Posted on 11/27/2014 6:51:02 AM PST by logi_cal869
THE OPEN MIND Host: Richard D. Heffner Guest: William Safire Title: William Safire on the Book of Job in Todays Politics VTR: 10/9/92
Im Richard Heffner, your host on THE OPEN MIND, where only very rarely indeed too rarely, as far as those of our viewers who want me to draw blood are concerned only occasionally do I play at what Ross Perot has called Gotcha journalism. But when I do, or at least try to, its usually in the guise of oh so innocently of course asking a guest about this or her most fervently stated point of debate. But where is it written?
Well, I cant use that device today at least not very effectively. For my guest almost always does know where it is written, what it may be. And surely thats true today, as journalist, historian, polemicist, expert on people, words and politics, New York Times Pulitzer Prize winning syndicated columnist William Safire joins me to discuss his intriguing new Random House volume: The First Dissident: The Book of Job in Todays Politics.
Now you know, I tend to make lots of notes when I read seriously, and early on with Mr. Safires The First Dissident: The Book of Job in Todays Politics I scribbled to myself, trouble with this book is that you have to read it to understand it despite the clarity of its title. Indeed, even after reading it through, I need my guests further help sort of as a pony I can trust: Safire on Safire. I refer to his conclusion, on page 225: Mr. Safire writes, I started my journey into this book with doubt in my faith, and have come out with faith in my doubt. Then he writes, parenthetically, of course, thats one of those turnaround sentences, an old speech writers trick to pull profundity out of a hat, but in this case, it has the added advantage of compressing a mawkish personal chapter into a line. So, Bill Safire, I, I want to ask about that mawkish chapter.
Safire: The full mawkish chapter?
Heffner: Absolutely.
Safire: (Laughter) No. The great thing about the Book of Job is that its not what most people have come to think. Its, its a rebels book. And most people think of Job in the line, the patience of Job. Well, Job was not a patient man. What happened to Job shall I tell the story of Job ?
Heffner: Please.
Safire: and quickly so then we can go from there god was looking down on Earth and observing the perfect man pious, upright, lived a good life, powerful man, major chieftain. And he says to the Satan, observe my servant Job how terrific he is, good. And the Satan says, Well no wonder hes rich and powerful and happy. No wonder hes pious. Does Job fear God for naught? Is he doing this for nothing? Hes, hes getting something from it. And God, in order to prove that the worship of man was not for material things, said, Okay, you test him. And then that portion of Job ends. And the poetry begins where Job is tested, and hes afflicted. Out of the clear blue sky with these terrible misfortunes all his children are killed, his, his property is taken away, and hes afflicted with terrible boils and hes sitting there on a dung heap, then contrary to the popular belief, he doesnt just sit there piously and say, well, this is the way the world is, and Ill, Ill stay resigned. On the contrary, he says, damn the day that I was born, and hes furious.
Heffner: Real blasphemy.
Safire: Absolutely. Irreverent to the point of, of, of blasphemy. Because when he says, damn the day that I was born, let there be darkness, thats his way of saying in Genesis where they said Let there be light, he was challenging Gods justice. And essentially he said, God is mismanaging the morality of the world because, as the reader knows, hes a good man he didnt do anything wrong, and hes being treated unjustly. And so, instead of just taking it on the chin, he challenges God and essentially says, Im being treated unjustly, theres no reason for this. And his friends come and sit there to commiserate with him, and they say, Look, you must have sinned because you wouldnt be suffering otherwise. And he said, No, I havent sinned. And Im suffering for no reason. Now, what was the poet who was writing this getting at? I think he was getting at reality. Here in the first five books of the Bible, Deuteronomy particularly, you learn about retribution. You do good and God will take care of you, and you do bad and youll be punished. But thats not the way the world always works. I mean the good die young, the wicked prosper theres something wrong. And there must have been a crisis in the faith back 500 years B.C. because people were beginning to say, Hey, this isnt the way the world really is. So the poet who wrote Job, came up with this idea that the real world there wasnt morality enforced by God, and that it was for us to work it out. And we couldnt lean on God and expect him to give us perfect order. Now this was kind of blasphemous. And I think that the end of the Book of Job, in order to get it into the Bible, to get into the canon, he had to tack on a Hollywood ending. He had to say, Okay, at the end God lectures Job and Job submits and then he gives him back his family, his money, everything. Which does not really make the point of the book. The point of the book is that its okay to object to misjustice, and its okay to assert yourself against even the highest authority if the highest authority is wrong.
Heffner: Now, wait a minute. Why is it okay if it if you dont refer back to the fact that ultimately job ends up with his camels, with another family, back in the position of prosperity? Whats the definition of okay, when Safire says its okay? What do you mean/ where do you derive this from except your own enthusiasm for being a dissident?
Safire: There is that enthusiasm.
Heffner: Yes.
Safire: And I dont pretend to be a biblical scholar. I just know this one book pretty well. But, in all the reading about Job, and it is probably well, its certainly one of the most written about books of the Bible because it bothers so many theologians. And all my reading about it, most scholars think that there was a book of poetry inserted between two an old legend that there had originally been an old legend about a Job who was not Jewish, who lived in what is now Iraq, and the story that we remember, The patience of Job, was that fairy tale. And that the, the poet who was writing this somewhat iconoclastic realistic book took that legend, split it apart and put his story in the middle. So that he was not he used that as a cover, really, for his rebelliousness and for his kind of irreverent point of view.
Heffner: You dont embrace the notion of the patience of Job?
Safire: Just the opposite. I think that was a cover up.
Heffner: No, no, I dont mean in terms of exegesis I dont mean in terms of a scholarship, I mean in terms of personality, I mean in terms of the here and now. As something that, an idea that you have embraced for your own personal reasons. I dont think you write this book of Job i you say so, you dont write about Job as an exercise in Biblical scholarship .
Safire: Yes.
Heffner: but what, what informs your tremendous interest in this interpretation of Job?
Safire: Well, it, its something that goes back to when I was a kid, back at Syracuse University, where I was a drop-out. And I read Moby Dick and I noticed in Moby Dick Captain Ahab challenging God, and he was kind of the well, he wasnt the hero, he was the protagonist of that book. And throughout the history of literature, you have these characters who stand up and fight authority. And in my world, in politics, you have these characters, whether theyre Gandhi or Vaclav Havel recently, or Sharansky, or any of the refuseniks who stood up to authority and asserted their conscience against the whole world. That is not only courage, I think its what the best thing in the human condition. And I kind of like that, and Jobans are usually attacked as nuts, as Ahab was a monomaniac. And they shake up the status quo, and they assault the, the comfortable authority, and theyre alone.
Heffner: So this is the key to Finnegans Wake? This is the key to understanding Safires columns in the New York Times?
Safire: I broke my head over Finnegans Wake, and Im sorry I, I never got it. But, and there may be a big of Joban philosophy in it. Thats for you to work on. But what was your question?
Heffner: whether this isnt the key to Safire? When you read Safires column
Safire: Yes.
Heffner: you have a key to it, and that is your interpretation of the Book of Job, which as you point out, isnt everyones interpretation.
Safire: Right. I, I dont identify myself as a an establishment pundit. Im a part of the establishment, lets face it. I work in Washington and I rub elbows with all the powers that be, and occasionally zap them, and occasionally use them as a source I, I know how to work in politics. But once in a while, I let some moral outrage show.
Heffner: Wait a minute, what do you mean moral outrage? youre I better to say, what do you mean by once in a while because we spoke here 15 years ago at this table, and I remember then saying, in terms of what you had written about Watergate, in terms of your novel, in terms of your history, that moral outrage is, of course, the, the centerpiece in what Safire does. No?
Safire: Well, you were right, you pointed out the fact that I worked for Nixon, and i you forgot to add that I wrote speeches for Agnew, The Nattering Nabobs of Negativism.
Heffner: You try you know I looked back at our transcript of that first program together in 1977, and you kept pushing me away when I talked about what you had done with Agnew. You, you indicated that ah, that was Pat Buchanan until we got to the Nattering (or Nattering) nabobs, and then, of course, you had to hold on to it. Authority
Safire: No, no, let me but
Heffner: Alright, go ahead you want to
Safire: let me answer the question you asked.
Heffner: Go ahead.
Safire: So here am I, coming out of this practical and not necessarily highly moral world, but it takes one to know one I lived through it, I can tell the clank of falsity in a government statement, because I used to write them. And that was that part of my life, I didnt get tainted because I wasnt particularly trusted
Heffner: In the White House?
Safire: Yeah. And they tapped my phone, and all I found out later. But you come out of an experience like that, and you begin saying What was the essential lesson of Watergate?. It was the abuse of power, and we mustnt let any center of power dominate our lives. And particularly not the White House. So, here I am a member of the media establishment not reveling in the power of the establishment, but trying to use the power that I have in it as a countervailing force to the power of government. Government operates largely secretly. Which is wrong. The amount of secrecy in government is totally unnecessary. There are some national secrets like how to build a hydrogen bomb we ought to keep, but most of the other secrets are embarrassments. And its my job, and the job of the press to create a tension that will strike a balance, and, and unfold more. Now when the head of the Criminal Division of the United States Department of Justice picks up the phone to call somebody he sends a chill across that line into whoever he speaks to because he can indict you. And the wonderful thing about our system is when he picks up the phone and Im calling or somebody like me, he feels the child. And there should be somebody, some countervailing force reminding people in power that their power is not all powerful.
Heffner: Now, wait a minute youre in power
Safire: Right.
Heffner: you have an enormous amount of power. As you say, when you call the Attorney General, or the Assistant Attorney General, theres some quaking there, too, cause they dont know whats going to appear in Safires column
Safire: Right.
Heffner: whats the countervailing power, authority where does dissidence enter the picture in terms of the power of the press?
Safire: Fortunately the press has a lot of internal critics. I mean were sniping at each other all the time. I got a call from some news magazine this morning saying Were doing something on the liberal bias in the media. Do you think there is one?.
Heffner: What was your answer by the way?
Safire: I havent returned the call. Because I had to come here and I got caught in traffic. But, what would my answer be?
Heffner: Please.
Safire: Gee, if theres a liberal bias in the media, why has there been, for the last generation a Conservative domination of the White House?
Heffner: You think thats a very good answer?
Safire: Thats a good, quick answer. Yeah. What do you want a long
Heffner: A, a slower, slower more thoughtful one.
Safire: Ummm, most literate people tend to be more liberal. I should have used that in the past tense, tended to be. Then in the late 70s, or early 80s, there was a wonderful conservative ferment intellectual ferment saying that were going to have to come up with something new a new approach to government. And, all the think tanks, and you could read all the stuff in all these little magazines excitement this was before Reagan really came in. and that, that has percolated through, and so no there is not a pervasive Liberal domination of the media. Most reporters are Democrats, most publishers are Republicans.
Heffner: Just as in the old days.
Safire: Yeah. Bu the, the bubbling, the intellectual excitement in the Conservative Movement has cooled. And
Heffner: In the Conservative Movement?
Safire: Yeah, yeah. And, and I havent seen it been replaced by Neo-Liberal thinking. Theyre not I, I think most Liberals now want to get back in.
Heffner: How do you account for that cooling of the bubble?
Safire: Could be time
Heffner: The Conservative bubble.
Safire: yeah, it could be time it could be power. If youre in for 10 or 15 years, you begin to lose your zing, and then you begin to think about how important being in is, and you also learn how tough it is to try to cope with some of these huge problems. Bu, the, the sense of excitement and certainty that we could fix things that we had in the late 70s, and early 80s has gone. And now were looking now that the cement of the glue of anti-Communism is taken away from the Conservative Movement, we have to find ourselves again.
Heffner: When you went to the New York Times in the 70s, when you went from the White House essentially to the, to the Times you were going to be the House Conservative. Fair?
Safire: Yes.
Heffner: Okay. How could you fairly characterize yourself now?
Safire: Well Im a Im a Libertarian Conservative, and always was. A Libertarian Conservative believes that the government should get out of peoples personal lives, and peoples economics and not re-distribute income and not spy on people, and not dominate them domestically. And, in terms of foreign affairs, should carry the spirit of freedom and the principle of human rights that weve developed so well here, around the world. And thats Libertarian Conservatism. Its a minority of the Conservative Movement, which is mainly traditional Conservatism, which suggests that morality is something that government has a part in to undergird the public morale. Now we saw that in the Houston Convention, the difference of opinion the party was dominated by, I think, extreme elements that insisted that morality should be legislated.
Heffner: When you say the party was dominated you dont mean it in the past tense, do you? Or, youre not referring to the party that took place in Houston, youre referring to the Republican Party, I gather.
Safire: Ah, I dont think that in fact Im certain that a rigidly moralistic view is held by the majority of Republicans. I think the majority of Republicans are reasonable Right, rather than self-righteous Right. Or Far Right. The Religious Right has a right to its view, has a right to assert its view, and quite frankly whipped the tails of the rest of the Party in primaries and in, in getting active and electing delegates and, and taking over that Convention. Thats politics. They played it fair. And I think the rest of the partys got to wake up to the fact that in the Convention of 1996 were going to have to put together a, a platform and a party that would appeal to the whole country.
Heffner: We are going to have to put together
Safire: Im a Republican.
Heffner: You intend to stay where you are?
Safire: As a Republican?
Heffner: Yes.
Safire: Yeah, Im happy in the Republican Party.
Heffner: But when I read the Times, and I read Safire in the Times, I dont have the feeling that Safire is happy with his Party or at least his Presidency.
Safire: Oh, quite the contrary. I felt that Iraq-gate was a scandal three years ago
Heffner: Yeah.
Safire: And I saw those same characteristics of Watergate that I ignored then, 20 years ago well, I cant ignore now, which is abuse of power and then cover-up and trying to keep it away from being exposed. And so I inveighed against it. And the fact that theyre Republicans that doesnt enter my mind. Im a good Republican, and I think a good Conservative, and I think we have to purify our own.
Heffner: How serious are you I know youre always serious, but
Safire: I kid around a little bit
Heffner: Okay. Were you kidding around a little just the other day in your column on Bush on Iraq-gate at the very end, The Iraq-gate cover-up is unraveling. In trying to conceal a blunder, real crimes have been committed. Now that means Watergate, and that means investigations
Safire: Right.
Heffner: and that means indictments.
Safire: Right. Thats I think that has been a, an obstruction of justice, and I think there should be a special prosecutor appointed as Congress has requested, and, for the first time since the special prosecutors law went into effect, the Department of Justice, the Attorney General said, No. Because he does not want an outsider coming in and investigating what I charge are potential obstructions of justice law-breaking. Now I may be right, I may be wrong. But I think there should be a special prosecutor and I think if there is one, well see some indictments.
Heffner: When you appeared on Meet the Press just the other day I mean we usually do these programs in a way they can be seen forever, and yours, of course
Safire: Good good
Heffner: will be but this one will be seen soon after we do it. You seem to be indicating that this question of Iraq-gate, as you call it, may come to plague the next Administration, if the next Administration as Watergate did the Nixon Administration Nixon won, won big and then was out of office.
Safire: Right. I think this should Bush win I think this will be the albatross around his neck.
Heffner: Albatross was the word you used on Meet the Press and I wondered whether
Safire: Yeah, you get a good metaphor, you stick with it.
Heffner: (Laughter) I wondered whether it meant to you that this country cant afford to be albatrossed if I may. I maynt, I know, but
Safire: Well, thats alright you can use a noun for a verb.
Heffner: What do you think? That we cant afford that?
Safire: Of course, we can afford it, were a strong country. And when power is abused, the people rise up and say, You cant do that.
Heffner: I didnt mean, can we afford it will we survive I mean can we afford it the way Watergate damaged us?
Safire: I dont think Watergate damaged us at all.
Heffner: You dont?
Safire: I think Watergate ultimately turned out to be a very useful exercise in democracy. I think we were headed down the wrong path, started with Roosevelt and carried on by Johnson and Kennedy invasion of privacy and snooping and wire-tapping and eaves-dropping illegally
Heffner: Believe it or not, Im getting a sign that says CUT cut if you will stay where you are
Safire: Alright.
Heffner: well cut ill say good-bye to you, thank the audience, and then well start another program. Okay?
Safire: Im with you.
Heffner: Thanks so much for staying with me today, William Safire. And thanks, too, to you in the audience. I hope youll join us again next time. And if you care to share your thoughts about todays program, please write to THE OPEN MIND, P.O. Box 7977, FDR Station, New York, NY 10150. For transcripts send $2.00 in check or money order. Meanwhile, as another old friend used to say, Good night and good luck.
http://www.thirteen.org/openmind/history/the-first-dissident-part-ii/1223/
Chapters 38-41 should be required reading for “man generated climate change” enthusiasts...leaves no doubt as to who holds the reins!
I never suspected Safire held radical views until I read this.
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