Trump to PC: “No More!”
However crudely, the president explodes shibboleths. January 15, 2018
Politics and law
Two op-eds in this weekend’s Wall Street Journal
and one on this website brilliantly call attention to aspects of the
vast political and cultural change, still in its early stages, that is
gathering force in this country as inexorably as the spring thaw breaks
up a frozen river, first as a trickle and then a torrent. Donald Trump
figures in all three stories. He is at once a cause and an effect of the
change—the Tea Party movement embodied and in power, and as much a
rejection of the existing order of things as the mob that swarmed onto
British ships in Boston Harbor 245 years ago and flung overboard their
cargo of tea whose tax they refused to pay in a gesture of defiance that
declared “No more!” And they meant it.
Peggy Noonan’s Journal column
observes that after Trump there will never again be a “normal”
president. Never again, that is, will we elect some apparatchik from the
haughty, out-of-touch, overpaid political class that has given us generations of arbitrary rule by the Administrative State’s
unelected “experts” too inept to see a financial hurricane brewing;
that has allowed the Supreme Court to cram the ethical beliefs of the
coastal elites down the throats of a gagging nation—so that nuns have to
sue not to hand out birth control, as if freedom of conscience were not
the first of our freedoms; that admits immigrants by the carload
without a thought of whether they will help or harm America and
Americans; that goes to war foolishly believing that toppling dictators
will magically turn their tribal subjects into democratic republicans;
and that lets the IRS tax as tyrannically as George III. No more!
In the same paper, Shelby Steele points out
that the lesson we should draw from the National Football League
protestors—whose kneeling at the National Anthem drew much-publicized
jeers from Trump and drove fans away from the stadiums—is that the days
of black protest are over, because past years of heroic protest
succeeded in making black Americans truly free (as Gene Dattel’s Reckoning With Race
argued recently). The campus snowflakes’ worries about
microaggressions, the Black Lives Matter protests, the armies of deans
of diversity are all obsolete. For all their vociferousness, they are
lost in a vanished past, and we no longer have to listen to them. The
problem now, Steele notes, is that too many blacks feel naked without
their victimhood, feel ashamed that most of Chicago’s or Baltimore’s
myriad murderers are black, and don’t know what to do with their
freedom. Time to man up, make a worthwhile life, and stop whining. No
more!
On this site, Andrew Klavan dazzlingly argues
that “rude and crude” President Trump, who “speaks like a Queens real
estate guy on a construction site,” nevertheless speaks truths that
well-mannered people are too cowed by political correctness to
admit—such critically important truths as that violent criminals are
disproportionately black, for instance, or that most terrorists are
Muslim. But well-bred falsehoods not only dull the minds of those who
mouth them but also are dangerous: just ask those who’ve lost loved ones
to terrorists or murderers. So when Trump crudely calls certain
countries “shitholes,” he is speaking truth, not racism. “They are not
shitholes because of the color of the populace but because of bad ideas,
corrupt governance, false religion, and broken culture,” Klavan notes.
After all, there is better and worse in everything. There are such
things as progress and enlightenment, fitful and unstable as these may
be. There is even such a thing as American exceptionalism. So while
Klavan is right to say that many “rank-and-file immigrants from such
ruined venues ultimately make good Americans,” it’s worth pointing out
that not all of them do, because oppressive government, violence-prone
or fatalistically passive religion, and cultures that spurn assimilation
or education can deform the soul. Their effects can’t always be
undone—as we discovered, Peggy Noonan implies, in our failed wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq. Watching sleek, richly tailored Senator Richard
Durbin admonish Trump
not for the vulgarity of his remark but for its truth, while
mendaciously twisting his words, is an object lesson in the self-serving
hypocrisy that fuels Americans’ contempt for their political class. No
more!
What happens next, no one knows. But jeering mockery sometimes explodes dogmatic lies more effectively than sweet reason.
No comments:
Post a Comment