BILL FRIST: NADER-LITE
One of the consequences of the way I chose to furnish my apartment (futon on one side of the room, table and chairs on the other), is that having the wired internet reach my laptop on the futon - which due to some trouble following the Ikea instructions only works as a bed - means that it can't reach the table. So I'll pull things up sitting on the bed, unhook the laptop from the internet, and then take it over to the table to read whatever web page I've pulled up while I eat. I mention only because otherwise it's unlikely I ever would have read the entire past week of blog posts from Marshall Whitmann. I say this not because I disagree with him (although on most things he chooses to write about I do), but because reading a page of Marshall Whitmann felt a lot like reading a paragraph of Marshall Whitmann several times in a row. Although there are some variations: On Friday, Joe Lieberman was like JFK in that he's a "blue collar, bread and butter" type unlike the "upper-crust" Ned Lamont; on Monday, Joe Lieberman was like JFK in that he's a "pro-growth progressive" and not "the darling of liberals" like Ned Lamont. But the most tendentious of the analogies employed repeatedly by "The Moose" is one that crops up again and again in neoconservative, neoliberal, "New Democratic" and other discourse on the internet: the comparison of left-wingers and Pat Buchanan. Lieberman's critics, Whitmann warns, are part of a "neo-isolationist, MoveOn.org, Pat Buchanan-lite imperative to rid the Democratic Party of the centrist hawks." And many of them "are merely Pat Buchanan lite who share the paleo-conservative animus toward America's special relationship with the Jewish state." The logic seems to go something like this: Pat Buchanan is famous and really unpopular. He believes Hitler was "an individual of great courage," that women lack "the will to succeed," and that AIDS is "nature's retribution for violating the laws of nature." Also, he promotes an isolationist doctrine in which America should minimize its presence abroad. One application of that doctrine has been opposition to the invasion of Iraq and criticism of the ongoing American presence there. And he doesn't much like neo-cons. Ergo: Anyone who is overly critical of the Iraq War is "Pat Buchanan lite" and one step away from embracing isolationism and bigotry. And since labeling lefties as Buchananite is counterintuitive, it's guaranteed to be right - and to demonstrate the sophistication of whoever makes the charge, especially if it's a conservative lumping another conservative in with a leftie. The folks who trot out the Pat Buchanan slur like to pitch it as some kind of sophisticated exegesis of the philisophical first principles underlying criticism of the neoconservative project. But it's not. Certainly, Democrats have been more comparatively more hesitant in polls to express support for phrases about government pursuing aggressive foreign policy or democracy promotion since the man who's running the government gave both a bad name. But that doesn't make them isolationists. And it doesn't mean there aren't worthwile interventions they would support, especially if they had reason to trust the people making the case for them. Plenty on the left - to the chagrin of some at The New Republic - have decided that US military intervention in Darfur would be a very good idea while remaining convinced that unilateral US military intervention in Iraq was a very bad one (as Alan Wolfe notes, unilateralism is itself the "first cousin" of isolationism). And it should go without saying, but if you're looking for a constituency with greater animus than most towards people who are Jewish, women, Black, or gay, the left isn't it. It's hard to come up with an equal and opposite absurdity to compare to the charge that war critics on the left are like Pat Buchanan. It would need to compare people on the right based on a policy view they have to a wildly unpopular figure on the left who shares it for different reasons. Maybe "Conservatives who tried to use the federal government to re-insert Terri Schiavo's feeding tube are Ralph Nader lite!" Difference is, Ralph Nader may be unpopular, but unlike Pat Buchanan, he's not a bigot.
3 Comments:
Important correction: The futon doesn't fold up because the pre-drilled holes were off, NOT because of any inability to follow directions (the second time around...)
Thought it was worth mentioning.
Would have been nice if Nader had read this before he started kissing Buchanan's ass back in the summer of 2004. Might have saved him some trouble.
(And in case it isn't clear, i agree with your argument.)
Josh: My song Little Wild Boo-K was written in 1994 for the album of the same name. Came across your Little Wild Bouquet while searching for a new band name for my next project. I called my girl friend Boo like many people and her last name started wih a K. Great blog! Bazza
Post a Comment
<< Home