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Victor Davis Hanson: The Look Back – Why are we split over the war since 9-11?
VDH ^ | June 17, 2004 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 06/17/2004 1:54:49 PM PDT by quidnunc

Two views are emerging about our post-September-11 world. One is angry, but also therapeutic — and most often embraced by the Left. I think it goes roughly like this. Removing the Taliban in our initial rage might have for a moment seemed necessary, but things now in retrospect have proved not much better than before in Afghanistan and might well get worse. There was no need for the Iraqi campaign. Thus the Europeans and moderate Arabs were right that chaos would result and terrorists multiply in its bitter aftermath. Sharon has only antagonized the Palestinians, set back the peace-process, and made America’s war far more difficult. Mr. Bush’s unilateral rhetoric and vainglorious posture have needlessly offended the Europeans, who now have recently developed a real dislike of the United States and likewise complicated our task.

Here at home the Patriot Act and certain dangerous new jurisprudence are greater concerns than any prior inability of rounding up sleeper cells. No wonder almost every day an Al Gore, Howard Dean, or Ted Kennedy is screaming or yelling about something. It doesn’t feel good to have so much money, education, and sophistication and still not be able to stop this dangerous course of events — that are the “worst ever,” “unprecedented,” and “a new low” in American history.

The other interpretation is somewhat tragic, largely upbeat about our recent accomplishments, and held by those on the more conservative side. Given the bleak options after the destruction of the World Trade Center, the prior murderous history of Afghanistan, and the depressing landscape of the Middle East, the past three years are nothing short of miraculous: Taliban gone; constitutional government emerging; and a good man like Karzai trying to end fundamentalist terror. Saddam, his sons, and Iraqi genocide are now over with. And despite the daily turmoil, Iraq is likewise inching toward some type of consensual government in less time than was true of a more sophisticated postwar Japan or Germany. There is a good chance that the Israelis will leave Gaza; suicide bombing is vastly reduced; a new fence will give both sides a breather until — and if — a legitimate Palestine government emerges to negotiate final borders.

As far as our “allies” go, Mr. Bush simply tore off the scab of the preexisting wound of Europe-American relations, in which the subsidized protection offered by the United States in the post-Cold War had far earlier led to an array of conflicting passions on the continent, arising out of an increasingly anti-democratic EU, envy, dependency, and resentment. In America proper — without much erosion of our daily ease and freedoms — we have rounded up scores of terrorists and thus so far avoided another mass murder. Consequently, conservatives are more likely to speak in calm tones than either scream for resignations or in wild-eyed fashion cite conspiracies that are destroying America.

How to adjudicate these two conflicting views of the present situation? We cannot. Why so?

-snip-

(Excerpt) Read more at victorhanson.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: anotherstupideqcerpt; september12era; vdh; victordavishanson
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1 posted on 06/17/2004 1:54:50 PM PDT by quidnunc
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To: Tolik

FYI


2 posted on 06/17/2004 1:56:17 PM PDT by quidnunc (Omnis Gaul delenda est)
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To: quidnunc

bump...


3 posted on 06/17/2004 1:58:15 PM PDT by danneskjold ("Somebody is behind this..." - George Soros)
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To: quidnunc

Boy do I like this guy! Such dedication!


4 posted on 06/17/2004 2:18:41 PM PDT by gilliam
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To: quidnunc

bump


5 posted on 06/17/2004 2:24:12 PM PDT by M1Tanker (Proven Daily: Modern "progressive" liberalism is just NAZIism without the "twisted cross")
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To: quidnunc

VICTOR!!!!!!...Man I love this guy...Thanks for the post


6 posted on 06/17/2004 3:27:32 PM PDT by jnarcus
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To: quidnunc
How to adjudicate these two conflicting views of the present situation? We cannot. Why so?

VDH describes these two conflicting views as "Gloomy, frustrated utopians and oddly upbeat optimistic pragmatists . . ." Liberals are the former, conservatives the latter.

I agree with him that these two views cannot be reconciled easily. We're just going to have to duke it out between now and November.

However, being the oddly upbeat optimistic pragmatists that we are, I think the majority of voters will want to be on our side. Clearly, it's the best choice.

7 posted on 06/17/2004 3:31:53 PM PDT by Vision Thing (Democrats and the mainstream press are the Hussein Clown Posse)
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To: Vision Thing
We're just going to have to duke it out between now and November.

 


8 posted on 06/17/2004 5:36:52 PM PDT by Max Combined
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To: quidnunc; seamole; Lando Lincoln; .cnI redruM; yonif; SJackson; dennisw; monkeyshine; Alouette; ...


    Victor Davis Hanson Ping ! 
9 posted on 06/18/2004 4:52:50 AM PDT by Tolik
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To: quidnunc

When some of us see suicide bombers we do not surmise that we are up against a new unstoppable phenomenon arising out of poverty, oppression, and American exploitation, but think back to what Kitchener did with the Mahdists and our own grandfathers with the Kamikazes. When we conjure up Afghanistan and Iraq, we factor in thousands of miles in distance, 30 years of mass murder, the nature of the Middle East, and thus can easily imagine much worse might have occurred than what has transpired. We don’t conclude that 9-11 was an accident or something caused by an overweening US, but inevitable given our appeasement of a past quarter century.

Which view do most Americans embrace—the tragic or therapeutic vision? Probably neither. Instead the majority just wishes things to go well and usually sides with those who can offer them the most reassurance in the present danger. Still, this should be an interesting election, the most ideologically clear-cut choice of candidates that we have seen since 1932 or 1968. Gloomy, frustrated utopians and oddly upbeat optimistic pragmatists will each offer the American public widely different views of Iraq—and therein of ourselves as well.

There's big difference between utopian thought and optimism. It's odd and fun to see the big hearted role served by Bush and the Republicans.


10 posted on 06/18/2004 5:36:08 AM PDT by playball0
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To: Vision Thing
In the end, voters usually pick optimists.

Who among us likes to be constantly flogged with their shortcomings and mistakes?

11 posted on 06/18/2004 5:39:34 AM PDT by metesky (You will be diverse, just like us.)
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To: Tolik
Read this yesterday, can't remember where.

A simplistic reading of your "tragic" versus "therapeutic" views could be read (and I suspect will probably often be read) as "classical-Judeo-Christian" on the one hand and "Enlightenment-modern liberalism" on the other hand. This reading is plausible based on the traditional view of the Enlightenment as holding some sort of 'idea of progress' as inevitable, human nature as perfectible, and a Rousseauean view of the state of nature. This contrasts, of course, with what I understand to be classical views of human nature (e.g. stoicism) and, of course, the traditional Judeo-Christian Biblical view that man is inherently sinful (since the Fall unless one is a supralapsarian), and human nature corrupt and fixed.

Where the difficulty comes in is that while the original notions of American exceptionalism come from the original Calvinist settlers in New England, by the time of the revolution and the founding of the republic, the vast majority of the founders were not religious in that original sense, but men of their time, conversant with the ideas of the Enlightenment and couching their views of a republic and American exceptionalism in terms of a devotion to liberty that is inconsistent with traditional Christian, and certainly strict Protestant interpretations of sin and human nature. And, certainly, the greatest proponents of American exceptionalism in the 19th century came not from the religious right, as it were, but from the more liberal Protestants. It was religion in Europe, as well as secular tyranny, that was seen as the problem confronting the spread of liberty. American exceptionalism was manifested in a unique combination of an enlightened liberty that encouraged science and commerce and accepted a role for religion. Remember, in the 18th and 19th centuries, only a small portion of the American population, especially in frontier areas, was "churched".

How to understand this? The distinction you do not make, I think, is between the English-Scottish Enlightenment tradition (taken in a very broad sense as to include both Hobbes and Locke as well as the more traditional Enlightenment figures such as Hume, Dugald Stewart and Adam Smith, and possibly to include Kant who coined the term 'enlightenment') and the Continental, primarily French, Enlightenment which gave us Rousseau as well as Voltaire, Diderot, Bayle, Pascal, deMandeville, etc.

The Anglo-Scottish Enlightenment is notable for never having never entirely abandoned the less than sanguine view of human nature so well described by Hobbes, and the English and Scottish thinkers never seemed to subscribe to the more extreme forms of the idea of progress current on the continent. At most, in them you see hope that reason can be employed to govern or check -- not replace -- the passions inherent in man, and the notion, therefore, that progress is possible. Not that human nature is perfectible, but that individual human beings, using reason, can be better. Which, consistent with the Anglo-Saxon systematic view of the building of knowledge, could (not necessarily would) make society better. This, of course, is consistent with the ideas one finds in the Founders, with American exceptionalism, and with the rise of modern science -- which would not have been possible in a world dominated the earlier Calvinist views.

On the continent, of course the hand of religion -- mostly in the form of ultramontane Catholicism, but often in the form of rigid state Protestantism as well -- was heavier than in England and Scotland. The struggles in French thought from the 17th into the 18th centuries ahs been well described by Georges Hazard in his The Crisis of the European Mind 1685-1715. I am particularly fond of his bon mot that sums the revolution in thought between the revocation of the Edict of Nantes and the death of Louis XIV nicely: (from memory so I may be a bit off) "it is as if the average educated Frenchman went to bed thinking like Bossuet and woke up thinking like Voltaire."

Whatever the causes, it was on the continent that the more extreme version of the Enlightenment grew, the one that the right caricatures, if but slightly. [Although, I must say, I studied the Enlightenment with Leonard Marsak, a Francophile who did original work on deMandeville, at UC Santa Barbara in the '70s, and Leonard took the view that even the French enlightenment was not nearly so wedded to the idea of progress as inevitable or the perfectibility of human nature as generally believed even in scholarly circles or as the subsequent French positivists and socialists - think Comte -and later Marxists] And, it was in France the revolution became the caricature of the Enlightenment that so repulsed Burke, with its schemes to perfect mankind. French thought, when it has not been ultramontane (deMaistre), in the 19th century tended to be based on this extreme view of the Enlightenment, whether in the socialists or anarchists. Hegel himself was a conservative, but his philosophy, especially his philosophy of history, seems to me based on the more extreme view of the idea of progress as eschatology. And, of course, Marx comes out of both Rousseau and left Hegelianism.

Someone (Palmer? Peter Gay? ) once described the United States as the Enlightenment's program in practice. Properly understood as the English and Scottish Enlightenment, I think this is true. Of course, then, the communist states of the 20th century represent Marxism's program in practice and the results have been disastrous and tragic. And, of course, their excesses can be tied fairly directly to the underlying view of human nature as malleable and perfectible. Ironic.

The "therapeutic" worldview you describe really reflects a worldview based on Rousseau, Hegel, and Marx. This reflects the success of the old left in the universities from the '30s through the '60s, as well as the success of the New Left who were our contemporaries in graduate school and who have mostly filled the ranks of the professoriat since.

I think the tensions in what is now conservatism today very much reflect the fact that those whose views are "liberal" in the same sense as the Founders, the classical liberals if you will, are very much on the defensive, from both the neo-Marxist left and the more fundamentalist religious right.

12 posted on 06/18/2004 6:49:03 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: CatoRenasci
I think you need to e-mail it to Mr. Hanson.Thanks
13 posted on 06/18/2004 7:18:56 AM PDT by Tolik
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To: quidnunc

Permanent link: http://victorhanson.com/Articles/Private%20Papers/A_Look_Back.html


14 posted on 06/18/2004 7:20:40 AM PDT by Tolik
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To: Tolik

I did. Thanks


15 posted on 06/18/2004 7:32:25 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: Tolik
Another quick thought: I think the fundamental difference between Anglo-American thought from the Enlightenment on and Continental thought explains a great deal, including (1) the reason traditional Marxism never caught on here, except among some intellectuals who read the Continental philosopners, and (2) most importantly, the reason we and the British, on one hand, and the Continental Europeans, on the other, have such fundamentally different conceptions the world to day, despite the common Judeo-Christian heritage and the origin of so many Americans in Europe.

It also explains in large part why the English are so chary of being intergrated into the European superstate. Our legal systems are fundamentally different.

On another level, this distinction also illuminates a broader sense of Anglo-American exceptionalism.

16 posted on 06/18/2004 7:41:28 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: quidnunc

see #12 and #16


17 posted on 06/18/2004 7:45:11 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: Tolik; quidnunc
Understanding that the underlying philosophical bases of our worldview -- the more traditionally Christian aspects of American society aside -- and that of the Europeans are profoundly different perhaps helps to understand why on so many levels, conversations with Europeans seem more and more like conversations between people speaking different languages.

Of course, it is clear that for the vast majority of Americans and Europeans, none of this is conscious. Most Americans and most Europeans have never read any of the underlying philosophy that provides the overriding climate of opinion here and there. Even the educated have not, for the most part, been taught about the divide as a result of increasingly marxist faculties. Locke is still read in this country and in England (I think), but the others less so.

A very telling thing also, in my experience, is that American and British intellectuals who have read the Anglo-Saxon philosophers, have often read the Continentals as well, but, it is rare for Europeans to have read much Anglo-Saxon philsophy.

18 posted on 06/18/2004 7:54:04 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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To: CatoRenasci
Conservatives look at the situation and see the terrorists choosing evil, and the struggle of good vs. evil.

European leftists refuse to see evil, only ambition. For them, our ambition of reforming Iraq is the same as Al Qaeda's ambition of conquering us.

Our great struggle is confronting evil and overcoming it.

Their great struggle is managing ambition, and they do it through appeasement and negotiation. Where they fail is when they are dealing with an opponent who seeks their annihilation and negotiates in bad faith. They are powerless against such a foe, and such are all the really bad foes. Their policies become the tools of the conqueror, used to gain their surrender without a fight.

19 posted on 06/18/2004 8:10:31 AM PDT by hopespringseternal (People should be banned for sophistry.)
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To: hopespringseternal
You are arguing, in essence, that the European worldview, whatever it's virtues in enabling its adherents to feel good, is not well-suited to explaining the nature of reality.

I concur.

20 posted on 06/18/2004 8:15:52 AM PDT by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo Arabiam Esse Delendam -- Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit)
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