By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
If it seems to you that the Left has, collectively, lost
its damned mind as the curtain rises on the last act of the Obama
administration, you are not imagining things. Barack Obama has been
extraordinarily successful in his desire to — what was that phrase? —
fundamentally transform the country, but the metamorphosis is nonetheless a
good deal less than his congregation wanted and expected. We may have gone from
being up to our knees in welfare-statism to being up to our hips in it, and
from having a bushel of banana-republic corruption and incompetence to having a
bushel and a peck of it, but the United States of America remains, to the
Left’s dismay, plainly recognizable as herself beneath the muck.
Ergo, madness and rage.
We have seen an extraordinary outburst of genuine
extremism — and genuine authoritarianism — in the past several months, and it
will no doubt grow more intense as we approach the constitutional dethroning of
the mock messiah to whom our progressive friends literally sang hymns of praise
and swore oaths of allegiance. (“I pledge to be a servant to our president” —
recall all that sieg heil creepiness.) There is an unmistakable stink of
desperation about this, as though the Left intuits what the Right dares not
hope: that the coming few months may in fact see progressivism’s cultural
high-water mark for this generation.
If there is desperation, it probably is because the Left
is starting to suspect that the permanent Democratic majority it keeps
promising itself may yet fail to materialize. The Democrats won two resounding
White House victories but can hardly win a majority in a state legislature
(seven out of ten today are Republican-controlled) or a governorship (the
Democrats are down to 18) to save their lives, while Republicans are holding
their strongest position in Congress since the days of Herbert Hoover. The
Democrats have calculated that their best bet in 2016 is Hillary Rodham
Clinton, that tragic bag of appetites who couldn’t close the deal in the
primary last time around. “Vote for me, I’m a lady” isn’t what they thought it
was: Wendy Davis, running for governor of Texas, made all the proper ceremonial
incantations and appeared in heroic postures on all the right magazine covers,
but finished in the 30s on Election Day. With young people trending pro-life,
that old black magic ain’t what it used to be.
For the Left, it feels like time is running out. So it
isn’t sufficient that same-sex marriages be legalized; bakers and florists must
be locked in prison if they decline to participate in a gay couple’s ceremony.
It isn’t sufficient that those wishing to undergo sex-change surgery be
permitted to go their own way; the public must pay for it, and if Bruce Jenner
is still “Bruce” to you, you must be driven from polite society. It isn’t
enough that the Left dominate the media and pop culture; any attempt to compete
with it must be criminalized in the name of “getting big money out of
politics.” Not the New York Times’s money, or Hollywood’s money, or the CEO of
Goldman Sachs’s money — just the wrong sort of people’s money. Every major
Democratic presidential candidate and every Democratic senator is on record
supporting the repeal of the First Amendment’s free-speech protections — i.e.,
carving the heart out of the Bill of Rights — to clear the way for putting all
public debate under political discipline.
Like it or not, you will be shackled to hope and change.
The hysterical shrieking about the fictitious rape
epidemic on college campuses, the attempts to fan the unhappy events in
Ferguson and Baltimore into a national racial conflagration, the silly and
shallow “inequality” talk — these are signs of progressivism in decadence.
So is the brouhaha over the Confederate flag in South
Carolina in the wake of the horrific massacre at Emanuel AME Church. For about
30 seconds, the political ghouls of the Left were looking to pick another
gun-control fight, swooping in, in their habitually indecent fashion, before
the bodies had even grown cold. But that turned out to be a dead end, since the
killer acquired his gun after passing precisely the sort of background check
that the Left generally hawks after a high-profile crime, regardless of whether
it is relevant to the crime. We might have spent some time thinking about whether
law enforcement was too lax in the matter of the murderer’s earlier encounters
with them — the South Carolina killer had a drug arrest on his record but was
able to buy a gun because he had been charged only with a misdemeanor. But the
Left isn’t in any mood to talk about whether the cops aren’t being hard-assed
enough. So, instead, we had a fight over a completely unrelated issue: the
Confederate flag flying at the state capitol in Columbia.
You have to credit the Left: Its strategy is deft. If you
can make enough noise that sounds approximately like a moral crisis, then you
can in effect create a moral crisis. Never mind that the underlying argument —
“Something bad has happened to somebody else, and so you must give us something
we want!” — is entirely specious; it is effective. In the wake of the financial
crisis, we got all manner of “reform,” from student-lending practices to the
mandates of Elizabeth Warren’s new pet bureaucracy, involving things that had
nothing at all to do with the financial crisis. Democrats argued that decency
compelled us to pass a tax increase in the wake of the crisis, though tax rates
had nothing to do with it. A crisis is a crisis is a crisis, and if a meteor
hits Ypsilanti tomorrow you can be sure that Debbie Stabenow will be calling
for a $15 national minimum wage because of the plight of meteor victims.
I bear no brief for the peckerwood-trash cultural
tendencies that led Fritz Hollings, then governor, and the rest of the loyal
Democrats who ran segregation-era South Carolina to hoist the Confederate flag
in 1962. My sympathies are more with John Brown than with John Calhoun. Yet
Lost Cause romanticism was very much in fashion for a moment, and not only
among Confederate revanchists; Joan Baez, no redneck she, made a great deal of
money with her recording of “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” in 1971.
About every third Western of the era had as its hero a conflicted Confederate
veteran, his wounded honor and stoicism in defeat compelling him to roam
westward in search of a new beginning. That story lives on into our own time:
Who are Mal Reynolds and the Browncoats if not another remnant of the Lost
Cause relocated from Virginia to the frontier in space?
Of course the Confederate flag is a symbol of Southern
racism. It is a good many other things, too, none of which was the cause of the
massacre at Emanuel AME. It is strange and ironic that adherents of the
Democratic party — which was, for about 140 years, not only the South’s but the
world’s leading white-supremacist organization — should work themselves up over
one flag, raised by their fellow partisans, at this late a date; but, well,
welcome to the party. Yet Democratic concern about racist totems is selective:
The Democrats are not going to change the name of their party, cancel the
annual Jefferson-Jackson dinner, or stop naming things after Robert Byrd,
senator and Exalted Cyclops of the Ku Klux Klan. Hillary Clinton is not going
to be made to answer for her participation in a political campaign that featured Confederate-flag imagery.
The Confederate flag, and other rebel iconography, is a
marker of Southern distinctiveness, which, like American distinctiveness, is
inextricably bound up with the enslavement and oppression of black people. But
only the South is irredeemable in the Left’s view, and it has been so only
since about 1994, when it went Republican. Which is to say, the Confederate
flag is an emblem of regional distinctiveness disapproved of by 21st-century
Democrats. Their reinvigorated concern is awfully nice: When the South actually
was a segregationist backwater that African-Americans were fleeing by the
million — when Democrats were running the show — they were ho-hum. Today the
South is an economic powerhouse, dominated by Republicans, and attracting new
African-American residents by the thousands. And so the Left and its creature,
the Democratic party, insist that Southern identity as such must be
anathematized. The horrific crime that shocked the nation notwithstanding,
black life in Charleston remains very different, in attractive ways, from black
life in such Left-dominated horror shows as Cleveland and Detroit, and the
state’s governor is, in the parlance of identity politics, a woman of color —
but she is a Republican, too, and therefore there must be shrieking, rending of
garments, and gnashing of teeth.
This is a fraud, and some scales are starting to fall
from some eyes. Americans believe broadly in sexual equality, but only a
vanishing minority of us describe ourselves as “feminists.” “Social-justice
warrior” is a term of derision. The Bernie Sanders movement, like the
draft-Warren movement of which it is an offshoot, is rooted in disgust at the
opportunistic politics of the Clinton claque. Young people who have heard all
their lives that the Republican party and the conservative movement are for old
white men — young people who may be not be quite old enough to remember
Democrats’ boasting of their “double-Bubba” ticket in 1992, pairing the protégé
of one Southern segregationist with the son of another — see before them Nikki
Haley, Bobby Jindal, Susana Martinez, Carly Fiorina, Tim Scott, Mia Love, Marco
Rubio, Ben Carson, Elise Stefanik. None of those men and women is bawling about
“microaggressions” or dreaming up new sexless pronouns. None belongs to the
party that hoisted Dixie over the capitol in South Carolina either. Governor
Haley may be sensitive to the history of her state, but she is a member of the
party of Lincoln with family roots in Punjab — it isn’t her flag.
What’s going to happen between now and November 8 of next
year will be a political campaign on one side of the aisle only. On the other
side, it’s going to be something between a temper tantrum and a panic attack.
That’s excellent news if you’re Ted Cruz, Scott Walker, Marco Rubio, or Carly
Fiorina. It’s less good news if you live in Baltimore or Philadelphia.
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