By Damon Linker
Friday, July 11, 2014
At the risk of sounding like Paul Krugman — who returns
to a handful of cherished topics over and over again in his New York Times
column — I want to revisit one of my hobby horses, which I most recently raised
in my discussion of Hobby Lobby.
My own cherished topic is this: Liberalism's decline from
a political philosophy of pluralism into a rigidly intolerant dogma.
The decline is especially pronounced on a range of issues
wrapped up with religion and sex. For a time, electoral self-interest kept
these intolerant tendencies in check, since the strongly liberal position on
social issues was clearly a minority view. But the cultural shift during the
Obama years that has led a majority of Americans to support gay marriage seems
to have opened the floodgates to an ugly triumphalism on the left.
The result is a dogmatic form of liberalism that
threatens to poison American civic life for the foreseeable future.
Conservative Reihan Salam describes it, only somewhat hyperbolically, as a form
of "weaponized secularism."
The rise of dogmatic liberalism is the American left-wing
expression of the broader trend that Mark Lilla identified in a recent
blockbuster essay for The New Republic. The reigning dogma of our time,
according to Lilla, is libertarianism — by which he means far more than the anti-tax,
anti-regulation ideology that Americans identify with the post-Reagan
Republican Party, and that the rest of the world calls
"neoliberalism."
At its deepest level, libertarianism is "a
mentality, a mood, a presumption… a prejudice" in favor of the liberation
of the autonomous individual from all constraints originating from received
habits, traditions, authorities, or institutions. Libertarianism in this sense
fuels the American right's anti-government furies, but it also animates the
left's push for same-sex marriage — and has prepared the way for its stunningly
rapid acceptance — in countries throughout the West.
What makes libertarianism a dogma is the inability or
unwillingness of those who espouse it to accept that some people might choose,
for morally legitimate reasons, to dissent from it. On a range of issues,
liberals seem not only increasingly incapable of comprehending how or why someone
would affirm a more traditional vision of the human good, but inclined to
relegate dissenters to the category of moral monsters who deserve to be
excommunicated from civilized life — and sometimes coerced into compliance by
the government.
The latter tendency shows how, paradoxically, the rise of
libertarian dogma can have the practical effect of increasing government power
and expanding its scope. This happens when individuals look to the government
to facilitate their own liberation from constraints imposed by private groups,
organizations, and institutions within civil society. In such cases, the
government seeks to bring those groups, organizations, and institutions into
conformity with uniform standards that ensure the unobstructed personal liberation
of all — even if doing so requires that these private entities are forced to
violate their distinctive visions of the good.
As the old (flagrantly illiberal) saying goes: If you
want to make an omelet, you've got to break some eggs.
Consider some of the ways that liberalism's dogmatism has
expressed itself in recent months.
- Brendan Eich
resigned as the chief executive of Mozilla, a company he helped found, after
gay rights activists launched a boycott against the company for placing him in
a senior position. Eich's sin? More than five years earlier, he donated $1,000
to the campaign for California's Proposition 8, which sought to ban same-sex
marriage in the state. It didn't matter that he'd explicitly assured employees
that he would treat them fairly, regardless of their sexual orientation. What
mattered was that Eich (like the 7 million people who voted in favor of Prop 8)
had made himself a heretic by coming down on the wrong side of an issue on
which error had now become impermissible.
- Liberals
indulged in a wildly overwrought reaction to the Supreme Court's decision in
Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, with seasoned journalists likening the plaintiffs to
the Pakistani Taliban, and countless others taking to social media to denounce
a government-sanctioned theocratic assault on women's health — all because some
women working for corporations that are "closely held" by religiously
conservative owners might have to pay out of pocket for certain forms of freely
available contraception (as, one presumes, they currently do for toothpaste).
Apparently many liberals, including the Senate Democrats who seem poised to gut
the decision, consider it self-evident that these women face a far greater
burden than the conservative owners, who would be forced by the government to
violate their religious beliefs. One highly intelligent commentator,
inadvertently confessing his incapacity to think beyond the confines of liberal
dogma, described the religious objection as "trivial" and "so
abstract and attenuated it's hard to even explain what it is."
- Beyond the
Beltway, related expressions of liberal dogmatism have led a Harvard
undergraduate to suggest that academic freedom shouldn't apply to the handful
of conservatives on campus — because their views foster and justify
"oppression." In a like-minded column in The Chronicle of Higher
Education, a professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania argued that
religious colleges should be denied accreditation — because accrediting them
"confers legitimacy on institutions that systematically undermine the most
fundamental purposes of higher education," one of which is to pursue
"skeptical and unfettered" (read: dogmatically liberal and secular)
inquiry.
But wait, some will object: You can't reduce contemporary
American liberalism to the illiberal outbursts of loudmouthed activists,
intemperate journalists, foolish undergraduates, and reckless Ivy League
professors!
To which the proper response is: True!
Still, I wonder: Where have been all the outraged
liberals taking a stand against these and many other examples of dogmatism —
and doing so in the name of liberalism? I've been doing that in my own writing.
And I've appreciated the occasional expressions of modest support from a
handful of liberal readers. But what about the rest of you?
A final thought: One area where Lilla's essay cries out
for further elaboration is on the question of why the demand for individual
autonomy has become so dogmatic at the present moment in history. Lilla himself
leaves it at the assertion that since the end of the Cold War we have
"simply found ourselves" in a world dominated by libertarian dogma.
I'd like to venture a tentative explanation — one that
has nothing to do with the end of the Cold War.
From the dawn of the modern age, religious thinkers have
warned that, strictly speaking, secular politics is impossible — that without
the transcendent foundation of Judeo-Christian monotheism to limit the
political sphere, ostensibly secular citizens would begin to invest political
ideas and ideologies with transcendent, theological meaning.
Put somewhat differently: Human beings will be religious
one way or another. Either they will be religious about religious things, or
they will be religious about political things.
With traditional faith in rapid retreat over the past
decade, liberals have begun to grow increasingly religious about their own
liberalism, which they are treating as a comprehensive view of reality and the
human good.
But liberalism's leading theoreticians (Locke,
Montesquieu, Jefferson, Madison, Tocqueville, Mill) never intended it to serve
as a comprehensive view of reality and the human good. On the contrary,
liberalism was supposed to act as a narrowly political strategy for living
peacefully in a world of inexorably clashing comprehensive views of reality and
the human good.
The key to the strategy was the promulgation of the
pluralistic principle of toleration.
Which is why the proper response to the distinctive
dogmatism of our time is to urge liberals to return to their tolerant roots.
That's what I've been trying to do in my own writing, and my efforts will
continue until more liberals come to their senses and begin recalling their
comrades to a robust defense of their own pluralistic principles.
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