual, Anthony Lewis, retired — finally — from the New York Times he revealed his one great insight into the nature of man. In what was arguably one of the most staggeringly idiotic comments ever offered in the New York Times, Lewis said that "certainty" was "the enemy of decency and humanity in people who are sure they are right, like Osama bin Laden and John Ashcroft."

Now, like finding a steamer trunk full of inane and offensive knickknacks, one could spend all day unpacking the profane obtuseness of this assertion. But, suffice it to say, if liberals like Lewis truly believe "certainty" is the enemy of "decency and humanity" then they would have to add Wellstone — and Teddy Kennedy, Hillary Clinton, Al Gore, Martin Luther King Jr., and many other gods of the Democratic pantheon — to their list of overly "certain" monsters as well, right alongside bin Laden and John Ashcroft.

It is obviously true that Paul Wellstone fought tenaciously for what he believed in. But it is also true that if he'd been successful in everything he wanted to accomplish, this country would be inarguably the worse for it. Any politician can fight for a better world, indeed most of them think they are. Just because Wellstone was more convinced of his rightness than many of his colleagues doesn't make him a better senator and it doesn't transform his many bad ideas into good ones.

THE CLINTONCRATS I have my own theory as to why Democrats celebrate "passionate intensity," as Yeats would say, so much. Intellectually, the old liberal project is exhausted. Its arguments do not persuade, its numbers do not add up, its aims no longer seem achievable or worth the costs required. But some liberals, many of them hobbled by nostalgia, refuse to believe that this is true. They loved the romance and excitement of the New Deal or the Great Society so much, that they continue to sit in a nearly empty theater refusing to believe that the movie's over — even though the credits have rolled and the lights have come on. It's just an intermission, they insist. The second half will be even better — just you wait and see!

And because theirs is a romantic vision of "what could be," they continue to treat has-beens as movie idols — which is why it is so fitting that they replace the "new voice" of Paul Wellstone with the quavering tones of Walter Mondale, whose speeches almost sound as if they contain the pops and skips of a worn-out LP album. As we'd already seen in New Jersey, the Democratic bench is deep with old men who still fit into their uniforms but have no place on the field.

Sure, it makes sense that the Democratic mascot is a donkey, a stubborn beast that will not move toward progress, even when the progress is for its own good. But an even-better symbol would be of the doctor who gives CPR to a corpse. That is why liberals who, for example, "work tirelessly" for nationalized healthcare are such heroes, even though many liberals don't want or wouldn't use such a system if it arrived. That is why Bill Clinton was so successful with liberals when he whined, "I've been working so hard." As with his wife's supporters, his base cared less about the ideas than his concern for them.

But it should be noted that unlike Hillary, Bill Clinton was no Wellstone liberal. Bill cared about power and attention and he played on the emotions of his base to get both. Wellstone was indeed about principle and he used power and attention to advance it. That is why it made so much sense for Bill Clinton to be in the audience of that repugnant rally they called a memorial service. Like some perverse "Where's Waldo" drawing, wherever large groups of Democrats congregate, you know if you can find Bill Clinton in the picture they will behave like jackasses.

That is what was so offensive about that rally: It shamelessly used Wellstone's death for partisan advantage while its organizers cynically accused their opponents of doing precisely that. Blaming others for something awful you've done is perhaps the defining attribute of Bill Clinton and his legacy on the Democratic party. Wellstone did many good things out of principle — including work with Jesse Helms, a man he grew to befriend, on human rights in China. But he will now be invoked by Democrats everywhere simply to get out the vote, beat up Republicans, and raise millions of dollars in campaign contributions.

In short, so long as they hold onto the Senate, the Clinton Democrats — who often found Wellstone's principles inconvenient — will find him more useful dead than alive. They will rewrite the story of his life to fit any cause they choose — much as they have done with other Democratic martyrs like John and Robert Kennedy (a Cold War anti-Communist and the attorney general who personally authorized the bugging of Martin Luther King, respectively). Wellstone's distinctiveness and honesty will melt in a warm pool of mass-marketed nostalgia. And, if Republicans complain, Democrats will simply charge insensitivity and laugh all the way to the bank.

But don't mind me, I'm just being mean, like a typical Republican.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: editorial; elections; mn
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1 posted on 10/31/2002 10:14:20 AM PST by jmstein7
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To: jmstein7
Democrats are dopey but kind. ???

You forgot the "BARF ALERT"

2 posted on 10/31/2002 10:17:05 AM PST by NEWwoman
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To: jmstein7
When the quintessential Democratic intellectual, Anthony Lewis, retired — finally — from the New York Times he revealed his one great insight into the nature of man. In what was arguably one of the most staggeringly idiotic comments ever offered in the New York Times,

Geeze isn't that assertion kind of hard to quantify and qualify?

Sort of like "... was the worst decision ever made by President Carter."

3 posted on 10/31/2002 10:36:07 AM PST by WaveThatFlag
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To: jmstein7
Excellent!!!
4 posted on 10/31/2002 10:40:05 AM PST by MsLady
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To: jmstein7
In 2000, Hillary Clinton successfully convinced voters that the campaign should be over "who is more concerned about the issues New Yorkers care about" and not about such petty issues as ideas or qualifications. In other words, the question is not over who is right or wrong, but over who has the stronger feelings. In the Democrats' world, we would choose a plumber over a surgeon to transplant our kidneys so long as the plumber "passionately believed" that your surgery should go well and the surgeon was blasé about it."

I love that part.

5 posted on 10/31/2002 10:41:47 AM PST by knak
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To: jmstein7


6 posted on 10/31/2002 10:42:14 AM PST by ppaul
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To: jmstein7
AMEN and Amen...you meanie you!
7 posted on 10/31/2002 10:46:37 AM PST by D. Miles
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To: NEWwoman
You didn't read much past the opening, did you? Shame, shame, shame. The author was simply stating stereotypes.
8 posted on 10/31/2002 10:57:45 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants
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To: jmstein7
Like some perverse "Where's Waldo" drawing, wherever large groups of Democrats congregate, you know if you can find Bill Clinton in the picture they will behave like jackasses.

ROTFLMAO!!

9 posted on 10/31/2002 11:06:51 AM PST by wayoverontheright
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To: jmstein7
Good article. Unfortunately the DEM strategy works.
10 posted on 10/31/2002 11:33:36 AM PST by Lost Highway
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IN 5 DAYS, THEY'LL BE VOTING DEMOCRAT

WHAT ARE YOU DOING TODAY TO HELP TAKE BACK THE SENATE?

TakeBackCongress.org

A resource for conservatives who want a Republican majority in the Senate

11 posted on 10/31/2002 12:41:22 PM PST by ffrancone
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To: jmstein7
This is one of the finest columns Jonah has written. Even so, I think he should've ended it about five paragraphs earlier than he did. When he got to the part about the "doctor who gives CPR to a corpse" he lost touch.

Oh, well. Still a good read. Thanks for posting it.

12 posted on 10/31/2002 12:43:49 PM PST by savedbygrace
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To: Blood of Tyrants
Actually I did.

You're no mind reader.

And a "BARF ALERT" would be a nice touch.
13 posted on 10/31/2002 12:47:39 PM PST by NEWwoman
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: jmstein7
later
15 posted on 10/31/2002 1:05:08 PM PST by LiteKeeper
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To: jmstein7
No. Wellstone's cloak is only being stolen for this election. After it is over, regardless of who wins, he will not be dragged about by the dims for their next cause or candidate, merely because they ARE only about using circumstances rather than ideas, to advance their cause.
16 posted on 10/31/2002 1:44:15 PM PST by Endeavor
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To: jmstein7
Republicans are mean but sober-minded; Democrats are dopey but kind. There's no need to dwell or expand on these stereotypes because everyone knows they exist. Everyone also knows that while there's certainly a kernel of truth to the stereotype, its utility in dealing with actual people in the real world isn't all that useful.

Other that this statement this article is brilliant. This statement might draw the "barf alert" as this is the Liberal stereotype!!!

Jonah, Jonah... Has liberal friend been picking on you? If you let them define you then your cause is lost!!! Alas, such is the plight of the GOP at large.

What your article lacks is that what we saw on Tuesday is the stereotypical Liberal... Opportunistic, lazy, immoral (or non-judgemental to use their terms), and selfish. Forget this "kind" crap. We saw there "kindness" on display as they booed Lott and Ventura who made a point to come to pay their respects. Nor was it "Dopey", not with Bill Clinton in the room. This was a calculated move. Fortunately most of the country is wise to the man behind the curtain. Hence, the outrage.

I can tell you from experience as one of the few conservatives in the building I work, that liberals are not dopey. They're lazy. They care, but want someone else to do the compasionate thing, they are too busy. They are to lazy to ponder what they pay in income taxes because they never saw it in the first place so why bother. But notice how they howl then they do have to pay it when the mortgage went up because of higher property taxes? And to be non-judgemental means they might be though of being less than cool.

Jonah, you are going soft on them. These aren't Donkeys, they are hiennas (I would say jackals but hienna has a more negative tone). They run in packs to be cool, they act like bullies, and they steal form other folks labor laughing all the while.

17 posted on 10/31/2002 1:46:31 PM PST by Pharmer
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To: NEWwoman
You forgot the "BARF ALERT"

You forgot to read the article.

18 posted on 10/31/2002 1:49:35 PM PST by Republican Wildcat
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To: Republican Wildcat
Yes. We can choose to play this game: "You did not read it. Yes, I did...." Yada Yada Yada

It's really quite childish. Let's drop it and get on with life.

I won't respond to any more commnets on this subject.

Good day. ;)
19 posted on 10/31/2002 2:08:35 PM PST by NEWwoman
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To: SrBahamonde
You don't recognize a tongue in cheek statement do you?
20 posted on 10/31/2002 2:18:08 PM PST by Fledermaus
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