|
|
Information, Commentary, News, & Other stuff that really doesn't matter all that much
|
In this Issue:
Other Stuff: |
Pessimistic Liberalism
Reprinted from The Wall Street Journal shortly after the liberation of Iraq
With the Pentagon declaring the end of "major combat" in Iraq, most Americans are responding with relief and pride. Our troops have performed with skill, courage and even honorable restraint in deposing a dictator half a world away in less than a month. The puzzle is why some Americans, especially media and liberal elites, continue to wallow in pessimism about this liberation. Two weeks ago these elites were predicting a long war with horrific casualties and global damage. Then at the sight of Iraqis cheering U.S. troops in Baghdad, they quickly moved on to fret about "looting" and "anarchy." Now that those are subsiding, our pessimists have rushed to worry that Iraqi democracy and reconstruction will be all but impossible. What is it that liberals find so dismaying about the prospect of American success?
In discounting these gloomy new predictions, it helps to consider their track record. Among the anticipated disasters that haven't come true: a "nationalist" uprising against U. S. troops, a la Vietnam; the "Arab street" enraged against us; tens of thousands of civilian casualties and a refugee and humanitarian crisis; bloody house-to-house urban combat; Iraq's oil fields aflame, lifting oil prices and sending the economy into recession; North Korea ("the greater threat") using the war as an excuse to attack; the Turks intervening in northern Iraq and at war with the Kurds; and all of course leading to world-wide mayhem. We could attach famous names or institutions to all of these positions, but (space limitations aside) our question today is less who than why? America's liberals weren't always so dour about their country's purposes. As recently as the 1960s, their favorite son (JFK) offered to "bear any burden" to extend the promise of freedom. Why are they so afraid of freedom's expansion now?
Another answer is the
continuing legacy of Vietnam. That failure remains the defining event
in the lives of the men and women who now run most of our idea-forming
institutions and media. Vietnam has made them forever suspicious of the
use of force on behalf of American national interest. They shelved those
doubts for a time under Bill Clinton, albeit only when the cause wasn't
"tainted" by national interest (Haiti, Kosovo) or when it was constrained
by the "international community" (the U.N.). But they simply don't trust
that, left to their own devices, the American government and military will
act in a moral way that leaves the world better off. Our former editor Robert Bartley offered a third,
and more philosophical, explanation in his column on Monday. Citing Thomas
Sowell, he noted that today's left has become a self-insulated elite
convinced of its own virtue. In this view, these members of "the anointed"
operate in an echo chamber that listens to and rewards one another to the
point that they refuse to admit contrary evidence. If you repeat often
enough that Iraqis couldn't possibly welcome Americans as "liberators,"
you can't process those TV images in Baghdad. Instead of freedom, you see
only "anarchy" and American troops that somehow "allowed" looting. We aren't saying that all liberals have succumbed to
this pessimism about American purpose. Many have seen Iraq's evil squarely
for what it is and have supported the Bush Administration's attempts to
remove it. They include the Washington Post editorial page, Holocaust
survivor Elie Wiesel, Democrats Joe Lieberman and Dick Gephardt, such
writers as Christopher Hitchens and Bill Keller, and above all Tony Blair. But the majority of the
American left, and especially its leading media voices, remain
flummoxed if not embarrassed by America's Iraq victory. These include most
Democrats in Congress, the editors (though not all reporters) of the New
York Times and its acolytes at CNN and the major networks, and of course
most academic experts. They can barely bring themselves to celebrate the
downfall of a tyrant before predicting the awful challenges to come. They now find themselves in
league with those on the pessimistic and isolationist right who also
opposed this war. The difference is that Pat Buchanan and his allies think
the U.S. is too good for the world and will be corrupted by it. The
liberal pessimists think the U.S. isn't good enough. We don't write this
in any spirit of gloating, because in fact this union of American left and
far right may pose a long-term problem for liberated Iraq. Nation-building
will require both patience and political consensus to succeed. Looking for
vindication, these voices may too quickly look for reasons to call every
mistake or difficulty a disaster-and demand a U. S. retreat. As optimists
ourselves, we'll hold out hope that the sight of free Iraqis will cause at
least some of them to revive their faith in American principles.
|
|
|
||
|
The NerdWorld Report A service of The NerdWorld Organisation and Vorlon Information Technologies 41 Mystery Rose Lane West Grove, PA 19390-8806 |
The NerdWorld Report is published sporadically, whenever the mood strikes. The opinions expressed herein are not necessarily those of the NerdWorld Report, the NerdWorld Organisation, or Vorlon Information Technologies, their assigns, heirs, creditors, or even the article's author. Any relationship to any person living or dead is purely coincidental. Any information presented as "fact" is probably based on faulty research (at best) or entirely made up (at worst). Your mileage may vary. We sincerely apologize to anyone who may find something offensive on these pages, and hope that you are able to reestablish a correct dosage for your medication. |