The Big White Lie
Andrew Klavan
http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_2_diarist.html
The thing I like best about being a conservative is that I don’t
have to lie. I don’t have to pretend that men and women are the
same. I don’t have to declare that failed or oppressive cultures
are as good as mine. I don’t have to say that everyone’s special
or that the rich cause poverty or that all religions are a path
to God. I don’t have to claim that a bad writer like Alice
Walker is a good one or that a good writer like Toni Morrison is
a great one. I don’t have to pretend that Islam means peace.
Of course, like everything, this candor has its price. A
politics that depends on honesty will be, by nature, often
impolite. Good manners and hypocrisy are intimately intertwined,
and so conservatives, with their gimlet-eyed view of the world,
are always susceptible to charges of incivility. It’s not really
nice, you know, to describe things as they are.
This is leftism’s great strength: it’s all white lies. That’s
its only advantage, as far as I can tell. None of its programs
actually works, after all. >From statism and income
redistribution to liberalized criminal laws and
multiculturalism, from its assault on religion to its
redefinition of family, leftist policies have made the common
life worse wherever they’re installed. But because it depends
on—indeed is defined by—describing the human condition
inaccurately, leftism is nothing if not polite. With its
tortuous attempts to rename unpleasant facts out of
existence—he’s not crippled, dear, he’s handicapped; it’s not a
slum, it’s an inner city; it’s not surrender, it’s redeployment—leftism
has outlived its own failure by hiding itself within the most
labyrinthine construct of social delicacy since Victoria was
queen.
This is no small thing. To rewrite the rules of courteous
behavior is to wield enormous power. I see it in Southern
California, in the bleeding heart of leftism, where I live. I’ve
been banned from my monthly poker game, lost tennis partners,
lost friends—not because I’m belligerent but because I’ve
wondered aloud if the people shouldn’t be allowed to make their
own abortion laws, say, or if the world might not be a better
place without the UN.
It’s a rotten feeling. I sometimes think that I’d rather be
deemed evil than a boor. Wickedness has some flair to it, even a
whiff of radicalism. If you molest a child, there’s always a
chance that you can get the ACLU to defend you as a cultural
innovator. But if you make a remark at table about the
destructive social effects of broken homes and then discover
that your dinner partner is a divorcée—trust me, you feel like a
real louse. It’s manners, not morals, that lay the borderlines
of our behavior.
This, I believe, is the reason conservative politicians so often
lose their nerve, why they back down in debate even when they’re
clearly right. No one wants to be condemned as a
brute—especially not conservatives, who still retain some vague
memory of how worthy it is to be a lady or gentleman.
And because we’ve allowed leftists to define the language of
political good manners—don’t say women are less scientific;
don’t remark that black people bear the same responsibility for
their actions as whites; don’t point out that the gunman was a
Muslim, it’s not nice—the sort of person willing to speak the
truth isn’t always the sort of person you want to be seen with.
It sometimes takes, I mean, a Rush Limbaugh or a Sean Hannity to
withstand the obloquy attached to stating the facts of the
matter. If these people in their public personae seem harsh to
more genteel conservatives, it may be because it requires that
extra dollop of aggression to shatter the silence created by the
Left’s increasingly elaborate sensitivities.
Still, mannerly as we would rather be, truth-telling continues
to be both compelling and ultimately satisfying. There is, after
all, something greater than courtesy. “Firmness in the right,”
Lincoln called it, “as God gives us to see the right.” We find
ourselves at a precarious moment in an endeavor of great
importance: namely, the preservation of Western rationalism and
liberty. It does mankind no good to allow so magnificent an
enterprise to slip away merely for fear of saying the wrong
thing.
SONG: LIFE AN'T ALL THAT EASY....
http://www.apfn.net/audio/L002I070422AL.MP3