By Jonah Goldberg
Saturday, November 28, 2015
“From whence shall
we expect the approach of danger? Shall some trans-Atlantic military giant step
the earth and crush us at a blow? Never. All the armies of Europe and Asia . .
. could not by force take a drink from the Ohio River or make a track on the
Blue Ridge in the trial of a thousand years. No, if destruction be our lot we
must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of free men we will live
forever or die by suicide.” — Abraham Lincoln
The winning streak enjoyed by campus activists this fall
was violently interrupted by the recent terrorist attacks in Paris. Some
activists were sufficiently annoyed by their ejection from the limelight that
they took to Twitter to complain under the hashtag “F***Paris.”
The most obvious irony stemmed from the fact that some of
the same protesters who griped about media coverage of their antics — even
declaring First Amendment-free zones — suddenly whined when the cameras turned
to bloodshed in the heart of Europe.
But there’s a deeper irony. In the aftermath of the Paris
attacks, fueled by a cynical media strategy directed by the president himself,
the national conversation turned quickly from Barack Obama’s foreign-policy
failures to the bigotry and insensitivity of the Republican party. There’s no
denying that Donald Trump made this an easy pivot for the Beltway Brahmins. But
left unnoticed in the clamor is the dismaying disconnect between the
conversation elite liberals want to have and the one being pushed by their left-wing
shock troops on the ground.
For instance, on ABC’s This Week, Representative Keith Ellison (D., Minn.) ripped into
Republican rhetoric about Syrian refugees, saying that we must have “confidence
in who we are as a nation . . . we need to be adhering to the values that have
made this country strong.”
Ellison was hardly alone. Everyone seems to be talking
about those American “values” of tolerance, diversity, and pluralism. Obama has
been on a tear about how rejecting refugees is “not American” and how those
refugees are akin to the pilgrims who arrived on our shores. He pays rote lip
service to denouncing murderers in Paris.
Meanwhile, back on our campuses, those very values are
routinely denounced as little more than “white privilege.” Needless to say, the
people who want to see Columbus Day banned and call for an accounting of
America’s crimes against Native Americans don’t think too highly of those
Pilgrims.
As for our values, student protesters and their enablers
on and off campus offer a full-throated rejection of America’s (classical)
liberal principles and, at times, America itself. By now you’ve heard it said
that “free speech” is just code for “white privilege” or even “hate speech.”
Tolerance itself has become a dirty word for many.
Many campuses have announced a zero-tolerance policy for
“hate speech” and “racial insensitivity,” and countless more campuses have
students demanding that such policies be implemented at their schools.
In principle, that doesn’t sound so bad. The problem is
that the definitions of hate speech and insensitivity have become entirely
elastic and subjective. Disagreement with the mob of right-thinkers is now
deemed unacceptable. There’s a vaguely Maoist flavor to demands that liberal
white professors and administrators confess and atone for their “white
privilege.”
It’s gotten to the point where even admiration for
non-European culture is denounced as bigoted if that admiration blossoms into
so-called “cultural appropriation.” Ethnic food fads are denounced for their
insensitivity; the website Everydayfeminism.com recently offered “The Feminist
Guide to Being a Foodie without Being Culturally Appropriative.”
For generations, we’ve heard that “diversity makes us
stronger.” I’ll leave it to another day to question whether this premise can
withstand the test of reality. The relevant point is that many of the chief
beneficiaries — or at least their self-proclaimed leaders — of what was once
called “Diversity Inc.” now reject the logic of diversity at the most
fundamental level. The famous “melting pot” is now derided as a kind of
cultural genocide.
Nothing is more comfortable for the Sunday-morning
talk-show elites than taking on the alleged forces of intolerance to their
right. Ohio governor John Kasich recently argued for promoting America’s
“Judeo-Christian” values of tolerance, equality, free speech, and pluralism.
NBC’s Chuck Todd fretted that such rhetoric sounded “anti-Islam.”
Meanwhile, the campus Left is openly rejecting those core
American values, and the response from media elites has run the gamut from
condescending tolerance to abject encouragement.
By all means, we need more civilizational confidence. But
demonstrating it only to denounce partisan opponents isn’t confidence at all.
It’s a recipe for suicide.
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