Posted on 06/23/2018 5:23:30 AM PDT by gattaca
The Democrat resistance has managed to break its own record for hysterical and hypocritical invective. Literalizing the clichéd punch line of a thousand gagsWill no one think of the children!!! the Dems are hyperventilating about the illegal alien parents and their children being separated upon detention, as the law requires. Once again, we see how much conspicuous compassion, as Alan Bloom called it, has become a weapon of politics, one that damages our security and interests.
In this case, the disconnect between fact and spin is more glaring than usual. No matter that ICE and Homeland Security are working within the constraints of court rulings and the law that Congress passed and can change any time. No matter that often its impossible to certify that the detained adults are the actual parents, or that human traffickers arent using this dodge to enter the country with their prey. No matter that the alternative is to turn these poorly vetted illegal aliens loose (as Obama did, as a form of de facto amnesty), merely on their word that they will show up for a hearing. No matter that across the country, Child Protective Services are ripping children from their parents arms, as are the children of those arrested on suspicion of a crime. Do we set a criminal suspect free on his own recognizance just because hes accompanied by his kid?
No matter. Fact, common sense, and law must cede to politics, which these days comprises a deep, pathological hatred of Donald Trump, the Emmanuel Goldstein of the Democrats 24/7 Two Minutes Hate. Compassion is just another weapon of that hate.
Compassion, however, has a long history of being trivialized in Western culture. It followed the idealizing of sensitivity that began in the late 18th century. Novels like Laurence Sternes A Sentimental Journey and Henry Mackenzies The Man of Feeling, whose hero bursts into tears every ten pages, marked the point when showy displays of feelings like compassion, often called luxurious at the time, became a virtue-signaling status symbol. This is the fad that Jane Austen satirized in her 1811 novel Sense and Sensibility. As many other critics at the time pointed out, compassion was the justifying virtue that masked what often was nothing more than emotional solipsism for those whose concern for others seldom led to action that improved their lot.
By the mid-19th century even a master of sentimentalism like Charles Dickens could recognize that such public displays of compassion for the poor or native peoples abroad were a self-indulgence. In Bleak House, he created Mrs. Jellyby, the archetype of todays purveyors of virtue-signaling compassion, who bleed for distant suffering but neglect that in their own backyard. As Mrs. Jellyby strives to settle impoverished Londoners among heathen Africans they will convert to Christianity, her shabby household and neglected children continue to fall into ruin.
Dickens called this telescopic philanthropy, a phenomenon were seeing today with the ostentatious compassion for illegal alien children on the part of those who shrug off the daily excesses in their own country, such as those of the Child Protective Services, which often violate the Fourth Amendment.
Popularized more widely in the 19th century by the mass circulation of illustrated magazines and serialized novels, conspicuous compassion permeated American culture, as did telescopic philanthropy. In Tom Sawyer, Mark Twain satirized the committee of sappy women who are petitioning the governor to pardon the murderous Injun Joe: If he had been Satan himself there would have been plenty of weaklings ready to scribble their names to a pardon petition, and drip a tear on it from their permanent leaky water-works.
So too today, with those beating their breasts over sloppily vetted illegal aliens who endanger their children by bringing them across the border or sending them off with coyotes. They cant seem to summon similar compassion for the victims of the criminals allowed into the country and kept here despite serial felonies. And remember the weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth over the terrorist murderers held in Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib? And how about the Palestinians who use their own children as shields behind which to launch lethal attacks on Israelis? When do we hear the same lamentations over innocent Israeli children and families murdered by homicide-bombers, scud missiles, and knife-wielding terrorists?
Then there is todays favorite venue for politicized conspicuous compassionthe postcolonial Third World. Our morbid fascination with the misery and suffering there serves both our need to signal our superior virtue, and the leftist melodrama of the Western colonial and imperialist oppression allegedly responsible for that suffering.
This combination of conspicuous compassion and ostentatious self-loathing is the essence of Third-Worldism, that idealization of the non-Western other combined with self-flagellation over the original sins of imperialism and colonialism. French philosopher Pascal Bruckner wrote a brilliant analysis of this cultural neurosis in Tears of the White Man. Bruckner describes how Third-World suffering has become a lucrative commodity for the modern media, who provide the images that we consume in order to enjoy cost-free pathos and smug superiority about our righteous compassion. In this way, we compensate for our certain essential evil, as Bruckner calls the Wests original sin, that must be atoned for.
Which is to say, conspicuous compassion is about political power, since this neurosis empowers the foreign policy favored by globalists and leftists alike foreign aid and development even if theyre not in our national interest and dont help to protect our security. Domestically, for decades, including during George W. Bushs bout of compassionate conservatism, the progressives have slandered conservatives as heartless and ruthless racists, bigots, and xenophobes who fear the dark-skinned other and seek to roll back the clock to the time when their white male hetero-normative privilege was unchallenged.
That caricature reinforces as well progressives self-image as more enlightened and tolerant, more caring about the suffering victims of conservatisms crimes. Both caricatures serve political theater by giving us a melodrama in which good and evil, white hats and black hats, are easily recognizable without having to think too much about, say, the long track-record of progressivisms failures, both at home and abroad, to improve the lives of those they have so much compassion for.
But politics based on sentimental emotions and cheap compassion obscures the tragic realities of the choices a nation has to make. Modern Mrs. Jellybys like Samantha Power, Obamas U.N. ambassador and architect of the responsibility to protect doctrine, have nothing practical to say about how to achieve their utopian projects without a massive intervention of lethal force. U.N. resolutions, heart-rending photographs, celebrity global pan-handling, disappearing red lines, and lofty speeches didnt bring the boon of education to girls in Afghanistan. The U.S. military did by killing and driving away the bad guys. They liberated more girls in Afghanistan than all the feminist books and seminars and protests combined.
But the role of our government is not to be the worlds social worker going about searching for monsters to destroy. The 800,000 murdered in Rwanda comprised families and children too, but we did nothing to stop the slaughter. Instead, we pretended that the feckless U.N.s Orwellian peace-keepers, who watched the disaster happen in real time, absolved us of our responsibility to protect. Rather than indulge such hypocrisy, we should be honest and let the world know that we act in the service of our own citizens security and interests. If humanitarian assistance or policies are compatible with those purposes, then we should do what we can.
Moreover, we do not have a moral obligation to be the worlds refuge and take in everybody if doing so harms our security and interests. And since we cant take in every refugee whether political or economic, any decision to admit people will necessarily be political, which again means that our countrys interests are the paramount criterion. In the end, we are not obligated to correct the misery and suffering of nations who bear the responsibility for their own peoples problems. We cant let the whole world use us as Mexico does, as a safety valve for lessening their citizens discontent caused by their countrys political and economic corruption and dysfunctions; and as a source of foreign currency$26 billion in just nine months last year in the form of remittances sent home by their citizens.
Finally, it is the fundamental right of every sovereign nation to protect its borders and to decide by what criteria they will admit immigrants. Whatever we decide is a political issue to be settled by the people through their representatives in Congress. Calls for amnesty or de facto open borderswhich is what the recent outcry over separating illegal aliens from their children is really aboutshould be adjudicated by political debate on the facts, consequences, and costs, not by emotional appeals, sentimental rhetoric, and conspicuous compassion.
Unfortunately, the hypocritical telescopic philanthropy of the Dems, few of whom live with the wages of our broken immigration system, has been seconded by too many Republicans intimidated by their rhetoric. The Bush clan, which spent Obamas two terms in silence as The One fundamentally transformed America, have squandered much of the good will they once enjoyed by piling on Donald Trump with ridiculous comparisons to the internment of Japanese citizens during the World War II, and with bathetic exaggerations of the conditions in which the children are kept. So too a lot of Republicans who should know better, but with an eye on the November midterms, are scrambling to defuse the bad publicity caused by the dishonest media coverage, rather than championing facts and principles and refuting the Dems duplicitous narrative.
But ceding the argument to the Dems, rather than putting their feet to the fire by forcing them to vote in Congress, is handing them a win. Thats why Trumps executive order on Wednesday ending the practice instead of forcing Congress to do its job, is disappointing. And even if thats what polls tell us the people want, laws or policy based on specious emotion and lurid optics, rather than on Constitutional principles and national interest, usually turn out to be disastrous. Our national interests are more important than peoples need to display their conspicuous compassion.
Open borders is cover for human trafficking, which is a billion+ trade every year! Modern day child slavery & death. We must build the wall to end human trafficking of children for pedos & ritualistic killing by satanists.
Good article.
In the absence of faith, we govern by tenderness. And tenderness leads to the gas chamber, said Flannery O’Connor.
Excess compassion ends up doing more harm than good if it leads to bigger government and more force.
Leave it to FrontPage to coin the term “Weaponizing Compassion”.
A friend of mine with who I disagree on our border issues was very moved by an article in the New Yorker that was done on interviews with unaccompanies children being detained at the border. He was feeling so bad for the kids, and that he didn’t understand how “we” could let this happen. I reminded him that we did not cause this, the children’s adults in their home countries caused it, often their parents, aunts & uncles and so forth, knowing the conditions but pushing the kids into it anyway. THEY are to whom my friend should be asking his questions. I also reminded him that what the interviews could not reveal was which of the kids was actually a victim of human trafficking, with coyotes paid by others to round up and bring groups of unaccompanied children into the country, for corrupt and sometimes immoral reasons.
Where is the compassion for the unborn?
Abortion separates children from their parents permanently.
Why aren't these people staying in Mexico?
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