By Victor Davis Hanson
Tuesday, May 06, 2014
The qualifications of a Tommy “Dude” Vietor or Ben Rhodes
that placed them in the Situation Room during Obama-administration crises were
not years of distinguished public service, military service, prior elected
office, a string of impressive publications, an academic career, previous
diplomatic postings, or any of the usual criteria that have placed others at
the nerve center of America in times of crisis. Their trajectory was based on
yeoman partisan PR work, and largely on being young, hip, and well connected
politically. I don’t think either of these operatives has a particular
worldview or competency that would promote the interests of the United States.
But they do talk well, know the right people, and are hip. Again, they have no
real expertise or even ideology other than that.
Al Gore is said to be our leading green activist, and the
Steyer brothers the most preeminent green political donors. But do they really
believe in reducing carbon emissions to cool down the planet?
Not really. The latter made much of their fortune in the
sort of high-stakes speculations that the Left supposedly despises. Many of
their financial payoffs derived from promoting coal burning abroad, of the sort
most liberals wish to stop.
As for Gore, he cannot really believe in big green
government or he would not have tried to beat the capital-gains tax hike when
he peddled his failed cable network to a petrodollar-rich Al Jazeera, whose
cash comes from the very sources of energy that Gore claims he hates. Do you
make millions, and then in eleventh-century fashion repent so that you can
enjoy them all the more? Gore certainly in the past has not lived modestly; the
carbon footprint of keeping Al Gore going — housing, travel, and tastes — is
quite stunning. Both the Steyers and the Gores of our human comedy know that it
is lucrative business to appear green, and that by doing so one can keep one’s
personal life largely exempt from scrutiny in general and charges of hypocrisy
in particular. For them, 21st-century liberalism is a useful badge, a fashion
not unlike wearing good shades or having the right sort of cell phone.
The 1 percent fetish is also not really ideological.
Elizabeth Warren, one of its greatest supporters, is not just a 1 percent but a
0.1 percent grandee. Her house, habits, household income, past corporate
consulting, and net worth all reflect a desire for profits and refinement not
accorded to most Americans. Her life is about as much a part of the 99.9
percent as she is Native American. She is not worried about welders getting
some work on the Keystone Pipeline or farmworkers put out of their jobs in
Mendota, Calif., over a baitfish.
Ditto Paul Krugman. He is eloquent about inequality and
about the sort of insider privileges that give so much to so few. But nothing
about his own circumstances suggests that he lives the life he professes, as
opposed to professing abstractions that psychologically make the quite
different life he lives more palatable. Certainly, Krugman’s liberalism means
that few care that he once worked in the Reagan administration, that he was a
paid adviser to Enron, or that he has just taken a part-time $225,000
post-retirement job at City University of New York — one that, at least
initially, requires no teaching. Given what CUNY is said to pay its exploited
part-timers, the university could have offered 75 courses with the salary it
will be paying Krugman. Or, put another way, Professor Krugman will make the
same as do 75 part-timers who each teach one class — and thus one class more
than Krugman will teach. Bravo for Professor Krugman to have marketed himself
so well and to have earned all the compensation that the market will bear — and
too bad for the part-timers, who don’t understand market-based economics, where
there are winners like Krugman and losers like themselves who can’t earn
commensurate hanging-around money. One last question: Is part-time teacher
Krugman going to study the inequality inherent in the modern university’s
exploitation of part-time teachers?
Such hypocrisy taxes Krugman’s supporters to find
ingenious arguments for the idea that noble ends justify almost any means, and
so they argue that Krugman’s advocacy for research into income equality trumps
this minor embarrassment, or that he can be very rich and still fight the 1
percent, or that the salary in the metrosexual world of the Boston–New
York–Washington corridor is not all that high. Of course, the CUNY billet is
likely just a small stream that feeds into Krugman’s other sizable income
rivers. Indeed, he more likely belongs not just to the 1 percent, but to the
same 0.1 percent as Senator Warren, which he so castigates. When President
Obama exclaimed that at some point one needs to know when one has made enough
money, Krugman would have agreed. He could now put that agreement into action
by donating his salary to double the meager wages of 75 part-timers, who,
unlike himself, are contracted professors who really do teach and are not
“generously” compensated.
Does the NAACP stand as our watchdog over racism? In
theory, yes; in fact, not so much. The L.A. branch was quite content to
overlook Donald Sterling’s sterling racialism, given his donations. Sterling
apparently thought that supporting the local NAACP either was not antithetical
to his racist sloppy talk and rental practices, or was a wise investment in
progressive insurance.
Al Sharpton receiving a “person of the year” award from
the same branch of the NAACP is no less absurd than Donald Sterling’s
“lifetime-achievement award” — given that Sharpton is on record as an
anti-Semite, homophobe, inciter of riot, former FBI informant, tax delinquent,
and convicted defamer of a district attorney. But the NAACP brand nowadays
functions much like our green culture, as a sort of way to display correct
coolness. It surely would not go after Joe Biden, Harry Reid, Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, Sonya Sotomayor — or Barack Obama — for either using racialist speech
or denigrating others on the basis of race or tribe. Such a fact is widely
accepted because it is just as widely assumed that the NAACP has become
something fossilized, like Betamax in its waning days, as it existed for a bit
longer because it had once thrived.
Too many modern liberal fetishes are predicated on the
medieval notion of exemption, and should not be taken as anything much other
than useful pretensions or smart career moves — something like joining the
Masonic lodge in the 1920s in small-town America. Charter schools are bad, and
troubled public schools are noble, but the coastal elites, whether at Sidwell
Friends or the Menlo School, assume that they should not sacrifice their
children on the altar of their own ideology. Diversions of Central Valley canal
water from agriculture to fish are good, but diversions of Hetch Hetchy canal
water from San Francisco to fish are bad. Dreaming about salmon jumping in a
hot Central Valley river is a lot easier than bathing with recycled grey water
three times a week.
Concern for the Sierra toad and frog should stop
logging-road and mountain development, but incinerating fauna with solar
mirrors or grinding up eagles and hawks in wind turbines is the necessary price
of green membership.
The Koch brothers have allegedly polluted politics with
their ill-gotten cash; the Steyer brothers have not with their coal money. The
revolving door is what right-wing operators do, not what a Tommy Vietor or
Peter Orszag does. Affirmative action is necessary to stop “old boy” hiring and
power wielding, but the sort of incestuous D.C. relationships that the Carneys
or the Rhodes brothers have (Jay Carney’s wife, Claire Shipman, is a senior
correspondent for ABC News; Ben Rhodes’s brother, David, is the president of
CBS News) are not what we are talking about.
The issues per se are not so important. No prominent
progressive really believes that his children belong in a public school with
the “other.” He does not wish to live in an integrated neighborhood in order to
promote his notion of high-density, non-suburban racial assimilation. A Che
poster does not mean you want to live somewhere like Venezuela and wait in line
for toilet paper.
The liberal is not immune from the material allurements
of the 1 percent. Whizzing off on a private jet or climbing into a huge black
ten-mile-a-gallon SUV limo is no problem. You do not necessarily denounce all
racist stereotyping, given that sometimes attacking friendly bigots could be a
headache. Taking the Google bus with like kind instead of the messy public bus
or the uncertainties of the commuter train does not mean you are against mass
transit for “them.” You surely don’t want the Coastal Commission enforcing
beach-access rights for hoi polloi when who knows how many of the 99 percent
wish to walk right by your deck in Malibu. It would be like ruining your beach
view with a wind farm.
Liberalism offers a wise investment for a politician, a
celebrity, an academic, or a journalist, by letting him take out inexpensive
insurance against a politically incorrect slip of the tongue. Donald Sterling
almost achieved exemption by his donations to Democratic candidates and the
NAACP and his trial-lawyer billions; he lost it by keeping his ossified
Republican registration while being an old, sick white guy who said the sort of
reprehensible racist things that one hears sometimes in bits and pieces from
some NBA players.
So, in medieval fashion, liberalism serves as a powerful
psychological crutch: You can be noble in the abstract to assuage worries of
not being so at all in the concrete. It adds a hip flourish to the otherwise
mundane pursuit of power, lucre, and influence that plays out on the golf
course, at the Malibu party, in front-row seats at NBA games, or in the tony
Martha’s Vineyard summer home. About three decades ago, sipping a fine wine at
a Napa bed and breakfast, or getting the right Italian-granite and teak
flooring, became a force multiplier of being loudly liberal.
If a liberal has a really nice Chevy Chase estate or
Upper West Side brownstone or Tahoe summer home, it is important to sound all
the more liberal. Or maybe it is just the opposite: You cannot sound credibly
liberal unless you first have the correct liberal address and square footage.
The joke is on us. Having lots of stuff and lots of money, while deriding the
system that provides it, is perverse, but perverse in a postmodern sense: You
fools love the free market, where you didn’t do too well; we whose parents or
selves did very well in it don’t like it all that much. How postmodern — like
guffawing that lots of smoke came out of that Gulfstream ride, or lecturing
about inequality from Rancho Mirage or the back nine at Augusta.
We are told that the Kennedys, the Pelosis, the Kerrys,
and others like them are noble because they vote against their class interests.
But they really do not; they vote for them. Liberalism is now the domain of the
elite, and antithetical to the aspirations of the upper middle class that lacks
the capital and tastes of the 0.1 percent. The higher the taxes, the more
numerous the regulations, the greater the redistribution, so all the more the
elite liberal distances himself from those less cool who breathe down his neck,
and the less guilty he feels about the growing divide between him and the poor
he worries about, but never worries about enough to associate with.
Liberalism professes a leftwing ideology, but these days
it has absolutely no effect on the lives of those who most vehemently embrace
it. In other words, being liberal is professionally useful and psychologically
better than Xanax, but we need not assume any more that it is a serious belief.
No comments:
Post a Comment