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On Society
By John Leo
Liberalism: Can it survive?
QUESTION FOR
THE DAY: IF LIBERALISM isn't dead, then why are autopsies performed
so regularly? In the latest examination of the much-probed cadaver,
the New Republic 's editor-in-chief,
Martin Peretz, recalls that John Kenneth Galbraith, in the early
1960s, pronounced American conservatism dead, citing as heavy
evidence that conservatism was "bookless" or bereft of new ideas.
Peretz writes, "It is liberalism that is now bookless and dying."
Liberals, he says, are not inspired by any vision of the good
society; the liberal agenda consists of wanting to spend more, while
conservatives want to spend less. And the lack of new ideas and the
absence of influential liberal thinkers, he says, are obvious.
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Galbraith's comment contains some comfort for
liberals: Conservatism revived with great intellectual ferment and a
long burst of new ideas, and liberalism presumably can do the same.
But there is no sign that this is happening. No real breakthrough in
liberal thought and programs has occurred since the New Deal, giving
liberalism its nostalgic, reactionary cast.
Worse, the cultural liberalism that emerged
from the convulsions of the 1960s drove the liberal faith out of the
mainstream. Its fundamental value is that society should have no
fundamental values, except for a pervasive relativism that sees all
values as equal. Part of the package was a militant secularism,
pitched against religion, the chief source of fundamental values.
Complaints about "imposing" values were also popular then, aimed at
teachers and parents who worked to socialize children.
Modern liberalism, says Harvard political
philosopher Michael Sandel, has emptied the national narrative of
its civic resources, putting religion outside the public square and
creating a value-neutral "procedural republic." One of the old
heroes of liberalism, John Dewey, said in 1897 that the practical
problem of modern society is the maintenance of the spiritual values
of civilization. Not much room in liberal thought for that now, or
for what another liberal icon, Walter Lippmann, called the "public
philosophy." The failure to perceive the importance of community has
seriously wounded liberalism and undermined its core principles. So
has the strong tendency to convert moral and social questions into
issues of individual rights, usually constructed and then massaged
by judges to place them beyond the reach of majorities and the
normal democratic process.
Bitter. Liberals have
been slow to grasp the mainstream reaction to the no-values culture,
chalking it up to Karl Rove, sinister fundamentalists, racism, or
the stupidity of the American voter. Since November 2, the withering
contempt of liberals for ordinary Americans has been astonishing.
Voting for Bush gave "quite average Americans a chance to feel
superior," said Andrew Hacker, a prominent liberal professor at
Queens College. We are seeing the bitterness of elites who wish to
lead, confronted by multitudes who do not wish to follow. Liberals
might one day conclude that while most Americans value autonomy,
they do not want a procedural republic in which patriotism,
religion, socialization, and traditional values are politically
declared out of bounds. Many Americans notice that liberalism
nowadays lacks a vocabulary of right and wrong, declines to discuss
virtue except in snickering terms, and seems increasingly hostile to
prevailing moral sentiments.
For a stark vision of what cultural liberalism
has come to, consider the breakdown of the universities, the
fortresses of the 1960s cultural liberals and their progeny.
Students are taught that objective judgments are impossible. All
knowledge is compromised by issues of power and bias. Therefore,
there is no way to come to judgment about anything, since judgment
itself rests on quicksand. This principle, however, is suspended
when the United States and western culture are discussed, because
the West is essentially evil and guilty of endless crimes. Better to
declare a vague transnational identity and admiration for the United
Nations. The campuses indulge in heavy coercion and indoctrination.
A sign of the times: The University of California's academic
assembly eliminated the distinction between "interested" and
"disinterested" scholarship by a 45-to-3 vote. The campuses are
politicized, and they don't care who knows it. Harvard is all
atwitter because its president ran afoul of local orthodoxy,
suggesting, ever so tentatively, that sexual differences might be a
factor in careers in science.
In their bafflement over rejection of their
product, liberals have been lacing speeches with religious phrases
and asking mainstream Americans to vote their economic interests by
rejecting Republican fat cats. It will take a bit more than that.
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