February 17, 2005
NOTHING DE FACTO ABOUT IT:
When Good News Feels Bad: After Iraq’s vote, New York liberals are in a serious moral-ideological-emotional bind. And the only way out is to root for Bush’s victory. (Kurt Andersen, New York)
The success of the elections poses a major intellectual-moral-political problem for people in this city. The cognitive dissonance is palpable.New Yorkers think we are smarter than other Americans, that the richness and difficulty of life here give our intelligence a kind of hard-won depth and nuance and sensitivity to contradictions and ambiguity. We feel we are practically French. Most New Yorkers are also liberals. And most liberals, wherever they live, believe that they are smarter than most conservatives (particularly George W. Bush).
And finally, most liberals and New Yorkers suspect that we may be too smart for our own good. It is a form of self-flattery as self-criticism. During these past few years, I have heard it said again and again that liberals’ ineffectiveness derives from their inability to see the world in the simple blacks and whites of the Limbaughs and Hannitys and Bushes. (Why else, the argument goes, did John Kerry lose?)
Maybe. But now our heroic and tragic liberal-intellectual capaciousness is facing its sharpest test since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Back then, most of us were forced, against our wills, to give Ronald Reagan a large share of credit for winning the Cold War. Now the people of this Bush-hating city are being forced to grant the merest possibility that Bush, despite his annoying manner and his administration’s awful hubris and dissembling and incompetence concerning Iraq, just might—might, possibly—have been correct to invade, to occupy, and to try to enable a democratically elected government in Iraq. [...]
Like “radical chic,” a related New York specialty, “liberal guilt” once meant feeling discomfort over one’s good fortune in an unjust world. As this last U.S. election cycle began, however, a new subspecies of liberal guilt arose—over the pleasure liberals took in bad news from Iraq, which seemed sure to hurt the administration. But with Bush reelected, any shred of tacit moral rationale is gone. In other words, feel the guilt, and let it be a pang that leads to moral clarity.
Each of us has a Hobbesian choice concerning Iraq; either we hope for the vindication of Bush’s risky, very possibly reckless policy, or we are in a de facto alliance with the killers of American soldiers and Iraqi civilians. We can be angry with Bush for bringing us to this nasty ethical crossroads, but here we are nonetheless.
I don’t mean to suggest, in the right-wing, proto-fascist rhetorical fashion, that every good American is obliged to support all American wars. But at this moment in this war, that binary choice of who you want to win is inescapable and needs to be faced squarely—just as being pro-war obliges one to admit that thousands of innocent Iraqis have been killed or maimed or orphaned.
At a certain point during the Vietnam War, a majority of Americans—those of us who were in favor of unilateral U.S. withdrawal—were in a de facto alliance with the North Vietnamese, the Vietcong, and the Soviets. Unpleasant but true.
On the other hand, Republicans who hated Wilson, FDR, Truman, LBJ, and Clinton never face such a quandry. Odd, eh? Posted by Orrin Judd at February 17, 2005 5:00 PM
What a preening little narcissist. Too smart for their own good, eh? Try this instead, nooxious little weeds incapable of living outside the hot-house, which others protect. Snot.
Posted by: Luciferous at February 17, 2005 5:29 PMAs I said further down in the post about Ton Friedman's piece, this is the way people like Friedman or Andersen feel they have to talk to their fellow New Yorkers -- or actually their fellow Manhattanites below 122nd Street on the West Side and below 96th Street on the East Side -- because they think to take a direct approach and come straight out and say "We were wrong," or "I want George W. Bush to take down baby Assad the way he took down Saddam," risks the wrath of both their co-workers and their superiors within the New York-Washington media power circuit.
Better to play the Good Cop in this secnario and try to soft-peddle the fact that their conventional wisdom is wrong -- even if that means being a condesending snob -- than to be the Bad Cop and come right out and say all those rubes west of the Hudson or the Potomac were right all along. That could be the death-knell to long-term career advancement.
Posted by: John at February 17, 2005 7:47 PMFunny how us pro-Iraq war folks "have to admit" that some innocent Iraqis got killed, but they anti-Iraq War folks never even think about the innocent Iraqis who haven't been fed into industrial shredders or bulldozed into mass graves.
Posted by: ray at February 17, 2005 9:09 PMThe people who led the push for 'unilateral disengagement' from Vietnam were either Communists or fellow travellers. Their followers were mere dupes conditioned to believe what traitors like Walter Cronkite broadcast instead of what really was going on.
Posted by: Bart at February 18, 2005 10:02 AMOJ Actually I like the post and plan to send it to my remaining Democrat/fellow travelers/paleocon friends along with a nuanced 5' pole for placement.
Your link isn't working so for those who want to read it all:
http://www.newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/columns/imperialcity/11076/index.html
