Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

A Liberal Trademark [Excellent Read]
Tech Central Station ^ | 06/03/2003 | Frederick Turner

Posted on 06/03/2003 8:17:10 AM PDT by Carolina

I have smelled the stink of fear in the most unlikely places.

In polite liberal gatherings of very nice academics, well-paid writers, journalists, even lawyers (who need fear nothing, surely) I have sensed a special kind of fear. It resembles, but is subtly different from, the unease that I dimly remember from my communist youth in the old British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, where if one said the wrong thing it might contradict the party line as it came down to us from time to time from Stalin's Moscow, together with the disguised funds that kept the office going.

It also resembles the fear I was taught to feel in Prime Minister Daniel Malan's South Africa, where as a boy I nearly got my parents arrested for saying loudly in a bus that "Malan is a bad man. He won't let the Africans have their own country." More recently I felt it visiting the PEN Club in Budapest before the fall of the Iron Curtain, where you had to watch what you said because there were still Soviet tanks in the countryside.

But what is this whiff of fear doing in the good old USA? I was at a party in the Northeast recently with the nicest people you could imagine. The conversation got on to Bush and Iraq, and at first it looked and sounded as if it was unanimously liberal. Bush was "scary," Texas was a dark and terrible place, the Iraq war was a catastrophe, it was all about oil, it boded the most terrible consequences for world peace. I started innocently asking awkward questions and citing awkward fact. At first people just tried to put me right, as if I hadn't understood. Then it looked as if the subject would be dropped; I had no desire to pursue it, preferring literary or scientific or philosophical questions anyway. I really didn't want to spoil the mood of the party, and people were beginning to look uneasy.

But then something odd happened. Somebody else started doing the same thing as I had, asking awkward questions, reminding people gently of facts they had forgotten; and then it turned out that this man's wife, who'd been silent, was quite fiercely in favor of the war and of free markets and democratic government. This couple had earlier struck me immediately as the most confident and intelligent guests present, though they were very quiet; and they were not yahoos at all, indeed they looked impressively Ivy League. The unease grew in the room. People shifted in their chairs and looked anxiously at the door.

View rest of article


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: classwars; culturewars
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-44 next last
Over the years all the real arguments for the left-liberal position, involving evidence and rational deliberation, have been exploded one by one. Thus rational discussion itself has become a sign of bad taste, of a pugnacious Appalachian kind of insensitivity, with a hint of a possible tendency to tobacco chewing, gun racks, talk radio, pickup trucks, wife-beaters and incest. There is left but one simple rule for the new upper crust: by all means prefer victims to oppressors, but always prefer oppressors to true liberators.

The class rationale for this odd paradox is complex. Karl Marx was right when he identified the phenomenon of a class having policies even when none of its members would necessarily recognize them - and the people I am talking about here are eminently nice, even good people, who would be horrified by the class motives they serve. But here it is: their class privileges are preserved by means of the continued existence and allegiance of a peon caste who will vote for the upper crust's leaders at home, and confuse and frustrate the great class enemy, the U.S. military, abroad. (If you want to "shock and awe" one of these folks, just mention that your son is in the Army. The look of horror is instantaneous, though it vanishes quickly.)

1 posted on 06/03/2003 8:17:11 AM PDT by Carolina
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Miss Marple; Ragtime Cowgirl; JohnHuang2; Jeff Head
PING!
2 posted on 06/03/2003 8:17:49 AM PDT by Carolina
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
ACCESS DENIED when I tried the link.
3 posted on 06/03/2003 8:24:00 AM PDT by Publius
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
I too, often post from TCS, great web site and great post. Thanks.
4 posted on 06/03/2003 8:30:33 AM PDT by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Publius
Hmmmm. It's working for me. Here's the article text:

TCS I have smelled the stink of fear in the most unlikely places.

In polite liberal gatherings of very nice academics, well-paid writers, journalists, even lawyers (who need fear nothing, surely) I have sensed a special kind of fear. It resembles, but is subtly different from, the unease that I dimly remember from my communist youth in the old British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, where if one said the wrong thing it might contradict the party line as it came down to us from time to time from Stalin's Moscow, together with the disguised funds that kept the office going.

It also resembles the fear I was taught to feel in Prime Minister Daniel Malan's South Africa, where as a boy I nearly got my parents arrested for saying loudly in a bus that "Malan is a bad man. He won't let the Africans have their own country." More recently I felt it visiting the PEN Club in Budapest before the fall of the Iron Curtain, where you had to watch what you said because there were still Soviet tanks in the countryside.

But what is this whiff of fear doing in the good old USA? I was at a party in the Northeast recently with the nicest people you could imagine. The conversation got on to Bush and Iraq, and at first it looked and sounded as if it was unanimously liberal. Bush was "scary," Texas was a dark and terrible place, the Iraq war was a catastrophe, it was all about oil, it boded the most terrible consequences for world peace. I started innocently asking awkward questions and citing awkward fact. At first people just tried to put me right, as if I hadn't understood. Then it looked as if the subject would be dropped; I had no desire to pursue it, preferring literary or scientific or philosophical questions anyway. I really didn't want to spoil the mood of the party, and people were beginning to look uneasy.

But then something odd happened. Somebody else started doing the same thing as I had, asking awkward questions, reminding people gently of facts they had forgotten; and then it turned out that this man's wife, who'd been silent, was quite fiercely in favor of the war and of free markets and democratic government. This couple had earlier struck me immediately as the most confident and intelligent guests present, though they were very quiet; and they were not yahoos at all, indeed they looked impressively Ivy League. The unease grew in the room. People shifted in their chairs and looked anxiously at the door.

Then another woman, who had been "going along" in order to be polite, turned out to have doubts of her own about the liberal agenda. The lovely mood of unanimity and solidarity was over. A couple of liberals slunk out into another room in order not to be contaminated. But then there was a real discussion, with fair expression of different arguable views on all sides - just as the Constitution intended.

I had two reactions. One was a sudden recognition that more and more people had been "coming out of the closet" in the way that the three people had, who had been so bold as to support George Bush. Michael Kinsey had done it in Slate. Dennis Miller had done it on Comedy Central. But their recognizable courage implies a prior risk. Why the fear in the first place? I had noticed it before, but the question needed answering. After all, these liberals at the party were people with the equivalent of tenure, living in a free country with all sorts of protection of speech - not like the communist party or totalitarian racist South Africa in the old days. What were they afraid of?

The fear, as I began to examine it, had two flavors. One was the same as the fear I had experienced in South Africa, in the communist party, in Hungary. It was fear for one's future, one's career. Even tenured faculty have lost their jobs and been disgraced because of an impolitic remark during the height of political correctness - I have known some of the hapless victims. One man, a friend whose health was poor, had been hounded, completely innocent, to his death by a whole conspiracy of gossip, secret caucuses and official administrative action. Milan Kundera, the Czech dissident writer "internally exiled" by the communist regime, would have understood the fear. The Polish writer Czeslaw Milosz describes what he calls "Ketman consciousness," the mask of enthusiastic support for the regime that ensured one's livelihood in Soviet Eastern Europe:

"Today man believes there is nothing in him, so he accepts anything, even if he knows it to be bad, in order to find himself at one with others, in order not to be alone. . . . But suppose one should try to live without Ketman, to challenge fate, to say: 'If I lose, I shall not pity myself.' Suppose one can live without outside pressure, suppose one can create one's own inner tension; then it is not true that there is nothing in man. To take this risk would be an act of faith."

Fear has become a liberal trademark. The Pulitzer Prizewinning New York Times reporter Chris Hedges used one of the favorite liberal words when, as invited speaker, having launched into a tirade against American imperialism and militarism at the commencement ceremony of Rockford College, he characterized the resultant outpouring of grief and outrage as "frightening." This word is becoming almost a trademark of liberal fear, as my friend Terry Ponick points out. "Scary" is preferred by female columnists. In the academy, "troubling," "disturbing" and "alarming" have the same atmosphere of impending reprisals about them.

But there is another flavor in the fear. I recognized it with astonishment, and once I did, it was unmistakable. It was the fear of losing one's class standing, of being "cut" by one's "set," of being labeled not quite "pukka," not quite "our sort," a loss of caste. What had happened, I realized, was something absolutely astonishing; that in some way the cultural revolution of the '60s had begun an attempt to reinstitute a class system that America had, out of its own inner nature and best genius, rejected. Rejected in the American Revolution, rejected in the Civil War, rejected in the decision to welcome immigration from Ireland and Southern and Eastern Europe and China, rejected in the Civil Rights movement. But still the urge toward the pleasures of snobbery kept reasserting itself in new forms; this time it was a snobbery of radical liberal intellectuals in the university, the school system, the press, the judiciary, and the charitable foundations, with wannabes in government, the caring professions, and even the hipper reaches of the corporate campus.

Aspiring middle-class folk adopt this snobbery in order to sound "Ivy"; Ivy people wear it like a comfortable old pair of $500 loafers; the rich, once the best educated people around, put it on in order to keep up with the better-educated professionals that define its canons.

So Eustace Tilley, the gentleman with the monocle on the cover of The New Yorker, is now the heir of Berkeley's Sproul Plaza protests, beards and beads and all. You can see the class system evolving in the movie "The Big Chill," where William Hurt, Kevin Kline, Glenn Close, Jeff Goldblum, and Meg Tilley all articulated its characteristic cool and style. Of course it has settled down since then, and has adapted to tweeds and fume blanc and Francophilia. It is an entirely unconscious snobbery, and thus it cannot be recognized and laughed at - which makes its potential loss only the more "frightening" for being a nameless terror, a shapeless menace. Déclassé - what fate could be more terrible, especially if one has no vocabulary to recognize it as such and to construct a rational defense against its threat? This is why they slink away from real debate, to rejoin the company of the "like-minded."

Over the years all the real arguments for the left-liberal position, involving evidence and rational deliberation, have been exploded one by one. Thus rational discussion itself has become a sign of bad taste, of a pugnacious Appalachian kind of insensitivity, with a hint of a possible tendency to tobacco chewing, gun racks, talk radio, pickup trucks, wife-beaters and incest. There is left but one simple rule for the new upper crust: by all means prefer victims to oppressors, but always prefer oppressors to true liberators.

The class rationale for this odd paradox is complex. Karl Marx was right when he identified the phenomenon of a class having policies even when none of its members would necessarily recognize them - and the people I am talking about here are eminently nice, even good people, who would be horrified by the class motives they serve. But here it is: their class privileges are preserved by means of the continued existence and allegiance of a peon caste who will vote for the upper crust's leaders at home, and confuse and frustrate the great class enemy, the U.S. military, abroad. (If you want to "shock and awe" one of these folks, just mention that your son is in the Army. The look of horror is instantaneous, though it vanishes quickly.)

True liberators, as we can now see, would deprive the world of victims, and thus dry up the supply of peons that constitute the new class's constituency. This is why, even though the new class disliked Saddam Hussein, they hate Bush infinitely more. Just as Palestinian refugee camps justify the failures and secure the tenure of Arab despots, so the poor and downtrodden of the world justify the ascendancy of the new upper crust. At home, school vouchers are opposed in the teeth of the urban poor that want them, because decent education might help put an end to the urban poor who vote for upper crust leaders. The same goes for the inclusion of privatization in the Social Security portfolio, and any form of tax relief that might result in turning the majority of Americans into owners, and into people too proud to consider themselves victims. And without victims, where would Lady Bountiful be then?

If one has had the privileges - or aspires to them - of a "liberal" education in the post-1960s academy, the privileges of "set" and caste, one subconsciously doubts whether one's own talents would sustain one if one were cast out. One's unexamined intellectual premises have an unsound feel to them, so that one doesn't want to "go there." It's not what you know, but who you know, so the greatest terror is to be shunned by the in-group. And this is where the fear comes from.

In this light it seems rather amazing that, as I and others have begun to notice, so many people are coming out of the closet and daring to ask why the emperor is wearing no clothes. Has the courageous spirit of our young men and women warriors started to revitalize the intellectual kidney of the home country? What is going on here?

5 posted on 06/03/2003 8:32:41 AM PDT by Carolina
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
...I was at a party in the Northeast recently with the nicest people you could imagine...

Now which is it? Were they nice people or were they Northeast liberals?
6 posted on 06/03/2003 8:33:54 AM PDT by the gillman@blacklagoon.com
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: the gillman@blacklagoon.com
Now which is it? Were they nice people or were they Northeast liberals?

I'm sure they're nice when talking about noblesse oblige and all.

7 posted on 06/03/2003 8:36:19 AM PDT by Carolina
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
. But still the urge toward the pleasures of snobbery kept reasserting itself in new forms; this time it was a snobbery of radical liberal intellectuals in the university, the school system, the press, the judiciary, and the charitable foundations, with wannabes in government, the caring professions, and even the hipper reaches of the corporate campus.

This snobbery has a high calibration of double standards, hypocrisy and emotional retardation. This coupled with an invested media of snobs makes for virtual propaganda printed and spewed out every day.

But (as the article indicates) people are finding the facts and seeing the light of truth. Let the erosion of the snobs begin.

8 posted on 06/03/2003 8:39:27 AM PDT by w_over_w (I'll still luv ya if yer covered in mud . . . just like I luv muh pick up truk!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: JonathansMommie; BlindedByTruth
You young adults are the only ones who can truly change this shame of our society. Keep up the good conservative work!!!
9 posted on 06/03/2003 8:42:39 AM PDT by netmilsmom (God Bless our President, those with him & our troops)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
What an excellent article! Thank you so much for pinging me!

It is interesting that at the end of the article he thinks that perhaps the crack in the left's united front has been caused by the example of the American military. Seeing this war on television the way that we did has to be making some people re-examine their preconceptions about the military, and thus about a lot of other things as well.

10 posted on 06/03/2003 8:46:36 AM PDT by Miss Marple
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
Great read! Having spent time visiting my family in Czechoslovakia under the communists, I can relate to the comparison with those conditions. There certainly is a parallel to the "go-along" attitude that the oppressed people adopted to a greater or lesser degree. Some just kept quiet to survive, while others actively engaged in supporting the regime and truly thrived. Political correctness and its tyranny of thought are less threatening than a totalitarian regime, but they are reminiscent of some aspects of it.
11 posted on 06/03/2003 8:49:07 AM PDT by Think free or die
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
Enjoying the liberation of being part of the unsilenced majority.
12 posted on 06/03/2003 9:00:36 AM PDT by HEY4QDEMS
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
good catch! the article includes:

"frightening." This word is becoming almost a trademark of liberal fear, as my friend Terry Ponick points out. "Scary" is preferred by female columnists. In the academy, "troubling," "disturbing" and "alarming" have the same atmosphere of impending reprisals about them.

Added to "deeply saddened", these represent the scope of liberal emotions these days. I repeat: liberals' sour world view has decimated their sense of humor.

The writer is dead-on about the paucity of intelligent discourse among the Left. I cannot get my liberal friends to calmly discuss politics, it quickly degenerates into Bush bashing and emotion.
13 posted on 06/03/2003 9:05:51 AM PDT by moodyskeptic
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
Thanks.
14 posted on 06/03/2003 9:25:28 AM PDT by Mad_Tom_Rackham
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
And without victims, where would Lady Bountiful be then?

This is really a well written piece. He goes straight to the heart of the matter.

What are liberals without victims? Most of us here have believed for years that the Democrats don't want to solve the problems of the poor and repressed. That would destroy their voting constituency. Instead, they are better served by a permanent underclass which looks to them for help and comfort.

It is a great deal for both sides: The liberals get their votes, the social safety net becomes a hammock for the permanent underclass.

15 posted on 06/03/2003 9:26:07 AM PDT by Senator_Blutarski
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: moodyskeptic
In the 'scary' category, add "chill" and 'a chilling effect' ;
the vocabulary of the left is so trite and predictable.
16 posted on 06/03/2003 9:30:48 AM PDT by janis
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: moodyskeptic
My Liberal Friends have a problem...an inability to admit that Bill Clinton has destroyed their party. They can't do this, because to do so would be to admit that they have supported an immoral man, because they themselves have acted without morals.

Time was, the Democratic party's proposed reason for being was to "protect the little guy." They were the party of unions in an age when the boss man in the coal mines would kill you for organizing, and when that boss man held entire towns hostage in the grip of low wages and the "Company Store." It was the era of "robber barons" and the Trusts, of corrupt government and Boss Tweed.

But time passed, and the Democratic ideal engineered many of these problems away, with the aid of real common men. And as many problems dropped away, it became clear that the Power that the party sought could disappear as well...if there were no more victims. We had OSHA, we had a minimum wage, we had raft upon raft of entitlements. The Age of Unions had past...but the Unions, like the Democratic Party, remain, held up by the money and the power.

I ask my Liberal Friends, "your party was started to protect the little guy from the abuse of power, and yet, you support an impeached, womanizing, sexist, accused rapist party-boy, who has lied under the law to judges, who has been disciplined by the courts, who has had his law license revoked, who has lied to his wife, who has lied to his child, who has groped women in the workplace, who has pulled business strings to get huge speaking fees that pay off his millions of dollars of lawyer fees when everyone he has ever touched had to pay their own legal fees for what he did to them. How does this, exactly, square with a supposed central core of trying to protect the little guy from the misuse of power? Your leader, and he is still your leader, is a rich, privileged white guy who abuses women and who only has use for minorities when he needs the votes. How is he in any way different from a Wall Street banker of the last Century, with his feet up on the desk and his secretary in his lap, one hand in the till and one up her dress?"

And you know, the general response is "Well, the Republicans made him do it!"

We are in the Last Days...of the Democratic Party. Just like an alcoholic can't recover until he has admitted there is a problem, these poor fools are doomed, because they will never admit that Bill Clinton, and their support of him, has destroyed whatever limited credibility their party had retained. Any noise they make here on out is merely the death rattle of a corpse. Will the last Democrat please contact us in a year's time so that we may assign a detail to throw your party on the "Dustbin of History" next to Communism, Fascism, and all the other failed ideologies that my Party has destroyed.

17 posted on 06/03/2003 9:37:20 AM PDT by 50sDad (OK, I'm a GEEK!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Think free or die
"Political correctness and its tyranny of thought are less threatening than a totalitarian regime, but they are reminiscent of some aspects of it."

That's probably true, but the people responsible for it will impose totalitarianism on us, given the chance.

18 posted on 06/03/2003 9:38:51 AM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
He is SO ABSOLUTELY correct in identifying a key factor in the Leftists of academia and the "upper classes", which is that it is a set of common beliefs that permit them to feel they are "a cut above" the common ruck and herd. This is a very critical point. The fact that their beliefs do not correlate to reality will eventually cause the Leftist belief structure to collapse, but not until these people die off.

They cannot afford to admit they are wrong and change their minds, because it is the belief structure itself that permits them to feel they are better than those ignorant and oh so common conservatives. It props up their egos - they fundamentally believe that they are better than, and superior to, those who believe differently than them. To change their minds would cause them to realize that they are not better, and in fact they are ignorant and foolish.

Therefore, they will never engage in rational debate. They will go to their graves believing that they are right and we are wrong -- don't confuse them with the facts, their minds are made up.

19 posted on 06/03/2003 9:41:29 AM PDT by dark_lord (The Statue of Liberty now holds a baseball bat and she's yelling 'You want a piece of me?')
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Carolina
Great post and a new news source, too. Thanks, Carolina!

"The Internet is a frightful danger to all of us.'' - Walter Cronkite

Liberty cannot be preserved
without a general knowledge among the people...
      The preservation of the means of knowledge among the lowest ranks
is of more importance to the public than all the property of all the rich
men in the country.
      There is but one element of government, and that is THE PEOPLE.
From this element spring all governments. "For a nation to be free,
it is only necessary that she wills it." For a nation to be a slave, it is only
necessary that she wills it.
                                                                                                        John Adams

***Operation Infinite Freedom - Situation Room - 3 JUN 03/Day 76 - LIVE THREAD***

20 posted on 06/03/2003 10:07:02 AM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl ("Our men and women in uniform have won for us every hour that we live in freedom." - Pres. Bush)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-44 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson