By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Many conservatives finished the year angry about the same
thing they were angry about at the beginning of the year: liberal double
standards.
As I write this, GOP House whip Steve Scalise is in hot
water over reports that he spoke to a group of racist poltroons in Louisiana
twelve years ago. Whether it was an honest mistake, as Scalise plausibly
claims, or a sign of something more nefarious, as his detractors hope, remains
to be seen.
But one common response on social media is instructive.
Countless conservatives want to know: Why the double standard? Barack Obama was
friends with a domestic terrorist, Bill Ayers. His spiritual mentor was a
vitriolic racist, Jeremiah Wright. One of his administration’s closest advisers
and allies is Al Sharpton, a man who has inspired enough racial violence to
make a grand dragon’s white sheets turn green with envy.
Meanwhile, the Democratic party venerated the late
senator Robert Byrd, a former Klansmen himself. He was one of 19 senators (all
Democrats) to sign the Southern Manifesto opposing integration. One of his
co-signers was William Fulbright, Bill Clinton’s mentor.
When Republicans are in power, “dissent is the highest
form of patriotism.” When Democrats are in power, dissent is the racist fuming
of “angry white men.”
Peaceful, law-abiding tea-party groups who cleaned up
after their protests — and got legal permits for them — were signs of nascent
fascism lurking in the American soul. Violent, anarchic, and illegal protests
by Occupy Wall Street a few years ago or, more recently, in Ferguson, Mo., were
proof that a new idealistic generation was renewing its commitment to idealism.
When rich conservatives give money to Republicans, it is
a sign that the whole system has been corrupted by fat cats. When it is
revealed that liberal billionaires and left-wing super PACs outspent
conservative groups in 2014: crickets.
When Republicans invoke God or religious faith as an
inspiration for their political views, it’s threatening and creepy. When
Democrats do it, it’s a sign they believe in social justice.
One can do this all day long. But while examples are
easy, explanations are hard.
I don’t know who first said, “Behind every apparent
double standard lies an unconfessed single standard” (and as far as I can tell,
neither does the Internet), but whoever did was onto something.
What looks like inexplicably staggering hypocrisy from
the conservative perspective is actually remarkably consistent from the liberal
perspective.
Well, “perspective” is probably the wrong word because it
implies a conscious, deliberate, philosophical point of view. What is really at
work is better understood as bias, even bigotry.
If you work from the dogmatic assumption that liberalism
is morally infallible and that liberals are, by definition, pitted against
sinister and — more importantly — powerful forces, then it’s easy to explain
away what seem like double standards. Any lapse, error, or transgression by
conservatives is evidence of their real nature, while similar lapses, errors,
and transgressions by liberals are trivial when balanced against the fact that
their hearts are in the right place.
Despite controlling the commanding heights of the culture
— journalism, Hollywood, the arts, academia, and vast swaths of the corporate
America they denounce — liberals have convinced themselves they are pitted
against deeply entrenched powerful forces and that being a liberal is somehow
brave. Obama, the twice-elected president of the United States, to this day
speaks as if he’s some kind of underdog.
Frank Rich, the former New York Times columnist and
theater critic, recently interviewed Chris Rock for New York magazine. He
wanted to know why right-leaning comedian Dennis Miller isn’t as funny (at
least according to Rich) as Jon Stewart of The Daily Show. He asked Rock, “Do
you think that identifying with those in power is an impediment to laughter?”
It was a hilarious and revealing moment. Stewart — who
recently had to turn down a pleading request from NBC to take over Meet the
Press — has long identified with liberals in power. Moreover, he’s easily one
of America’s most powerful liberals, routinely creating and enforcing liberal
conventional wisdom (much as Rich had done from his perch at the Times).
Miller, meanwhile, has nowhere near the same cultural clout precisely because
he doesn’t affirm the single standard at the heart of liberalism: “We’re the
good guys.”
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