By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, August 06, 2015
Some Democratic-party groups are renouncing their
once-egalitarian idols, the renaissance genius Thomas Jefferson and the
populist Andrew Jackson. Both presidents, some two centuries ago, owned slaves.
Consequently, the two men have been suddenly deemed unworthy of further liberal
reverence.
In Connecticut, for instance, the state Democratic party
has removed the two presidents’ names from an annual fundraiser previously
known as the Jefferson-Jackson-Bailey Dinner.
There are lots of strange paradoxes in the current
frenzied liberal dissection of past sins.
One, a historic figure must be near perfect in all
dimensions of his or her complex life to now pass progressive muster. That
Jefferson is responsible for helping to establish many of the cherished human
rights now enshrined in American life apparently cannot offset the
transgression of having owned slaves.
Two, today’s moral standards are always considered
superior to those of the past. Ethical sense supposedly always improves with
time.
However, would the American society of 1915 have allowed
a federally supported agency such as Planned Parenthood to cut apart aborted
fetuses to sell infant body parts?
Ivy League–enrollment figures suggest that some of these
universities have capped the number of Asian students. Is this really much
different than the effort to curtail Jewish enrollment at Ivy League schools in
the 1920s?
Three, the sins of the past were hardly all committed by
racist, sexist, conservative white men.
Under the new morality, should we not also condemn the
Aztec king Montezuma as a Hitler-like war criminal? No society prior to the
Nazi Third Reich had so carefully organized and institutionalized the machinery
of mass death that each year executed tens of thousands of sacrificial human
captives from conquered neighboring tribes. Perhaps San Diego State University
should stop using the nickname “Aztecs” for its sports teams, given the fact
that the Aztecs practiced slave-owning, human sacrifice, and ritual
cannibalism.
The Zulus are often portrayed as saintly indigenous
people, brutally colonized by rapacious British imperialists. That’s not quite
the whole story. Earlier in their pre-British history, the Zulus’ King Shaka
adopted the sort of military imperialism and internal police state that would
have made Joseph Stalin proud. By the time of his death in 1828, Shaka’s army
had killed more than 1 million Africans through systematic imperial conquest
and mass executions.
Applying the morality of the present in crude political
fashion to ferret out the supposed race, class, and gender immorality of the
past is a tricky thing. Picking saints and sinners can boomerang in unexpected
ways.
Will Democrats now also damn America’s most openly racist
president since the pre–Civil War era — the liberal saint Woodrow Wilson?
Wilson successfully led the U.S. in World War I, tried to
organize a global League of Nations — and was an unapologetic Southern racist
in word and deed. It was Wilson who fought the integration of the U.S. military
and did his best as president of Princeton University to deny talented African
Americans admission.
Should Princeton focus only on that disreputable aspect
of his legacy and thus change the name of its vaunted Woodrow Wilson School of
Public and International Affairs?
Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren is worshipped as a
progressive icon who through his work on the Supreme Court helped enshrine a
liberal agenda. But no American was more responsible for incarcerating
Japanese-Americans in internment camps. As California’s attorney general,
Warren, in conjunction with liberal President Franklin Roosevelt, fanned racist
paranoia and stripped constitutional rights from tens of thousands of U.S.
citizens.
Should we therefore wipe away any mention of “The Warren
Court” or Roosevelt’s New Deal? Or do history’s liberal sinners alone win
special exemption from today’s liberal witch hunters?
Should we regard civil-rights advocate Malcolm X as
unworthy of attention, or instead as a complex historical persona?
By present ethical standards, was Malcolm more than just
a convicted thief and avowed Communist who dismissed Martin Luther King Jr. as
“chump,” declared that he was “glad” when John F. Kennedy was assassinated, and
talked of black superiority as he condemned whites as “devils”?
The architect of Planned Parenthood was the feminist
family planner Margaret Sanger. Shouldn’t Planned Parenthood denounce Sanger’s
legacy, given her eugenics agenda that deliberately sought to focus abortions
on minority communities?
The past is not simplistic “gotcha” melodrama in which we
convict figures of history by tabulating their sins on today’s moral
scorecards.
Instead, history is tragedy. It is complex. Moral
assessments are dicey. With some humility, we must balance past and current
ethical standards, as well as the elements of the good and the bad present in
every life.
And we must avoid cheap, politicized moralizing that
often tells us more about the ethics and ignorance of today’s grand inquisitors
than the targets of their inquisitions.
No comments:
Post a Comment