January 21, 2007

WRONG FROM THE BEGINNING:

Don't you know your left from your right?: As a child of politicised parents, Observer columnist Nick Cohen followed in their tradition and became a trenchant voice on the liberal-left in the 1980s and 90s. But the Iraq War changed all that and forced him to rethink. In an exclusive extract from his incendiary new book about the failings of the modern left, he argues that anti-Americanism has left it blind to the evils of militant Islam. (Nick Cohen, January 21, 2007, Observer)

I still remember the sense of dislocation I felt at 13 when my English teacher told me he voted Conservative. As his announcement coincided with the shock of puberty, I was unlikely to forget it. I must have understood at some level that real Conservatives lived in Britain - there was a Conservative government at the time, so logic dictated that there had to be Conservative voters. But it was incredible to learn that my teacher was one of them, when he gave every appearance of being a thoughtful and kind man. To be good you had to be on the left.

Looking back, I can see that I got that comforting belief from my parents, but it was reinforced by the experience of living through the Thatcher administration, which appeared to reaffirm the left's monopoly of goodness. The embrace first of monetarism and then of the European exchange-rate mechanism produced two recessions, which Conservatives viewed with apparent composure because the lives wrecked by mass unemployment and business failure had the beneficial side-effect of destroying trade-union power. Even when the left of the Eighties was clearly in the wrong - as it was over unilateral nuclear disarmament - it was still good. It may have been dunderheaded to believe that dictators would abandon their weapons systems if Britain abandoned hers, but it wasn't wicked.

Yet for all the loathing of Conservatives I felt, I didn't have to look at modern history to know that it was a fallacy to believe in the superior virtue of the left: my family told me that. My parents joined the Communist Party, but left it in their twenties. My father encouraged me to read Alexander Solzhenitsyn's exposés of the Soviet Union and argue about them at the dinner table. He knew how bad the left could get, but this knowledge did not stop him from remaining very left-wing. He would never have entertained the notion that communism was as bad as fascism. In this, he was typical. Anti-communism was never accepted as the moral equivalent of anti-fascism, not only by my parents but also by the overwhelming majority of liberal-minded people. The left was still morally superior. Even when millions were murdered and tens of millions were enslaved and humiliated, the 'root cause' of crimes beyond the human imagination was the perversion of noble socialist ideals.

Every now and again, someone asks why the double standard persists to this day. The philosophical answer is that communism did not feel as bad as fascism because in theory, if not in practice, communism was an ideology that offered universal emancipation, while only a German could benefit from Hitler's Nazism and only an Italian could prosper under Mussolini's fascism. I'm more impressed by the matter-of-fact consideration that fascist forces took over or menaced Western countries in the Thirties and Forties, and although there was a communist menace in the Cold War, the Cold War never turned hot and Western Europe and North America never experienced the totalitarianism of the left.

There were many moments in the Thirties when fascists and communists co-operated - the German communists concentrated on attacking the Weimar Republic's democrats and gave Hitler a free run, and Stalin's Soviet Union astonished the world by signing a pact with Nazi Germany in 1939. But after Hitler broke the terms of the alliance in the most spectacular fashion by invading the Soviet Union in 1941, you could rely on nearly all of the left - from nice liberals through to the most compromised Marxists - to oppose the tyrannies of the far right. Consistent anti-fascism added enormously to the left's prestige in the second half of the 20th century. A halo of moral superiority hovered over it because if there was a campaign against racism, religious fanaticism or neo-Nazism, the odds were that its leaders would be men and women of the left. For all the atrocities and follies committed in its name, the left possessed this virtue: it would stand firm against fascism. After the Iraq war, I don't believe that a fair-minded outsider could say it does that any more.


Folks who supported the North Vietnamese, Castro, etc. didn't just now stumble from the path of the righteous in the Middle East.

Posted by Orrin Judd at January 21, 2007 12:10 AM
Comments

Tyrannies of the right? ... the left possessed this virtue: it would stand firm against fascism.

What a bunch of expletive deleted.

Posted by: erp [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 21, 2007 8:35 AM

It's always funny to read something from a lefty moving out of the fold. There's always the straw that breaks the camel's back.

It's astonishing to read people for whom Hungary '56 or Prague '68 were some sort of revelation. Had they somehow missed the purges in the 30s, the Soviet intervention in Spain with its own purges, the Molotov pact, the brutal "repatriation" program after WW2, and on and on and on?

Posted by: Jim in Chicago at January 21, 2007 10:17 AM

The left is evil in its ideals, not just its operation. Back to Leniin, bact to Marx, back to Robespierre, back to Cataline, back to Cain, the left is the party of envy, hatred, revenge, impiety; in oj-speak, witches.

Posted by: Lou Gots at January 21, 2007 10:43 AM

Jim in Chicago:

My personal favorite is all the intellectual types who say they first realized how bad communism was when they read Solzhenitsyn. These are people who claim to evaluate situations based on reason and logic, rather than giving primacy to emotional appeals. I applaud their moment of truth, but what does it say about them that a literary genius had to come along before they realized that millions of dead people in the gulag was bad?

Posted by: Matt Murphy at January 22, 2007 12:03 AM
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