Thursday, December 16, 2021
C.A.A. On Vacation Until January
The New Misogyny
By Christine Rosen
Thursday, December 16, 2021
A new form of misogyny is taking hold in
contemporary culture. It comes in the guise of a liberationist philosophy, a
transformational movement dedicated to open-mindedness. Its advocates believe
they are ushering in a world in which one can be whomever one chooses to be.
And in doing so, they are treating womanhood itself—the defining feature of
half of humankind—as though it is a disposable commodity.
Under the dictates of this new dispensation, anyone,
regardless of physiology, must be allowed to lay claim to the biological
realities of the female body. Anyone should have the right to call themselves a
woman.
The misogynistic nature of this revolution has escaped
proper scrutiny precisely because it is understood as progressive—as literally
better than everything that has come before. And it casts everything that has
come before as suspect: All forms of social organization and every idea that denies
this movement’s claims have been deemed retrogressive and actively harmful to
the forward march of greater rights for all.
This is an audacious form of woman-hatred, especially
since it comes in the guise of opening up womanhood, of extending its benefits
to all. But by doing so, it becomes nothing less than an assault on what it
means to be a woman. And it is not being understood as such by its advocates
and their fellow travelers because of a potent combination of two factors:
First, people’s fears of being labeled bigots, and second, a genuine and
commendable effort to extend compassion and care to a very small minority.
That compassion has largely been met with hostility. It
is becoming increasingly clear that the new misogyny shares one feature with
the old: contempt for women. The difference is that the contempt is now coming
from the radical extremes of the trans movement. As the signs carried by trans
activists who recently protested a women’s conference in the UK read, “Suck my
dick you transphobic cunt.” This is not progress. This is misogyny.
These radicals insist on redefining women in masculine
terms. Women are as tough as men; they are not biologically different from men;
indeed, many of them were born men, came of age as men, and, despite having
lived in the guise of women for but a scant portion of their lives, feel
entitled to take positions of power away from women. Even motherhood must be
acknowledged as something men should be allowed to claim as their own.
Classic misogyny claimed that men were better than women
merely by dint of being born male. The new misogyny insists that being female
isn’t an essential biological fact but a mutable identity, something anyone can
be. It gives men permission to say to women: We can be women, too.
This flies in the face of all history and experience of
Homo sapiens. Biological differences between the sexes are real; indeed, those
differences make it possible for us to exist. Literally. But today’s radical
egalitarians do not like the consequences and choices that flow from that fact
and are currently attempting to erase it from our collective cultural
experience.
Acknowledging the distinction between biological sex and
how one expresses one’s gender identity is not the issue. That cultural battle
has largely been settled in favor of greater acceptance of fluidity in gender
expression. No, this is something more radical, and it is poised to turn a
nascent fourth wave of feminism into a form of female cultural erasure.
Feminists have long argued that although men and women
are fundamentally different, they deserve equal treatment as a matter of human
rights. “Ain’t I a Woman?” was the plaintive demand of feminist Sojourner
Truth. The trans-rights movement answers that demand with: There is no such
thing as a woman.
And so women now find themselves unwittingly forced into
the position of revanchists, trying to reclaim territory they long ago won in
their struggle for equality.
* * *
In A Vindication of the Rights of Woman,
published in 1792, the pioneering British feminist Mary Wollstonecraft
memorably insisted that women were rational beings, as capable as men and as
deserving of opportunity. “I shall first consider women in the grand light of
human creatures, who, in common with men, are placed on this earth to unfold
their faculties,” she wrote. “Virtue can only flourish among equals.” The men
of her time were not easily convinced; Horace Walpole called Wollstonecraft a
“hyena in petticoats.”
Yet by the 19th century, the emergence of what is now
called “first-wave feminism” had made gains, particularly around the demands
for female suffrage. The feminism of the 1848 Seneca Falls Declaration, led by
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, embraced the idea that women were
different from men but no less equal. Indeed, they often invoked women’s
supposedly superior moral sense to argue for an expansion of their rights in
the political realm.
In the 20th century, so-called second-wave feminism
focused on extensions of these public rights, such as the right of women to
make money while working in a job of their choosing, to obtain lines of credit
in their own name, and to serve on juries. By the 1960s, feminists were also
winning battles for greater reproductive rights, reform of divorce and
marital-rape laws, protections against domestic violence, and equal pay and
educational opportunities. Many of those rights were enshrined in federal laws,
such as the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972.
This second wave, though more radical in some ways, still
often invoked women’s unique qualities as women as justification for seeking
political power. “The personal is political,” a phrase much in use in the 1960s
and 1970s, signaled that commitment. In their efforts to combat misogyny and
sexism in politics and culture, second-wave feminists created new, women-only
spaces (such as domestic violence shelters) and developed theories about
women’s leadership styles as more cooperative and inclusive than men’s. And the
battle against sexism waged by the second wave still acknowledged the
biological realities of being a woman, even if a few outré figures insisted
that those realities also potentially limited women’s opportunities; a radical
thinker named Shulamith Firestone dreamed of a day when women would be
liberated from biology through the widespread use of artificial wombs, for
example.
By the 1990s, third-wave feminists extended the feminist
critique further, coopting previously sexist tropes and misogynistic language
such as “bitch” and engaging in a more “sex-positive” approach to womanhood.
They were critical of their second-wave feminist mothers; many rejected the
label “feminist” entirely. Culture, not politics, was their chosen battlefield.
Within every wave of feminism, women struggled among
themselves with biological essentialism and the attendant questions it raised.
Did the ability to become pregnant and give birth hamper women’s ability to
succeed in society, for example, or did it create an imperative for society to
offer special protections for them? Feminist theorists continue to argue about
whether defining women in any way related to biology reinforces the very thing
that has been used to justify the oppression of women for centuries.
Despite considerable disagreement, however, no one before
had denied women the reality of their own biological existence. Rather, the
argument that triumphed and made women in the Western world some of the freest
people on earth was that whatever differences existed, women were of equal
value to men in public life, and their immutable qualities (including
motherhood) were as central to human flourishing as the immutable qualities of
men.
Today, a fourth wave is emerging, but it does not
resemble anything like the feminism of the past, because it contains within it
the radical notion that biological sex differences are not real.
* * *
Its early iterations can be found in the 2000s, when
women’s-studies departments at universities began recasting themselves as
gender-studies programs. To study women is to acknowledge the realities and
limits of biology. To study gender is, according to its most radical
proponents, to study the limitless experience of any number of self-defined
identities.
The godmother of gender theory, Judith Butler of UC
Berkeley, argues in her book Gender Trouble that “male”
and “female” are merely arbitrary, constructed categories, a binary based not
on any biological realities but rather on oppression. Gender is a performance,
a game anyone can and should play, and any efforts to create special
protections for women or acknowledge the limits of physical differences between
men and women are merely excuses made by the patriarchy to hoard power.
Everything is socially constructed, including the physiological experience of
bearing children (which Butler describes not as a miracle but as “the
compulsory obligation on women’s bodies to reproduce”).
Instead, Butler argues that by not recognizing biological
realities, “the culturally constructed body will then be liberated, neither to
its ‘natural’ past, nor to its original pleasures, but to an open future of
cultural possibilities.”
But how open is that future if it requires everyone to
adhere to a dogma that denies biological realities? Butler and her many
acolytes have taken literally Simone de Beauvoir’s claim that “one is not born,
but rather becomes, a woman.” In her landmark 1949 book, The Second
Sex, Beauvoir observed how social and cultural forces shape one’s
perception of oneself and the public’s idea of what a woman is and should do.
Hers was a plea for greater understanding—by men, social institutions, and
women themselves—of the fact that the experience of being female created unique
challenges and insights not always understood or respected by the other half of
the species. However revolutionary its aims, Beauvoir’s analysis was grounded
in biological realities.
By contrast, anyone who believes that biological
realities root women in a particular experience is, according to the new
dispensation, a “TERF,” or Trans-Exclusionary Radical Feminist. In a recent
interview with the Guardian, Butler went even further, calling
anyone who argued for sex-based rights (and sex-exclusive spaces such as
women’s prisons, rape crisis centers, and the like) a fascist: “The anti-gender
ideology is one of the dominant strains of fascism in our time. So the TERFs
will not be part of the contemporary struggle against fascism.”
* * *
There are many people outside the academy who are eager
to embrace such radical ideas because by doing so they believe they will help
trans people, whom they also believe to be at serious risk. Reporting on a
recent protest by trans activists against Netflix (for airing a Dave Chappelle
comedy special they think is transphobic), Variety noted that
among the protestors was the creator of the series Transparent,
Joey (formerly Jill) Soloway. “Trans people are in the middle of a holocaust,”
Soloway declared. “Apartheid, murder, a state of emergency, human rights
crisis, there’s a mental health crisis. There’s a suicide crisis, a bullying
crisis, an anxiety, depression, self-hatred state of emergency crisis.”
If this were true, tolerance for dissenters from the new
orthodoxy would rightfully be seen as a serious moral error. Perhaps that is
why trans activists insist that compulsory acceptance of the idea that biology
is a figment is a necessary stop on the road to true tolerance. Colin Wright
has observed at Quillette that “as more and more people refer to themselves as
trans, nonbinary, two-spirited, and gender-non-conforming, there’s been a push
to realign the objective reality of biological sex to match one’s subjectively
experienced gender identity. In the emerging view, the very notion of males and
females existing as real biological entities is now seen as obsolete.”
This is a more extreme claim than saying that sex exists
on a “spectrum” or that gender is a fluid category that allows for a range of
expressions. As Wright notes, according to the reigning trans ideological
posture, “a person may literally reimagine their biology, as if by alchemy, by
merely stating so.”
Embracing this is not optional. Trans activists insist on
the transformation of words and their meaning so as not to offend the extremely
small minority of people who identify as women but were not born female. To
show proper respect, we are told that women are no longer women, but “people
with vaginas.” Women are not mothers, but “birthing people” or “chest-feeders.”
The new misogynists have cleverly coopted the language of
feminism and its emphasis on misogyny. Trans activists denounce what they call
“transmisogyny” and discuss the implications of the “cotton ceiling.” The
latter phrase is a reimagining of “glass ceiling,” the supposedly invisible
barrier to women’s career success that second-wave feminism devoted a great
deal of energy to shattering. By contrast, the “cotton ceiling” refers to
women’s underwear, and, as the BBC described, the phrase is “intended to
represent the difficulty some trans women feel they face when seeking
relationships or sex.” Planned Parenthood of Toronto hosted a workshop devoted
to the cotton ceiling; its director described the session as exploring “the
ways in which ideologies of transphobia and transmisogyny impact sexual desire.”
These changes have happened quickly, most noticeably in
the transformation of the meaning of words we have used for generations. The
results have been jarring. A Huffington Post headline from October read,
“California Governor Signs Law to Improve Outcomes for Black Birthing People
and Babies.” The Centers for Disease Control under the Biden administration
embraced the trend, encouraging “pregnant people” to get COVID vaccinations in
late September.
Similarly, in September, the British medical journal the Lancet advertised
its latest issue on social media with the quote “Historically, the anatomy and
physiology of bodies with vaginas have been neglected.” Lest you think these
new semantic rules are equally applied, a few days earlier, the Lancet had
no problem promoting an article about prostate health with the following
statement: “About 10 million men are currently living with a diagnosis of
prostate cancer—making it a major health issue.” It is only women whose bodies
have been erased and replaced by “bodies with vaginas.”
The deliberate sowing of confusion about what to call men
and women was also on display when the Biden administration announced that
Rachel Levine, an assistant secretary at the Department of Health and Human
Services, was made a four-star admiral in the U.S. Public Health Service
Commissioned Corps. The administration boasted that Levine was both the first
transgender appointee to reach this rank as well as the “first female four-star
admiral.”
But Levine in fact is not biologically female (she
transitioned in 2011, when she was in her forties, but lived most of her life
as a biological male). She identifies as a woman, and it would have been more
appropriate to say she was the first woman to achieve that rank, or more
precisely, the first trans woman. But the use of the word “female” by the Biden
administration was purposeful. It is meant to elide distinctions based on
biological realities, denying half the population its unique characteristics,
all while those who use the term are patting themselves on the back for their
inclusiveness and tolerance. No wonder the announcement prompted cynicism; as
one observer noted on Twitter, Levine’s appointment proved that “anything women
can do, biological men can do better.”
This is not an argument for denying Levine her right to
identify as she chooses. But dehumanizing biological women by turning them into
abstractions such as “bodies with vaginas” and “people with cervixes” is not
striking a blow for tolerance and equality. It is the bureaucratizion of
misogyny.
And it spares no one. This fall, the American Civil
Liberties Union chose to honor Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the
anniversary of her death by removing the word “woman” from something she had
said during her confirmation hearings. The doctored statement now read, “The
decision whether or not to bear a child is central to a [person]’s life, to
[their] well-being and dignity.” Just a year ago, the ACLU had published the
same quotation with the word “woman” still intact.
The effort to transform words and their meaning is part
of a broader effort to police behavior regarding who can and cannot speak for
women and their experiences. Just as an earlier generation of activists made
use of “queer theory” to pursue a political agenda that called for “queering”
normal spaces and activities (to chip away at “normativity” in hopes of
eventually erasing the concept of “normal” entirely), today’s activists seek to
use language to confuse what is understood as average or normal while also policing
the behavior of others.
* * *
This effort extends beyond semantics. It also demands the
destruction of female-only spaces. If, as trans activists demand, we accept
that someone born male can identify as female, then we must also accept that they
should have access to women’s spaces. Contrary to what progressives claim,
however, this idea is neither popular nor justified by historical precedent.
When women understandably object, citing concerns for their own physical safety
or privacy, they are not listened to respectfully, nor are their concerns
treated seriously. Rather, they are called bigoted.
Transphobia is also wielded as a weapon against anyone
who challenges born-male people competing as women in sports competitions.
Trans women with significant physical advantages, like the mixed-martial-arts
athlete who identifies as female and pummeled a born-female competitor while
wearing an “End Trans Genocide” T-shirt, are using the biological advantages
that come from having been born male (and experiencing male puberty) against
women. Women are losing out on college scholarships, membership on Olympic
teams, and careers in professional athletics because trans women who compete
with a significant physiological advantage are beating them (in the case of
mixed-martial-arts competitions, quite literally).
Trans activists tend to downplay the idea that
trans-female athletes compete at a significant advantage compared with
born-female athletes. Yet trans women have clearly figured this out. University
of Pennsylvania student Lia Thomas, who is biologically male and competed as a
male in NCAA Division I swimming for three years, now identifies—and competes
as—a woman. Not surprisingly, she is obliterating female competitors thanks to
the great physiological advantages she has as someone who was born male and
went through puberty as a male, with the resulting increase in strength, muscle
mass, and bone density. “Thomas blasted the number one 200 free time and the
second-fastest 500 free time in the nation,” SwimSwam news reported after a
recent meet, where Thomas broke Penn’s existing women’s swim records. As a
male, Thomas was one of many good but not exceptional swimmers. But by
competing as a woman, Thomas has now become an Olympic-caliber athlete. And her
extraordinary boost in status comes at the expense of female athletes whose
training and determination can never overcome Thomas’s obvious physical
advantages.
The absurdity of calling this situation a blow for
equality was captured well in a recent episode of South Park called
“Board Girls.” The episode features a character, Heather Swanson, who
transitioned from male to female two weeks earlier and goes on to win every
female sports competition in the town. Sporting a full beard and a masculine
physique, she trounces the wife of “PC Principal” in the town’s “strong woman”
competition. Her comeuppance comes in the form of the “board girls,” an
all-female board-games club that destroys her in competitions that do not
require physical strength.
South Park was parodying something that our
nation’s cultural elite have embraced uncritically: the notion that the way to
stop the stereotyping of women as the weaker sex is to have women’s desires,
interests, and accomplishments represented by people who were born male.
This extends to the workplace, where people born male are
now granted the moral authority to speak on behalf of all women. Consider a
recent profile of Natalie Egan in Elle. Egan, a self-described
failed former “tech bro,” transitioned to female and soon rebranded herself as
the voice and face of gender equality in the workplace. “It wasn’t just because
she was trans,” Elle notes. “It was because, having left the
identity of a successful white man behind, she was experiencing marginalization
and vulnerability.” Egan’s executive coach says Egan “really had the experience
as a woman of not being taken seriously, and not being acknowledged as an
equal.”
Egan now enjoys lucrative invites as a keynote speaker at
women’s networking events and is selling an app, Translator, that “works with
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and Human Resources departments at companies
like Claire’s and ViacomCBS.” Good for her, but Egan’s handful of years living
as a woman does not automatically grant her the authority to speak on behalf of
women in the workplace.
Most disturbingly, the new misogyny demands that women
conform to trans ideology in even the most intimate situations: the people to
whom they feel sexually attracted. Trans activists insist that desire itself is
socially constructed, and so can be deconstructed to conform to trans demands
for acceptance.
A much-lauded new book, The Right to Sex, by
the Oxford philosopher Amia Srinivasan, begins with an unusual disclaimer: “At
birth, bodies are sorted as ‘male’ or ‘female,’ though many bodies must be
mutilated to fit one category or the other, and many bodies will later protest
against the decision that was made.” She goes on to ask, “Is anyone innately
attracted to penises or vagina? Or are we first attracted to ways of being in
the world, including bodily ways, which we later learn to associate with
certain specific parts of the body?”
In other words, sexual desire and sexual preference are
merely learned behaviors, roles we can take on and discard as we please. “Some
bodies are for other bodies to have sex with,” Srinivasan states. But not every
body. To the gay man who expresses “disgust at vaginas,” she asks, “Is this the
expression of an innate, and thus permissible revulsion—or a learned and
suspect misogyny?”
In practice, this approach to desire has led to the
policing of sexuality on a grand scale, particularly of lesbians, who insist
that they are attracted only to women with female sex organs. The BBC recently
interviewed lesbians who had been threatened and labeled transphobic because
they acknowledged that they were sexually attracted only to biological women.
As the reporter notes: “They described being harassed and silenced if they
tried to discuss the issue openly. I received online abuse myself when I tried to
find interviewees using social media.”
The sex-shaming is driven by a small number of activists
who have outsize influence thanks to social media and cancel culture. “I’ve had
someone saying they would rather kill me than Hitler,” a 24-year-old lesbian woman
told the BBC. “They said they would strangle me with a belt if they were in a
room with me and Hitler.” Her crime: “She says she is only sexually attracted
to women who are biologically female and have vaginas. She therefore only has
sex and relationships with women who are biologically female.” As a result, she
has been called transphobic, a TERF, and a “genital fetishist” by trans
activists.
Another lesbian activist told the reporter, “Lesbians are
still extremely scared to speak because they think they won’t be believed,
because the trans ideology is so silencing everywhere.” “This word
‘transphobia’ has been placed like a dragon in the path to stop discussion
about really important issues,” another said.
In a recent interview with the libertarian UK magazine
Spiked, lesbian activist Kate Harris was blunt about what is happening: “At its
very heart is misogyny. It’s so regressive, so misogynistic and so homophobic.
It reinforces all the old stereotypes that we thought had gone.” Harris notes
emphatically that this is not an argument for intolerance against trans people.
“We want every single child to grow up being what he or she wants to be, not
tied down by pink or blue gender roles,” she says. “I have fought for 50 years
for people’s right to do what they want. Wear a dress! Call yourself Ariadne!
But don’t say you are a woman. And don’t say that I am transphobic if I don’t
want to have sex with you because you’re a man with a penis wearing a dress.”
* * *
At its root, misogyny is a hatred of the things that give
women their unique power and their unique vulnerability—the biological
differences that make women as a group physically weaker in hand-to-hand
combat, for example, but powerful enough to perform the labor of pregnancy and
childbirth. And to outlive men. One of feminism’s salient achievements was
arguing that those unique qualities did not make women morally, intellectually,
legally, or politically inferior.
The new misogyny in effect says that it does. It claims
that since everyone who wants to be a woman does not have to be born that way,
it’s offensive and bigoted to believe the biological facts that flow from the
truth that one is—as the title of feminist Adrienne Rich’s 1976 book put it—Of
Woman Born. It forces on society a lie about women and enforces it through
illiberal intimidation. It is neither tolerant nor liberating.
Spiked reported on a recent feminist human-rights
conference in the UK, where women, many of them survivors of male violence, had
convened to discuss issues such as rape, domestic abuse, and sex trafficking.
Trans activists picketed and tried to shout down speakers, including women who
had organized to protect other women from rape in a Kenyan refugee camp. Trans
activists claimed the conference “puts the lives of our trans and non-binary
friends in danger” because it focused on the needs of those born female.
One of the most prominent critics of trans activist
extremism, Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling, has been attacked
relentlessly on social media by activists after she tweeted support for a woman
who had lost her job for saying biological sex was real, and for supporting
lesbian activist Magdalen Berns, who had argued publicly that lesbians should
not be called bigots merely because they aren’t sexually attracted to trans
women. As Rowling wrote in a statement on her personal website, she has dealt
with “threats of violence, to be told I was literally killing trans people with
my hate, to be called cunt and bitch and, of course, for my books to be
burned.”
In late November, however, Rowling posted on Twitter that
police had to get involved after trans activists posted pictures of themselves
in front of her house with her address clearly visible in a blatant attempt to
dox her. She noted how many women she’s spoken to, including many with no
public profile, who “have been subject to campaigns of intimidation which range
from being hounded on social media, the targeting of their employers, all the
way up to doxing and direct threats of violence, including rape.” She added,
“None of these women are protected in the way I am. They and their families
have been put into a state of fear and distress for no other reason than that
they refuse to uncritically accept that the socio-political concept of gender
identity should replace that of sex….I’ve now received so many death threats I
could paper the house with them, and I haven’t stopped speaking out.
Perhaps—and I’m just throwing this out there—the best way to prove your
movement isn’t a threat to women, is to stop stalking, harassing and
threatening us.”
Genuine tolerance for trans people doesn’t require the
erasure of the characteristics that half of the population believes to be
intrinsic to their sense of personhood. Erasing women to inaugurate a “new
normal” regarding gender is destructive, not tolerant. And it offers no
recognition that what might be acceptable for adults (trans-friendly bathrooms)
could be uncomfortable for vulnerable women (domestic violence shelters) or for
children.
An extremely small minority is not merely demanding
tolerance to live as they choose; they are demanding that the overwhelming
majority conform to the language and practices they insist upon, or else be labeled
evildoers. They demand that everyone declare and perform their own gender
preferences and pronouns and proclivities with no regard for privacy or
restraint.
It’s a strange bargain: not, in the tradition of previous
eras of feminism, to extend the rights and protections of womanhood to people
born male who now want to live as women, but rather to denigrate the very
category of woman, both in language and in function, by claiming it for
themselves. The disrespect is staggering. And so is the danger.
Elizabeth Warren Says It’s Time to Destroy the Supreme Court
By Charles C. W. Cooke
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
In the Boston Globe, Elizabeth Warren writes that she now supports destroying the Supreme
Court:
To restore balance and integrity to
a broken institution, Congress must expand the Supreme Court by four or more
seats.
Some oppose the idea of court expansion. They have
argued that expansion is “court-packing,” that it would start a never-ending
cycle of adding justices to the bench, and that it would undermine the court’s
integrity.
They are wrong. And their concerns
do not reflect the gravity of the Republican hijacking of the Supreme Court.
Why “four or more”? Because Elizabeth Warren likes three
of the current justices and dislikes six of the current justices (one of whom
has been there for more than thirty years; two of whom have been there for more
than 15 years), and because adding four or more new justices would ensure that
the people she likes would have a majority.
That’s it. That’s the case.
Warren’s apologists will explain that this is just a
“messaging bill.” And they’ll be right. It is a messaging bill. And Warren’s
message is that she’s a tyrant.
When this idea was last mooted — by FDR in 1937 — a
Congress filled with supermajorities from the president’s own party chose
emphatically to reject it. The Chair of the House Rules Committee described the
plan as “the most terrible threat to constitutional government that has arisen
in the entire history of the country,” while Joseph O’Mahoney, who never met a
plank of the New Deal that he disliked, told a friend that it “smells of
Machiavelli and Machiavelli stinks.”
The Senate Judiciary Committee, meanwhile, proposed that
the idea “violates every sacred tradition of American democracy” and “all
precedents in the history of our government,” and runs “in direct violation of
the spirit of the American Constitution.” Such a move, it submitted, would
represent “an invasion of judicial power such as has never before been
attempted in this country” and “make this government one of men rather than one
of law.”
In conclusion, the Senate insisted that the measure
“should be so emphatically rejected that its parallel will never again be
presented to the free representatives of the free people of America.” By
presenting its parallel, Senator Warren is telling us something about herself.
We should listen.
The March of the New American Leninists
By Kevin D. Williamson
Thursday, December 16, 2021
Steve Bannon, the recently indicted Trump sycophant and
ex-Breitbart jackass, sometimes describes himself as a “Leninist.”
I believe him. And he isn’t alone.
For Vladimir Lenin, a revolution required three
preconditions: The masses had to be unwilling to accept the
status quo, the ruling class had to be unable to enforce the
status quo, and, as a result of the first two, there had to be an outbreak of
political fervor and activity among the masses. Once these conditions were
satisfied, Lenin would be ready to move on to the question of revolutionary
instruments, which in his case were war, terror, and executions.
(It is worth keeping in mind that Bolsheviks wanted to
outlaw capital punishment, and Lenin overruled them: “How can you make a
revolution without executions?”)
Americans are a little sentimental about revolutions, because
we had one of the very few good ones. But the revolutionary family tree gets
pretty ugly pretty quickly: The American Revolution helps to inspire the French
Revolution, with its purges and terror; the French Revolution provides a model
for Lenin and his gang; the Russian Revolution informs the Iranian revolution. The line from the Boston
Tea Party to the Iran hostage crisis is not a bold, straight one, but it can be
seen, if you want to see it. Revolutions are dangerous, often in ways that are
not obvious at the time and become understood only decades later.
Lenin, who wrote about the world in terms of capital-H
History, was also a practical man. (Hence the terror and the executions.) And
so he probably would have understood, as Steve Bannon and others of that ilk
(from Bernie Sanders to Eric Zemmour) understand, that there are additional
practical considerations.
One of those, which we can see emerging in the United
States on both sides of the political aisle, involves a question of loyalty.
Loyalty is very much on the minds of American political partisans, with each
side denouncing the other as “traitors” and “seditionists” and
“insurrectionists” and the like. If you are not used to the intellectual
compartmentalization required of an American politician, it can be jarring to
hear, e.g., Senator Sanders demanding “revolution” at 10 a.m. and
denouncing “insurrection” at 10:15 a.m.
But the most relevant issue involving loyalty is this: We
are in a pre-revolutionary situation because the regime — by which I mean not
the Biden administration but the American constitutional order itself and the
principal institutions associated with it — is being made to compete for the
loyalty of Americans against individual politicians (Donald Trump), particular
political organizations and movements (BLM), and less well-defined political
tendencies (right-wing identity and left-wing identity). There has always been
partisan fanaticism, and there have always been demagogues. When loyalty to a
political leader or a political movement supplants loyalty to the regime, the
nation grows dangerously close to revolution in proportion to the degree to
which such tendencies are general and widespread.
When some significant share of citizens feel themselves
more closely identified with a particular politician than with the
constitutional order per se, then you have the conditions for
a coup d’Ă©tat and a caudillo; when some significant share of
citizens feel themselves more closely identified with a party or a movement
than with the constitutional order per se, then you have the
conditions for a more broad-based revolution. The first gets you an Augusto
Pinochet or a Francisco Franco, and the second gets you a Russian Revolution or
a French Revolution — both of which eventually produced caudillos of their own,
meaning that they ended up in much the same place.
As far as the events of January 6 go, the “stolen
election” fiction was a moral-permission slip for acting on loyalties (and the
social demands associated with such loyalties) that long preceded the 2020
election and will long outlast it. Some of these revolutionists invaded the
Capitol, but the more important ones work there. And what they hope to do is to
achieve what Lenin wanted: “unrestricted power based on force, not law.” The
legal pretexts feverishly dreamt up by such ghoulish amoralists as Rudy
Giuliani were exercises in publicity, not exercises in law. The lawyers are the
marketing department of the revolution.
There are reasons for hope. Donald Trump failed to
overturn the 2020 election, and the republican spirit remains alive in
such robust institutions as the jury-trial system, as Charles C. W.
Cooke notes.
This being the United States of America, our
revolutionary fervor is driven in some non-trivial part by cynical
profit-seeking, with media figures as superficially different but fundamentally
identical as the daft galaxy of Fox News and MSNBC pundits feverishly working
to convince Americans that our society and our institutions are not in need of
reform but are in fact so irredeemably corrupt that they must be overthrown.
These arguments are made almost purely for commercial purposes — there isn’t a
lot of money to be made from sensible conversations about incremental reform —
but their influence extends well beyond the balance sheets of their corporate
parents. I used to say, with unwarranted confidence, that the real world isn’t
Twitter, and Twitter isn’t the real world. That turns out not to be true.
There is plenty of cynicism at work in the media
business, but it would be wrong to think that figures such as Tucker Carlson or
Rachel Maddow create revolutionary fervor on their own — they are only
supplying a preexisting demand in the market. They do not create demand any
more than Purdue Pharma or Pornhub do. The ultimate source of the revolutionary
fervor is in the people themselves, in the “masses,” as the creaky old Marxists
still call them.
Lenin would understand our situation. He might even be a
little bit proud.
The Public-Health Mafia
By Philip Klein
Thursday, December 16, 2021
The public-health community is behaving like the
Mafia. They come offering protection. They control the politicians. And they
threaten businesses that don’t accede to their demands.
Led by boss Anthony Fauci, and comprising many
federal, state, and local officials, they have exploited the Covid pandemic to
orchestrate a campaign of fear and intimidation to consolidate their power, and
they have no plans to give any of it up.
The protection racket is based on the conceit that if we
simply do as they command, we will vanquish Covid. It started with the
now-infamous “15 days to slow the spread” and the effort to “flatten the curve”
to prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed. This quickly turned into six weeks
and then months of rolling lockdowns and, in some areas, more than a year of
closed schools.
Vaccines, they assured us, were to be the end point of
the pandemic. But a year after they became available, and eight months after
they have been widely available, the medical Cosa Nostra still insist that
people who are fully vaccinated — and boosted — need to wear masks in public
(even though they initially convinced people that masks were ineffective).
When the policies that they propose do not produce the
promised results, and as one variant after another surfaces, the response is to
argue that we have shown insufficient respect to them and that we need to make
amends by being more loyal to their guidance.
It is not only the public to whom the public-health mafia
offers protection but also politicians. Any politician who defies the orders of
the public-health community can expect blistering media coverage whenever there
is a surge in cases, as has been the case with Florida governor Ron DeSantis.
Politicians who follow public-health guidance might not be protecting their
constituents from the virus, but they are protecting themselves from getting
blamed, as with New York governor Kathy Hochul, by operating with the
imprimatur of the family. Recall how it was common to blame Donald Trump for the hundreds of thousands of Covid deaths on his watch.
But President Biden, who has deferred to health officials, is spared any blame,
despite the fact that more people have died of Covid under Biden.
“His two big promises were to get Covid behind us and to
get rid of Donald Trump,” NBC’s Chuck Todd said on Sunday. “Covid’s not behind
us, and Donald Trump’s still lurking. It’s not his fault, but is that why we’re
in this no-man’s land here for him?”
And herein lies the essence of the control over political
leaders. The current Covid surge, while openly reported on, isn’t being framed
as Biden’s fault, because he has agreed to defer to the experts. He is granted
protection, and any blame for the persistence of Covid is targeted at those who
are challenging his mandates.
To be clear, it is perfectly appropriate for
public-health officials to present the best and most up-to-date evidence to
decision-makers and advise them on what they believe to be the best course of
action to fight the spread of infectious diseases. But it is the role of
elected leaders to weigh any such advice against other priorities.
Unfortunately, too many leaders have uncritically ceded
authority to public-health officials, myopically focusing on reducing Covid
spread over all other priorities — including economic well-being, religious
observance, social interaction, and the education and mental health of children
(who face virtually no threat from the virus). And they continue to do so — even
though following the advice of these so-called experts has not shut down the
virus.
This week, New York’s Hochul, citing the health
commissioner, implemented a more severe statewide mask mandate, attributing it
to a post-Thanksgiving surge despite the state’s 82 percent adult vaccination
rate. Under the new rules, all offices, restaurants, stores, and businesses of
any kind will be required to confirm vaccination status for all or force
everybody to wear masks. Hochul’s policy calls for masking two-year-olds and
requiring proof of at least one dose starting at age five.
Failure to comply carries steep fines for businesses. But
beyond the fines, there is a further threat that is left unsaid. That is,
political leaders, egged on by health officials, already showed that they could
shut down businesses with the stroke of their pens. The press release
announcing the new mandate claimed it was to “prevent business disruption.” All new mandates carry an
underlying whiff of “Nice business there; shame if something were to happen to
it.”
While some, frustrated by the never-ending Covid
restrictions, have rallied around the cry to “Fire Fauci,” the reality is that
doing so would not make much of a difference. If history has taught us
anything, it’s that if one boss gets taken down, another will pop up in his
place.
What needs to change is that elected leaders have to
learn to stand up to the public-health mob.
Last week, another Democratic governor, Colorado’s Jared
Polis, provided a better example.
“The emergency is over,” he said. “You know,
public-health [officials] don’t get to tell people what to wear; that’s just
not their job. Public-health [officials] would say to always wear a mask
because it decreases flu and decreases [other airborne illnesses]. But that’s
not something that you require; you don’t tell people what to wear.”
It’s time for more leaders to break up this public-health
mafia.
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
There Is No Reason for Anyone Else to Pay Your Student-Loan Debt
By Charles C. W. Cooke
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
The strangest thing happened to a friend of mine on
the night of his 18th birthday. There he was, lying in bed after an evening of
celebration and revelry, when, all of a sudden, a strong and insistent man
broke in through the window of his apartment, kidnapped him, and forced him to
take out $70,000 in student loans. Alarmingly, the saga didn’t end there.
Despite my friend’s urgent protestations, this man personally escorted him to
his college matriculation, sat with him while he chose his classes, and then
spent four years ensuring that he not only attended them, but benefited from
them as much as was practically possible. And here’s the worst part: Despite
having put my friend through this rotten ordeal, this dastardly man has
steadfastly refused to transfer responsibility for the loans to the good ol’
American taxpayer. Can you believe it?
I joke, of course. But I’m afraid that this is how the
people who demand that the “federal government” must pay off their student
debts are beginning to sound to the average American: as spoiled, selfish,
delusional, buck-passing grifters, who spend their days searching for reasons
to balance their budgets on the backs of the less fortunate. “Cancel my debts!”
they shout. And the rest of us ask, “Er, why?”
The core problem the loan-forgiveness advocates have is
that their cause is motivated by nothing more noble than a desire to have more
money. The movement’s more skilled supporters attempt to abstract this
away a little, naturally — “If I didn’t have to pay my loans,” they say, “I’d
have more money to spend on consumer products, which would have a beneficial
macroeconomic effect”; “If I didn’t have to repay my loans, I could get on the
property ladder”; “If I didn’t have my loans to pay, I would be less anxious
about money” — but, as is abundantly obvious to everyone on the outside, these
are ultimately just different ways of saying the same thing: “I would like to
have more cash.”
Anyone can do this. If I didn’t have to pay my mortgage,
I’d have more money to spend on consumer products, which would have a
beneficial macroeconomic effect. Ipso facto, the federal government
should pay my mortgage. If my plumber didn’t have to make the payments on the
F-150 he uses to transport his equipment, he would be more readily able to buy
a home. Ipso facto, the federal government should pay off his
truck.
“Ah,” cry the loan-forgivers, “But that’s different!”
Is it, though? Why? It seems pretty simple to me. I benefit from my home; I
should pay it off. The plumber benefits from his truck; he should pay it off.
Students benefit from college; they should pay it off. “Yes,” comes the
response. “But taking out loans is the only way to pay for college, which is so
expensive!” Okay, and the same is true of housing and of cars. “But education
is a human right!” Well, even if we accept that, by that way of
thinking, so are housing and transportation. “But college is less affordable than it
used to be, thanks to an unholy combination of federal subsidies and strict
controls on supply!” May I introduce you to the real-estate market? “But my
going to college is good for everyone!” No, it’s really, really not.
Recently, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez griped
about her own loans. “I’m 32 years old now,” she said. “I have over $17,000 in
student-loan debt, and I didn’t go to graduate school because I knew that
getting another degree would drown me in debt that I would never be able to
surpass. This is unacceptable.” Why? Which part of this, exactly, is
“unacceptable”? Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has debts because
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez took on debts in order to pay for the
education that she received — an education that has landed her a plum job
in Congress. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez doesn’t have more debt than she would
have had if she’d borrowed more than she did, because, aware of the tradeoffs,
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez demurred. I cannot see the problem. Are we really
supposed to believe that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s having some more letters
next to her name would be of such extraordinary benefit to the nation at large
that the rest of us should gratefully pony up and pay for it? Give me a break.
If there is anything “unacceptable” about Ocasio-Cortez’s
situation, it is that she seems genuinely to believe that she is a victim. As a
member of Congress, Ocasio-Cortez makes $175,000 per year, and as has been
widely reported, she is doing sufficiently well to have bought herself a Tesla.
And good for her! In all sincerity, I wish her great riches and happiness. But
that she would even consider asking for help in repaying the $17,000 worth of
debt from which she’s already benefited considerably? That is obscene.
Just pay your bills, slackers. Everyone else has to.
Gone Too Far
By Michael Brendan Dougherty
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
As cable television broadcast the scenes of Trump
supporters breaking past police lines and even smashing their way into the
Capitol on January 6, the president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., texted Mark
Meadows, the White House chief of staff: “He’s got to condemn this sh** ASAP.
The Capitol Police tweet is not enough.”
A little later, Don Jr. texted again: “We need an Oval
office address. He [then-president Trump] has to lead now. It has gone too far
and gotten out of hand.”
It’s that last statement that reveals the whole
truth of January 6 for Trump’s supporters. Donald Trump’s claims of
massive election fraud (only in the states he lost, btw) were treated by people
around him as a kind of naughty habit that had to be tolerated or indulged.
When the people who treated these claims very seriously started acting like
they were true — when they tried to “Stop the Steal” by interrupting the
ceremony in which Congress certifies the results of the presidential election —
then it had “gone too far and gotten out of hand.”
For those few hours, several people in the conservative
media world who had influence with the president tried to intervene on behalf
of reality. “Please, get him on TV — [the Capitol riot is] destroying
everything you accomplished,” Brian Kilmeade texted Meadows.
Also Laura Ingraham: “The president needs to tell people
in the Capitol to go home. This is hurting all of us. He is destroying his
legacy.”
“Can he make a statement, ask people to leave the
Capitol?” pleaded Sean Hannity.
Just as Tucker Carlson had once traveled to Mar-a-Lago to
ask the president to take the Covid-19 pandemic more seriously, these Fox hosts
were intervening with a man who they knew took television seriously, more
seriously than his constitutional duties.
Hearing the texts read aloud at this late date in the
year does provide a sense of clarity. Many of Trump’s lies before this seemed
to have little cost at all. Many of them had been brazened out until they
produced a kind of success. The lies that Trump told that day to that crowd had
produced this specific, televised disaster. Unfortunately, it
was a predicted disaster.
But almost everyone knew it was wrong while it was happening. It took effort to
forget.
In the months after January 6, the politically correct move
for Trump’s cable-news apologists has been to ignore the fact that the people
who set about “investigating” the supposed vote fraud have turned up nothing of
consequence or merit. Or, it has been to focus obsessively on the potential
involvement of the FBI or other intel agencies in the riots, to speculate about
who may have been planted as agent provocateurs in the crowd. This is worth
inquiring about, especially after the FBI’s cack-handed work trying to
instigate a kidnapping plot against Governor Whitmer went south.
But the riot at the Capitol happened because President
Donald Trump simply lied, and lied, and lied. On that very day he lied about
what the vice president’s powers were. “All Vice President Pence has to do is
send it back to the states to recertify, and we become president, and you are
the happiest people,” he told the crowd.
Presidents have a duty to protect the Constitution; on
that day Trump was subverting it. Even as the ugly scenes were unfolding, Trump
seemed to be instigating the crowd even further, as if he were trying to put
more coercive pressure on his own vice president. He tweeted:
Mike Pence didn’t have the courage
to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution,
giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent
or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the
truth!
There is a kind of partisan kick-reflex that is surely
active in many people reading this. The reflex kicks: The Left is at war with
the Right. It kicks again: Stop punching to your right. It kicks again: Stop
trying to police the Right and stop trying to make it respectable to the Left.
But it’s not them I care about. It’s simply the truth.
Treating Trump like a baby whose feelings had to be coddled at the end resulted
in Ashli Babbitt’s getting shot as she tried to break into Congress against a
lawful order to desist. He could no more Stop the Steal than make Mexico pay
for the wall. But, pay for his actions? Some people did.
One of These Riots Is Not Like the Other
By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
Why make such a big deal about January 6?
Sean Hannity, radio host and off-the-books Donald Trump
adviser, demands to know. After all, Hannity points out, there have been scores of riots, some of them deadly, over the past couple
of years. Why fixate on that one?
Sean Hannity apparently believes that he has the dumbest
audience in America.
The sacking of the Capitol on January 6 by a
gang of enraged Trump acolytes acting on the president’s complaint that the
election had been stolen from him is different from other
riots because of its particular political character.
Stealing Nikes is one thing, and stealing the presidency is another. Hannity
knows this. Most of you know this.
But, apparently, some people need to have it explained to
them.
Consider: There were 21,570 homicides in the United
States in 2020. If one of the victims had been the president of the United
States, we would have made a pretty big deal about it. It would have been on
the news. There might have been congressional hearings. Why? If we take Sean
Hannity’s view, then we should treat such a murder as one murder among the
thousands of murders the United States sees in a typical year.
But, of course, we do not treat the murders of political
leaders that way. We even have a special word for such murders — assassination —
because they are different from your average Saturday-night recreational
shoot-’em-up in Chicago.
Likewise, nobody would care about Hunter Biden’s
shenanigans if his father were the president of an office-supply company
instead of the president of the United States.
We care especially about the killings of political
leaders not because these men and women are special people whose lives are
valuable in a special way. I am sure Abraham Lincoln’s family mourned him in
much the same way as any other murder victim’s family would — but the nation
was convulsed because of the political consequences of the assassination.
Even Sean Hannity knows this is a problem. That is why he
— along with fellow Fox News hosts Laura Ingraham and Brian Kilmeade — texted
Trump’s chief of staff to ask the president to try to put a stop to the riot.
It is strange that these people, who today insist that Trump had nothing to do
with the violent events in question, believed at the time that he was in a
position to stop them.
(Incidentally, isn’t it at least a little improper
for hosts on a so-called news network to be acting in such an advisory
capacity? Didn’t CNN dump Chris Cuomo for precisely that — advising the New
York governor?)
What has been clear to some of us for a long time —
and what is becoming more difficult to deny every day — is that the events of
January 6 were part of an attempted coup d’Ă©tat, one that proceeded
on two fronts: As the rioters occupied the Capitol and disrupted the process of
certifying the Electoral College votes, Trump’s legal minions sought madly for
some pretext upon which to nullify the election. Meanwhile, Trump allies
occupying several points on the far-right tail of the bell curve of
glue-sniffing madness hatched all kinds of supplementary schemes, some of
them involving the military.
A riot that is part of a coup d’Ă©tat is
not very much like a riot that is part of a coup de Target.
It is true that some of the disorder of the past few
years has had a distinctly political — revolutionary — character. The CHOP/CHAZ
episode in Seattle is one example. But planting your flag on a Seattle sidewalk
is a very different thing from having the president of the United States and
his official allies make a serious effort at an autocoup — an effort that is, we
should very much keep in mind, ongoing, with Trump-aligned Republicans working
to take over election-management offices and to continue their effort to
delegitimize the 2020 election through lies and conspiracy kookery.
There is a place in the jails and prisons of California,
Washington, and Illinois for the criminals who rioted and looted in their
cities, burning businesses and carrying out all manner of havoc. And there is a
place in Florence, Colo., for the people who tried to overthrow the government
of the United States on January 6.
I am ecumenical enough that I hope to see justice done in
both cases.
Limited Government Is Back in Fashion. Can Republicans Make the Most of It?
By Noah Rothman
Monday, December 13, 2021
In 2019, First Things magazine published
an open letter that captured a dominant sentiment on the American right. “Against the Dead Consensus” sought to bury the “warmed-over
Reaganism” that passed for conservative thought and policy in favor of
something more muscular. That something was and remains elusive, but what the
letter rejected was plainly specific: the “fetishizing” of “individual
autonomy.”
Thus, the American right joined the left in the race to
get ahead of what seemed like an emerging bipartisan sentiment in favor of
activist government. As New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait noted, forces
were at work that would “eventually render abstract appeals to small-government
conservatism obsolete.” More and more voters were tempted by the promise of an
expansive, overweening public sector that imposed itself on American lives—even
if they disagreed on the forms that imposition should take. The era of big
government was back, and it was here to stay.
What a difference a pandemic makes.
We’re now closing in on the start of the third year of
the global coronavirus outbreak and, with it, the continuation of all the
extraordinary interventions into private life that are starting to feel
terrifyingly normal. Couple that with unified control of government in the
hands of a party that is perfectly willing to use the crisis to advance its
long-sought but entirely unrelated policy objectives, and you have a recipe for
a political backlash. At least, that’s what the polling suggests.
Gallup’s polling in 2019, which had indicated to Chait
that an irreversible shift against limited governance was underway, has already
reversed itself. In that year, only 41 percent of adults said the government was
“trying to do too many things” while 54 percent said the public sector “should
do more to solve problems.” Today, the tally has flipped to a more historically
familiar form; 52 percent of Americans say government is doing too much while
just 43 percent disagree. A complimentary ABC News/Washington Post poll published
last month found that six-in-ten Americans are concerned that Joe Biden is
doing too much to increase the size and role of government—a figure that
includes roughly 30 percent of Democrats, 60 percent of independents, and
nearly all Republicans.
At the moment, these voters are woefully underserved by
both major political parties. The American political establishment has
abandoned the “dead consensus” around limited government at a time when that
political orientation is desperately needed and sorely missed.
Today, checks on overreach at the federal or state level
are largely left to the courts to mete out. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, which interpreted its Trump-era congressional mandates so broadly
that it thought it could abrogate the rights of property owners, was tossed aside by the federal bench. If the Supreme
Court follows the precedents established in lower courts, the Biden administration’s
vaccine mandates for federal workers and medium- to large-sized employers will
meet the same fate.
Judges have compelled the chief executive to enforce the laws he doesn’t like and to pare back
his attempts to legislate from behind the Resolute Desk. Judicial
efforts to save liberty from the designs of imperious politicians have been
even more vigorous at the state level—a condition that led Vox’s Ian Millhiser to mourn the ways in which the
judiciary is “destroying America’s ability to fight pandemics.” This crucial
impediment to the ambitions of heedless politicians cannot survive if American
political culture does not support it. It’s fortunate that polling suggests
voters do still believe in limited government, even if their representatives
don’t.
Meanwhile, if the voting public sought to send a message
to the activists in American government last November, the message was not
received. The schools are still closing—ostensibly to protect the least
vulnerable demographic from the ravages of COVID, but also to preserve “mental health” and promote “kindness, community, and connection,” largely in service to
the demands of public-sector unions. The country’s most panicky governors
are still imposing onerous burdens on employers to stem the tide
of a pandemic that can now be mitigated by highly effective vaccines and
antiviral therapies.
The federal government is still desperately trying to
tack several trillion dollars onto the national tab. That ambitious agenda
includes provisions that would require banks to provide the IRS with data on
accounts that receive more than $10,000 per year in deposits outside
wages and tips. It would seek to block the provision of grants to child-care providers that
are primarily houses of worship or that provide sectarian
education—essentially, an effort to starve religious institutions and force
them out of the childcare business. Its own advocates promote this legislation
as a means by which the government may, at long last, establish a cradle-to-grave
welfare state. If ever there was a time for small-government conservatives
to stand athwart history, it is now.
But some are still in thrall to the shadows that danced
across the wall during the Trump years. Sen. Marco Rubio has sought to bridle
national conservatism with the aim of riding it back into political
relevance. The American Conservative’s Declan Leary
highlights yet another speech in service to the senator’s ambitions, describing
Rubio’s newfound philosophy as one that “acknowledges that what the 21st
Century requires is not an immediate and reflexive conservatism.” Rather, it
necessitates “a robust and ambitious activism to rebuild the kind of
social-economic order that invites and deserves defense.”
In other words, no one is willing to defend the old
conservatism anymore. No one cares for modesty, liberty, the entrepreneurial
spirt, and the free markets in which it can thrive. Voters don’t seem to agree.
They are no longer inclined to reward activism in government, and they’re not
making the same careful distinctions between right and left activism the
solipsists on the nationalist right prefer.
As the Wall Street Journal’s Elliot Kaufman astutely observed, if those on the
right rediscovered the virtues of status quo ante conservatism, it would not be
because they are a thoughtless lot tethered to “ossified Reaganism.” It would
be a logical response to the demands of the electorate amid a spasm of
“restrictions on personal liberty.” America needs conservatism; the boring old
sort that isn’t revolutionary but preserves that which needs preserving. If
trends continue, first principles may win out over First Things,
but not if Republicans don’t give voters that option.
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
The American State Cult
By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Conservatives used to say: “America is a
Christian nation.” Everybody knows what they meant by that, even if many people
pretended not to understand. We are not a country with a national church or a
national faith. We are — or were — a “Christian nation” in the sense that the
United States grew out of a Christian civilization and found its political
basis in Anglo-Protestant liberalism. The Founding Fathers and the influential
men of the Founding generation were — like almost everybody else in the
colonial era — almost exclusively Protestant Christians, albeit Protestant
Christians of varying degrees of orthodoxy and observance. Thomas Jefferson’s
religious eccentricities are well-known, and George Washington, a parish
vestryman, rarely entered a church once his public career no longer required it
of him. Back when the states had established churches, there was never any
practical possibility that any of them would have been anything other than
Christian. None of this necessarily argues that Christianity should have some
special place in American political life beyond the predominance that comes
naturally to a religion that still speaks, at least notionally, for two out of
three American adults. In that sense, to say that America is a Christian nation
should be no more controversial than to say that France is a European nation.
Japan is Japanese, even though not everyone who lives in Japan is ethnically
Japanese, of Japanese origin, born in Japan, or even a Japanese citizen.
But even though 65 percent of U.S. adults
identify themselves as Christian, I am no longer convinced that Christianity is
the dominant religious faith of the United States. What most of us profess may
be Christianity, but what Americans corporately practice is an imperial cult, a
religion that puts the state and its officers at the center not only of
national political life but national moral and spiritual life. I do not know
many Americans, including very devout Christians, who are losing any sleep
about the filioque or transubstantiation, and nobody who is
much interested in dispensationalism other than those with a
professional interest in the subject.
But there are millions of Americans, tens
of millions and maybe more than 100 million, who grieve, lament, and despair
when they believe that the wrong man has become president of these United
States. Just at the moment, many of those many grieving millions are people who
believe themselves to be devout Christians. You’d think that these
Bible-reading people would know a golden calf when they see one.
Here is an example of the sort of thing I
am talking about, from Dr. Mehmet Oz, the celebrity physician who is going to
run for a Senate seat from Pennsylvania, a state with which he has only the
lightest of connections. The good doctor spells out his political agenda thus:
“I’m here to promise you one thing: I am going to help reignite the divine
spark inside every American and empower us to live better lives.”
Set aside the comical notion of this
ridiculous dork taking over for Pat Toomey — what in hell does that gibberish
even hope to mean?
Dr. Oz is a fairly interesting figure on
the religion front. He is a Muslim of Turkish background, and served in the
Turkish army. There was a split in his family between the more traditionalist
Islam practiced on his father’s side and the more secular attitude of his
mother’s family. He married into a family of Swedenborgians — more on them in a
second — and his mother-in-law is a minister in a Swedenborgian sect. When Dr.
Oz decided to run for the Pennsylvania seat, he needed an address in
Pennsylvania, and the one he chose is in the town of Bryn Athyn, which is the
center of the Swedenborgian church. That is probably a matter of pure
convenience — Dr. Oz’s address in Pennsylvania is his in-laws’ home — but his
association with the Swedenborgian church (or cult, as many Christians would
have it) is more than a matter of convenience. He has spoken in interviews
about his embrace of Swedenborgian beliefs and his incorporation of what he describes
as a Swedenborgian approach to patient relations in his medical practice.
The main contemporary organ of
Swedenborgianism is the Bryn Athyn–based General Church of the New Jerusalem,
which operates Bryn Athyn College. (Bryn is Welsh for “hill,” as in nearby Bryn
Mawr.) Emmanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772) was a mystic who claimed to have special
revelations and a unique personal commission from Jesus Christ to reform
Christian doctrine. He published an influential book called Heaven and
Hell (which is not just a great Ronnie
James Dio song!) in 1758. The Swedenborgian churches
established in the United States (the General Church of the New Jerusalem is an
offshoot from an earlier sect) were part of that great 19th-century burst of
religious entrepreneurialism in the United States, which gave us everything
from Mormons to Christian Scientists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Adventists,
Disciples of Christ/Church of Christ, and the Southern Baptist Convention. (The
late-18th-century split of the Methodists from the Church of England was a
portent of this effervescence.) The spirit of capitalism was very much at work
in the church-planting sector in those years. The United States is still
probably the best place in the world to start a technology company or a cult.
(The word cult, as Cultish author
Amanda Montell reminds us, comes with heavy emotional baggage and no generally
agreed-upon definition. I don’t intend to use it here in a derogatory way.
There’s an old joke that a religion is a cult plus
time and money. I’m sure the Swedenborgians are very nice people. Similarly, I
can’t see joining the Mormon church, but I want to
have Mormon neighbors.)
Why did Americans start all those
churches? The New World was vast beyond the comprehension of the first pilgrims
who landed in New England, and Americans were very far removed from Canterbury
— to say nothing of Rome or Jerusalem. As waves of revivalism and awakenings
convulsed North America beginning in the early 18th century, it was only
natural that believers would start looking for local seats of
power and meaning — the First Great Awakening was arguably the first truly
“national” experience of the American colonies and an important factor leading
to the American Revolution. Here, we can blame the Puritans, at least a little
bit: By rejecting church hierarchy and episcopal authority, insisting upon the
ability of every properly educated believer to interpret Scripture for himself,
they created cultural conditions that almost guaranteed the kind of religious
innovation — the start-up mentality — that would lead to the vast
multiplication of what they would have recoiled from in horror as heresies.
This is deeply embedded in American culture: Our first public-education law,
which bears the splendid name of the Old Deluder Satan Act, was written with a
mind toward educating Christians up to a level that would allow them to engage
directly with Scripture, thereby (the thinking went) giving them an
intellectual inoculation against European popery and Anglican crypto-popery.
The Puritan enthusiasm for Hebrew came from the same source — not, alas, from
any particular tender feeling toward Jews, and Puritan clergy were educated in
Greek, where possible, for the same reason.
Armed with literacy and a smattering of
theology, looking upon the vastness of America, culturally alienated and
physically distant from the institutions of British and European Christianity,
Americans looked for spiritual anchors. And unlike their British and European
cousins, those Americans did not have monarchies and other ancient institutions
to which they might cling. Having ceased to think of themselves as essentially
British, they were not part of an ancient nation with a deep foundation in
blood and soil. Americans are a particular people — much more so than we often
appreciate — but they are not a particular people defined by a shared ethnic
history, which is why a Korean can become American but an American cannot
become Korean, even if he moves to Korea, speaks Korean, takes Korean
citizenship, etc. A big piece of our national identity is a set of generally
shared political beliefs (incorporating a religious premise: that men are
endowed with their unalienable rights not by the state but by God) and
political documents (the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence)
which have for us a totemic character as well as legal and political
significance.
And so, from the very beginning, we were
in a peculiar position: that of a nation founded in religious ferment but
having political documents and a shared political faith as central elements in
our national character. France is on its Fifth Republic, there was an England
long before there existed what we now call the United Kingdom, there was an
Italian nation long before there was an Italian state, the Chinese people have
had many different forms of governmental organization, etc., but the United
States isn’t really the United States without the Declaration of Independence
and the Constitution. Politics in the United States is culture war —
inevitably.
Depending on how you count, the United
States has either a few hundred or several thousand Christian denominations —
and there are millions of self-professed American Christians who are associated
with no particular church, practicing their own eccentric
choose-your-own-adventure models of Christianity, and, beyond there, is the
one-third of Americans profess either some other religion or no religion. What
that means (among other things) is that Americans looking for a national basis
of spiritual and ceremonial life cannot find one in any particular religious
mode except one: the imperial cult. Of course, we don’t call our state cult
that (or even generally acknowledge the imperialistic and sacramental qualities
of the state), and we don’t acknowledge it directly the way the Romans do or
even indirectly the way the English do by making their monarch the head of
their national church. (National churches are always and everywhere
in the Christian world the spiritual wreckage of earlier efforts to
reconstitute pagan imperial cults.) But if you doubt that we have a genuine
state cult, ask yourself how it is that a man running for a Senate seat from
Pennsylvania can launch his campaign by promising to “reignite the divine
spark” without getting laughed across the river back to Delaware?
Instead of laughing at this sort of thing,
it is precisely what Americans expect of Senate candidates, House candidates,
gubernatorial candidates, and, above all, would-be presidents. Joel Osteen and
David Remnick both have written about the “Joshua Generation”; Osteen’s sermon
was about Christian devotion, while the Reverend Remnick’s New Yorker homily
was about Barack Obama.
Every presidential candidate has, for
years, promised that his election would lead to a national spiritual revival.
Sometimes, the restorationist thinking it put into obvious language (“Make
America Great Again”) and sometimes it is part of an explicitly messianic
campaign (looking at you, Barack Obama), but it is an element even of the
campaigns of such modest republicans as the late Bob Dole, who, no less than
Barack Obama or Donald Trump, sought moral histrionics from the American
people, demanding “Where’s the outrage?”
and offering himself as the necessary instrument (and personification) of their
righteous wrath.
(This is not a slight to Bob Dole: The
debased Republican Party of 2021 would have to hike up a very steep and
difficult hill to look him in the eye. Bob Dole may have ended his days selling
credit cards and erection pills, but next to Lindsey Graham he looks like
Abraham Lincoln.)
My friend and colleague Jay Nordlinger,
reading Dr. Oz’s “divine spark” nonsense, did a very fine job suppressing an
eye-roll that no doubt would have seemed like a bit much if Linda Blair had
done it in The Exorcist. “Isn’t anyone willing to balance the
budget?” he asked.
The difference between a Republican who
says that he is the Second Coming of Jesus Christ and a Republican who says
that he’s going to balance the budget is that somebody might believe the first
guy.
A nation that looks to its politicians to
provide spiritual nourishment needs that nourishment badly — and it is going to
starve.
It is also going to face endless political
disappointment and misgovernment. It is important to bring the right tool to
the job: Bananas are great, but you can’t hammer in a nail with one.