Posted on 09/22/2008 8:58:40 AM PDT by Tolik
You are a damn elite, not me!
That sums up the current political debatewhether we look at charges that John McCain has so many houses he cant remember any longer the actual number of them; or that poor Barack Obama is depressed at the soaring price of arugula; or that Fightin Joe Biden once bootstrapped himself up at ten in Scranton; or that moose-hunting Sarah snowmachines as naturally as Barack Obama trips over himself in a bowling lane.
A nation of wood-cutters
In short, we remain log-cabin America, formed as the frontier antithesis of Europe. Apparently, we are determined, at least in mind, to stay that wayrightly or wrongly sneering at both natural Francophile John Kerrys spandex, and also poor forced and uncomfortable duck-hunting John Kerry, decked out in camouflage, and looking as uncomfortable with a dead duck as Mike Dukakis in a tank helmet. We dont like snooty elitists, and dont give them a break when they clumsily try at election time in the eleventh hour to morph into one of the people.
A state of mind
So what is elitism? And who is an elitist? We can start by remembering that objecting to elitism in hardly anti-intellectualism. Elitism itself cannot be defined necessarily by social status, money, blue-chip degrees, or tony zip codesthough all that can make an elitists task much easier than can a CSU Bakersfield BA and residence in Oildale.
Rather, elitism is a state of mind. It is a world view in which ones refinements from the commonswhether they are natural or acquired tastes and interests, whether they be intellectual, musical, artistic, architectural, or simply socialare seen as exclusive rather than inclusive.
Looking up with, rather than down at, others.
Poet and intellectual Dana Gioia, the head of the National Endowment of the Arts, is not an elitist, primarily because he works to bring his knowledge of poetry, music, and art to Middle America, rather than to subsidize yet another talentless endowed Professor of Arts postmodern pornographic paper-machês that could not exist as art, outside of the university lounge. He believes that music or poetry not only enriches life, but that most in rural areas, or the ghetto, or the middle-class suburbs agree, if only they are given steady opportunity and encouragement for such enjoyment, and the arts are presented in a context of shared tastes and the desire for commonality and fellowship, rather than the condescending bestowal from a superior to his pawn.
Renaissance man Teddy
Teddy Roosevelt was not for long seen as a snooty Ivy-League bore once he went West, fought with the Rough Riders, and in his fifties ended up with malaria in the Amazon, determined that the value of his education was to lead others and enrich his own rather full and often arduous physical life. He read Tolstoy while chasing outlaws out West. In that sense, his Harvard education was of benefit only to the degree learning acquired in Cambridge proved in the real world of some value in sharpening Roosevelts acumen, his sense of beauty, his judgment, his knowledge, and his ability to enlighten others. It surely did in matters intellectual, since Roosevelt wrote persuasively about the West and South America, as he drew on word and deed. If education does not do such things and it often does not for manythen refinement and intellectual prowess are as valuable as a crystal paper weight: sometimes impressive to the eye, but more frequently of no utility, not quite art, not quite an implement.
Something gained, but something also lost
Second, elitism is the deliberate deprecation, in active or passive fashion, of the other world of physicality and pragmatism. The true elitist values his books, his music, his refined taste in furniture, food, and fashion to the neglect of how one makes a book, to the absolute uninterest in the construction of a violin, a chair, a fig, or a pair of pants. The elitist always fails to appreciate, (1) that his existence, and his much cherished rarified world, are impossible without others that are as smart and as skilled as he, and thus due commensurate thanks and acknowledgment, and (2) that in the zero-sum game of life, hours spent at the piano, Smyths Greek grammar, the Sunday morning opera, or the Guggenheim Museum are a tragic trade-off in which one forfeits commensurate time invested in the physical challenge of chain-sawing limbs, the aesthetic sense of accomplishment in weeding an overgrown garden, or the satisfaction of re-roofing a house. The elitist, in contrast, simply cannot imagine that such tasks are as necessary as his own, or that such muscular experience can reflect upon character and knowledge as much as those interests of his own softer and more sophisticated world. Again, knowing how to chain-saw or hammer may be more valuable in dealing with Chavez or Putin than distinguishing Virgil from Horace.
Forgetting Platos warning about wisdom
Third, the elitist, by his very nature, proves overreaching. That is, he seems in anti-Platonic fashion, to think his expertise in one field is instantly transferable to another. The good tractor mechanic may, with dirty nails and the odor of diesel, instinctively sense that he has shorted rhetoric and diction, and so has to prepare and tread carefully when dealing with the probate lawyer, county assessor, or local professor at night school.
Again, in contrast, the elitist seems to think that his Harvard Law Degree or Stanford PhD, or Victorian on Pacific Heights instantly makes him a far better guide to human nature, diplomacy, warmaking, and governancealmost anythingthan does the sheet-rocker or crane operator (cf. the Obama sermon on clinging Pennsylvanians). That is, the elitist does not understand that his admirable hours spent investigating French provincial furniture or understanding the pedigree of good silverware may be of no more utility in cultivating logic, good judgment, and moral character than in mastering checkers.
William F. Buckley, who knew something of the Ivy League, was not being (just) flippant when he quipped
Id rather entrust the government of the United States to the first 400 people listed in the Boston telephone directory than to the faculty of Harvard University.
The Anger of the Anointed
The Democrats are furiousand have been so throughout the last thirty years in which they have nominated the less than savvy products of law schoolsthat the public does not appreciate their concern for the poor and middling classes. This angst plays out in a sort of Whats the Matter With Kansas sneering, akin to Marxist false consciousness, that the yokel simply has been hoodwinked by the Machiavellian Karl Roves of the world to vote against his own economic interests by electing a NASCAR-going, nuclar-speaking George Bush, who, the liberals cry out, is really a snooty product of Yale and Harvard determined to protect his own class.
Ivy Leaguesometimes good, sometimes bad, depending
How odd that while the media informed us that Obamas Harvard education was a pivotal consideration, we were never reminded earlier of any advantage in Bushs own as lengthy pedigree in the Ivy League. If Obama would release his transcripts, we could compare Bush at Yale, and Obama at Columbia to ascertain the more serious student. Legacies were as important perhaps in Bush getting into Yale as affirmative action was for Obama to enter Columbia and Harvard, given his actual GPA. I just did an interview for CNN (probably wont be aired) in which the interviewer after arguing that the Ivy League should be a proper barometer of talent, then blurted out but Yale and Harvard didnt help George Bush. Odd to see someone trying to make and reject her case all at once.
Rove made them do it
The question liberal Democrats must ask is not whether George Bush fooled Middle Americabut rather how was he able to do it? And the answer is a pontificating and hypocritical Al Gore, or a ponderous and sanctimonious snob like John Kerry made it easy. Long gone are the Harry Trumans, Scoop Jacksons, and Hubert Humphreys, all smart, widely read and sophisticated leaders, who nonetheless sought to include others rather than relied on social status, education certificates, pedigrees, zip-codes, tastes and fashion to remind the less blessed that their own cultivated landscape was proof of singular intelligence and competence.
In the arena
Like it or not, this campaign has turned into a cultural war in which elitism is center stage. Everyday some celebrity like a Chevy Chase or Woody Allen, whose own lives are hardly worthy of emulation, gives a nasty, condescending lecture about how inept Palin is, how dense we are, and how embarrassed they would be should we pass on Obama and disappoint the world.
When Obama talks ad nauseam about Bidens Scranton upbringing (moved away at ten), we know hes afraid of his own impression that he is elitist. And that is not helped by his lectures to Americans about their inability to speak French (he doesnt himself), or praise to Europeans about world efforts to save Berlin during the airlift (mostly a US effort), or braggadocio that he doesnt look like most American officials who come to Germany (false; cf. Powell and Rice).
I dont think a Bob Herbert knows anything because he writes for the New York Times, ditto a Sally Quinn who sometimes op-eds at the Washington Post. Matt Damons ideas about Palin are no more valid than my vineyard renters, but far less logical and sane. I take Obamas lectures about French about as seriously as I do any backpacking students.
Paths taken and not
We are all a sum total of what weve read, how weve been taught, where we lived, what weve done and not done. Given our tragically short-lives it really is a zero-sum game, in which each choice entails a choice not to do something else. I grant that in theory sitting in front of a sofa watching sit-coms could be a bad choice if done serially. But then so could be acting in that silly sit-com day after day a bad choice of time, even if such performance sometimes brings one the money and status to fool others that it is not.
Let me know if you want in or out.
Links: FR Index of his articles: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=victordavishanson
His website: http://victorhanson.com/
NRO archive: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson-archive.asp
Pajamasmedia: http://victordavishanson.pajamasmedia.com/
For many years I have been trying to get VDH proclaimed King. No luck so far.
Don’t worry about what constitutes an elite - we will let you know!
We are all a sum total of what weve read, how weve been taught, where we lived, what weve done and not done. Given our tragically short-lives it really is a zero-sum game, in which each choice entails a choice not to do something else. I grant that in theory sitting in front of a sofa watching sit-coms could be a bad choice if done serially. But then so could be acting in that silly sit-com day after day a bad choice of time, even if such performance sometimes brings one the money and status to fool others that it is not.”
___________________________________________________________
NOW THAT WE ARE A NATION, PRESUMIBLIITY OF 40,000,000 IMMIGRANTS, CHIEFLY FROM MEXICO, DURING THE LAST 20 YEARS,
We have a whole new set of pigeonholed interests, many do use the systems to obtain, free medical care, free schooling, free food stamps and social security, free college benefits more ... so since they are the recipients of welfare largess; they are largely going to vote Democratic. They came here with a mind set for wanting socialized everything ... so it is a fit.
Rush said, during the Clinton years, that when we crossed the line of more than 50% of the people either working for the government at some level or on the welfare, and entitlement programs ... we (conservatives) would not have much of an opportunity to win in the elections.
We see this is right where we are. Unless we can fire up the sensible old time Democrats to vote for John McCain/ Palin which we must, then the process for change is not available to us.
Understand the education systems favor socialism, global warming, one world order etc. all the years of our children's education. So how do we turn this around? Where is our American ingenuity?
This is not a game we can lose.
BTTT
There needs to be a public discussion of the ideology and puppet masters behind Obama and his cult. Maybe some of the Straussians at The Weekly Standard would also take an interest in it before we become a People's Republic (if they are paying attention)?
Let's break this down into its parts:
The Saul Alinsky theories of Community Organizer Social Agitation
Karl Popper's "Open Society" theories which Obama benefactor, George Soros, subscribes to
The Richard Hofstadter class theories of American politics, painting conservatives as "bitter" and alienated malcontents
The Communist Beatnik poetry of Frank Marshall Davis
The crackpot Black Power Liberation theology of Obama's reverend and spiritual mentor (a full 20 years of his adult life)
Critical Legal Studies, value-free positivism, and moral relativism at Harvard Law School (rendering Obama incapable of determining whether a moving infant "born alive" in a botched abortion was a human "child" deserving of constitutional rights)
This is the content of an "elite" Columbia/Harvard education. Things have drifted rather far from the days of Charles William Eliot and George Santayana. Or as one observer summed it up, "full of wacky ideas many bordering on, if not in the realm of, pure idiocy."
Would you please include me in the ping list? Thanks and I’d appreciate it so much!
Beautiful!
"(1) that his existence, and his much cherished rarified world, are impossible without others that are as smart and as skilled as he, and thus due commensurate thanks and acknowledgment, and
"(2) that in the zero-sum game of life, hours spent at the piano, Smyths Greek grammar, the Sunday morning opera, or the Guggenheim Museum are a tragic trade-off in which one forfeits commensurate time invested in the physical challenge of chain-sawing limbs, the aesthetic sense of accomplishment in weeding an overgrown garden, or the satisfaction of re-roofing a house.
"The elitist, in contrast, simply cannot imagine that such tasks are as necessary as his own, or that such muscular experience can reflect upon character and knowledge as much as those interests of his own softer and more sophisticated world.
"Again, knowing how to chain-saw or hammer may be more valuable in dealing with Chavez or Putin than distinguishing Virgil from Horace."
My favorite lines.
Not being elite, I have to bookmark this for further study.
The Smart People, like Paulsen and Bernanke, seemingly weren't able to raise the alarm to a high-enough level until we were on the verge of collapse. How smart are they, really? Are they corrupt and evil, or just plain stupid?
OK. Added to the VDH ping list. Thanks.
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.