By Gary Saul Morson & Morton Schapiro
Friday, November 10, 2023
The Hamas charter calls for killing all Jews (not just
Israelis), so how could it be that there are Jewish groups, such as If Not Now
and Jewish Voice for Peace, who carry water for Hamas? Hamas and other Islamist
groups punish gays with death, so why are there LGBTQ+ groups that are
pro-Hamas? Given the way that Iran and Islamists treat women, why do some
feminists back them?
The Jewish groups are the most perplexing. Placing the
blame for the barbaric terrorist attack of October 7th squarely on
Israel, they are busy lobbying Congress to stop sending military aid.
Anti-semitic harassment does not seem to concern them, and their rallies have
led to headlines that surely make Hamas leaders gleeful: “Progressive Jewish
Groups Blame Israeli ‘Apartheid’ for Hamas Violence” (Newsweek) and
“Hundreds Arrested as US Jews Protest Against Israel’s Gaza Assault” (The
Guardian) are but two examples.
This phenomenon is not new. Lenin supposedly called
people of this sort “useful idiots” and, as the phrase suggests, he had utter
contempt for them, especially the liberals of the Kadet (Constitutional
Democratic) party. Although they did not themselves practice terrorism, the
Kadets apologized for, even applauded, it. As with Hamas, Russian terrorists of
the early 20th century reveled in cruelty. It was common to disfigure a person,
often chosen at random, by throwing sulphuric acid in his face. Another favorite
was to toss bombs laced with nails into a crowded café “to see how the foul
bourgeois will squirm in death agony.” One group threw “traitors” into vats of
boiling water. As the leading scholar of
Russian terrorism, Anna Geifman, explained, “the need to inflict pain was
transformed from an abnormal irrational compulsion experienced by unbalanced
personalities into a formally verbalized obligation for all revolutionaries,”
as it apparently was for ISIS and is for Hamas.
How could the liberals have stomached such cruelty? Paul
Milyukov, the Kadet leader, declared that “all means are now legitimate… and
all means should be tried,” much as apologists for Hamas favor decolonization
“by any means necessary,” including, it would seem, burning babies alive.
Another Kadet official, asked to condemn such terrorism, famously replied:
“Condemn terror? That would be the moral
death of our party!”
No sooner had Lenin seized power than the Bolsheviks
proclaimed Kadets “outside the law,” which meant anything could be done to
them. Right away two Kadet leaders were murdered in their hospital beds. Since
Lenin made no secret of his plans—again, like Hamas—why did the liberals not
oppose him? Even Russian capitalists contributed to the Bolsheviks and other
parties sworn to destroy them!
As if not to be outdone by their Russian predecessors,
some American liberals justified Stalin’s purges, the Gulag, and the starvation
of millions of peasants. Other liberals objected, and so a split reminiscent of
what seems to be developing today took place. Closer to our time, the radical
gay cultural theorist Michel Foucault, whose ideas helped form the current
academic ethos, came to back Ayatollah Khomeini. In short, we are witnessing a
familiar pattern.
What explains it? What makes people useful idiots? It
isn’t lack of intelligence. One is most likely to find useful idiots on the
campuses of elite colleges and universities. Nor is it ignorance: Hamas is
proud to broadcast its atrocities. So what then is it?
In his cycle of novels about the Russian Revolution,
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn poses this very question. In one memorable scene, he
describes the novel’s hero, Vorotyntsev, at a meeting of the Kadets. “They were
all overwhelmingly certain that they were right, yet they needed these
exchanges to reinforce their certainty,” he thinks. And despite his better judgment, Vorotyntsev
goes along with them as if he were hypnotized—not because he felt he was wrong,
but out of fear of saying something reactionary.” Today, many are unwilling to risk being called
“conservative” or worse, not just to avoid the consequences that such a
reputation might entail, but so as not to tarnish their sense of self, which is
inextricably tied up with being on the progressive side of everything. At last,
Vorotyntsev breaks free from ”the bewitchment” and speaks his mind. How
wonderful it would be to get people to do the same in the present day.
Perhaps supporters of Hamas terror naively imagine that
they will never find themselves the target of it. “There is reason to fear that
the Revolution may, like Saturn, devour each of her children one by one,”
declared the French revolutionary Pierre Verginaud at his trial, and it wasn’t
long before the guillotine also claimed the revolutionaries who condemned him.
Useful idiots need to use their heads before they lose their heads.
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