July 04, 2006

The Fisking of E.J. Dionne

Cross-posted at Mein Blogovault.

Happy 4th (again), fellow Jawas!

E.J. Dionne spews a mournful, tired editorial in today's Washington Post entitled "A Dissident's Holiday" that was too good not to fiske. My responses are italicized. I dedicate this post to all leftists feeling confused, isolated and frustrated about their views of America on this 4th of July. Enjoy! (click Read More)

Have you ever noticed a certain hesitant quality to the expressions of patriotism by progressives or left-wingers?
What?!! How dare you question their patriotism!!
The patriotism of the conservative goes unquestioned. It's assumed that every politician on the right will wear a flag on his lapel and effortlessly hold forth on ours as "the greatest country in the history of the world."
Any arguments against “we’re the greatest country in the world?” Another country that surpasses on all of the most important and relevant indicators, perhaps?
You can be certain that on this, as on every July 4th, patriotic oratory will flow as well from liberals declaring their love of flag, country and the Declaration of Independence.
The difference is that the right actually means it. To the left (per this column), patriotism is hokey and uncomfortable.
Many will speak of how our constitutional republic is to be revered especially for its guarantees of liberty and justice for all and -- hint, hint -- limits on the powers of overreaching monarchs.
Hint, hint. Cite the laws this ELECTED “monarch” (G-d- Dionne is such a drama queen!) violated. You’re going to be looking for a while.
But the progressive and the reformer have a problem with what passes for unadulterated patriotism.
Oh – so they’re “reformers” now, huh? Anything to avoid calling them “liberals.” That is, after all, what they are. Not new, not revolutionary, not unique, and ineffective. Come on, E.J. It’s really starting to get old.
By nature, the reformer is bound to insist that the country, however glorious, is not a perfect place, that it is capable of doing wrong as well as right.
And theWaPo columnist, by comparison, is bound to raise up straw man arguments that nobody but the most simple-minded “progressives” actually made, only to fail heroically in demolishing them anyway. What dreck.
The nation that declared "all men are created equal" was, at the time those words were written, the home of an extensive system of slavery.
And then (gasp) a WAR ended it, and the Constitution was amended three times to rectify this injustice. Progress without communism. The modern left should look this up and figure out how democracy righted this wrong.
Most reformers guard their patriotic credentials by moving quickly to the next logical step: that the true genius of America has always been its capacity for self-correction.
So in other words, they focus an inordinate amount of time, effort and analysis to anything they deem a “problem” or an “injustice,” even if it isn’t necessarily a “problem” or an “injustice.” Hence, “political science” and “journalism” degrees. That’s a pretty narrow minded view of the world from somebody claiming that “conservatives are blindly patriotic.”
I'd assert that this is a better argument for patriotism than any effort to pretend that the Almighty has marked us as the world's first flawless nation.
Flawless? Who, besides EJ Dionne, has ever asserted for any reason (straw man or otherwise) that America was "flawless?” "Greatest" and "flawless" are spelled differently, implying that they are, in fact, different words with different definitions.
One need only point to the uses that Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. made of the core ideas of the Declaration of Independence against slavery and racial injustice.
Is that before or after Lincon threw dissidents, journalists and agitators into prison for sedition (not that he shouldn't have...)? Please don’t cite Lincoln or King in this column. That is insulting. They are far too important to trivialize here in this whiny little screed against “the stalwart and unchanging oppressors.”
to show how the intellectual and moral traditions of the United States operate in favor of continuous reform.
Translation: Ongoing leftist reform.
There is, moreover, a distinguished national tradition in which dissident voices identify with the revolutionary aspirations of the republic's founders. Frederick Douglass, the former slave turned anti-slavery champion, offered the classic text in his 1852 address often published under the title: "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?"
If you want to be honest, the black voter for the Democrat Party is the real slave – a slave to a dying socialist ideology that inculcates in many blacks a culture of dependence on Democrats in government to give blacks “what they want,” since it has been taken as an article of faithfor the last several decades by Democrats that they can’t get anything for themselves – because of eeeevil Republicans. Your assertion is little more than poppycock.
"To say now that America was right, and England wrong, is exceedingly easy," Douglass declared. "Everybody can say it. . . . But there was a time when, to pronounce against England, and in favor of the cause of the colonies, tried men's souls. They who did so were accounted in their day, plotters of mischief, agitators and rebels, dangerous men. To side with the right, against the wrong, with the weak against the strong, with the oppressed against the oppressor! here lies the merit, and the one which, of all others, seems unfashionable in our day."
True. Since these were Douglas’s words, they actually make sense. There was also a time when dissenting with President Clinton got you labeled by Democrats convinced of their political invincibility as a “Clinton-hater.” Go figure.
This telling of the Fourth of July story identifies the day as part of a long, progressive history and turns "agitators" and "plotters of mischief" into the holiday's true heroes.
The Founders were not progressive agitators, EJ. They were laywers, doctors, landowners, farmers, merchants, white men, mostly Christian, etc. That’s part of your own “progressive narrative” of US history. They were also patriots, loved their country (slavery and all) and fought and died to protect it. Compare that to the “progressives” of today – rambling on and on about how “9-11 was an inside job,” or that Bush is actually a reincarnation of Adolf Hitler - perhaps the most foul human being ever to exist. You’re entitled to believe this nonsense, but you do so at the expense of your own credibility (and sanity).
The Fourth is transformed from an affirmation of continuity into a celebration of change.
What makes you think that all “change” is good? If we changed our workplace discrimination laws to their pre-1960’s-70’s versions, is that not “change?” Why do you assume that “change” is good exclusively for its own sake? I just presented an example of “change” you may regard as bad – why not celebrate this” change” as well, if we’re celebrating “change” instead of the nation’s birthday? Sheesh.
The republic's founders are praised not because they inaugurated a system designed to stand forever, unaltered, but because they blazed a path toward what Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer has called "active liberty."
The Supreme Court also upheld “separate but equal” after the people had passed the 13th-15th Amendments. Who cares what a SCOTUS judge says? I didn’t elect Breyer – nobody did. Clinton appointed him. A Democrat president appointing a judicial activist, cited by a liberal columnist. What an impenetrable fortress of truth! As long as were quoting SCOTUS justices, what did Scalia or Thomas have to say about “active liberty?” Just curious why you didn’t look up any of those quotes.
They set the nation on a course that would, as Breyer put it, expand "the scope of democratic self-government."
Through the electorate. Not the courts. Hence, why the electorate was ahead of SCOTUS until Brown v. Board of Ed. in 1954. Duh. You’re still not making the point you’re trying desperately to make.
This is not a philosophy for the stand-patter nor a recipe for living in the past. And it emphatically rejects any definition of true patriotism that cedes to a current ruling group the right to declare what is or is not "Americanism."
It does? Breyer said all that? If I define my own version of patriotism as spitting at troops to show my dissent with “Bush,” is that patriotism? Patriotism is a love of country, not an endless laundry list of grievances, complaints, accusations, screeds, attacks, lies, propaganda and vitriol towards the nation’s history and half of the citizenry in the country. Then again, this is what “patriotic” holier-than-thou leftists are struggling with – the definition of patriotism. They want to redefine it so that it can mean “hating your country” too. No dice.
The Fourth of July is, of course, a celebration of national unity and of shared love of country.
That’s the first sentence that made any sense in this column, save the eloquence of Frederick Douglas.
But it need not bother us that there has always been a struggle over the day's meaning.
I’m sure anti-American protests and hate-fests have always been considered traditional celebrations of the 4th of July. In Soviet Russia, maybe.
This is part of a larger argument over how to interpret our national tradition, an ongoing quarrel that I suspect the revolutionaries of '76 would understand.
Sure, but you are also implying (by mentioning them in this manner in this pro-left column) that they would be on your side as well. I’m sure Gen. Washington was laying naked in the streets of Boston with thousands of his unemployed, disenchanted minions, screaming about the evils of “King George.” Oh, wait. That’s the Democrat base. Nevermind.
Those who reject the idea of national perfection, who insist that the Founders laid out a pathway and not a destination, should thus resist defensiveness.
Your defensiveness is a result of substantive criticism of your ideas. You hadn’t had much pointed and substantive criticism of liberal ideas until the past ten years or so (after they have been shown to be the abject failures that they are – war on poverty, public education, SocSecurity, high taxes, etc.). What you are reacting to is the fact that your beliefs are being challenged, much the same way liberals point out that Christians don’t like to have their views challenged “in public schools.” And one.
They should embrace the creed offered in a speech to Congress in 1990 by Vaclav Havel, the Eastern European dissident who became president of the Czech Republic.
After Ronald Reagan (R) brought down the Soviet Union without firing a shot, that is. Hows about that for “change.”
"As long as people are people, democracy, in the full sense of the word, will always be no more than an ideal," Havel said. "One may approach it as one would the horizon in ways that may be better or worse, but it can never be fully attained. In this sense, you, too, are merely approaching democracy."
Nice, but we actually have what is known as a representative republic based on democratic principles here, not a direct democracy.
That we're still trying, 230 years after we declared independence, is our national glory.
Nothing we’ve accomplished in the past for ourselves and the world, though? No wonder you’re struggling with the definitions of democracy, patriotism and change – you are making a conscious effort to avoid recognizing that America is the standard bearer.

Thanks for playing, E.J. Next!


By Good Lt. at July 4, 2006 09:54 AM | | l digg this