June 6, 2007
DOES THE HARVARD HEALTHCARE PLAN COVER BDS?:
A Degradation of the Intellect (ADAM KIRSCH, June 6, 2007, NY Sun)
When a man as distinguished as Patrice Higonnet — professor of history at Harvard, a leading scholar of France and the French Revolution — writes a book as bad as "Attendant Cruelties" (Other Press, 378 pages, $25.95), it is more than a shame, it is a symptom. What drove Mr. Higonnet to range so far from his professional pasture as to write this brief history of America? It was not any great expertise in the subject; the bulk of the book is a sketchy and conventional chronicle, assembled from secondary sources, and containing no facts or interpretations that will surprise any reader who paid attention in his or her 11th-grade U.S. History class. It was not any deep historical insight; for Mr. Higonnet's method is not to explain our history so much as to assign grades to its leading actors, depending on how well they suit his present-minded criteria of "inclusion" and "exclusion," enlightened "patriotism" and iniquitous "nationalism."No, the reason why "Attendant Cruelties" got written is much simpler: It is Mr. Higonnet's overpowering hatred of President Bush. How, Mr. Higonnet keeps asking, did the country in which he has lived for decades — the country that he admires as "open-minded, welcoming, at the forefront of nearly everything, and, in so many ways, the freest country in the world" — twice elect as president a man whom he regards as evil incarnate? This is not an exaggeration. In the course of his book, Mr. Higonnet compares the president not just to Hitler — "We can understand him better if we understand what came before him. ... Hitler was a madman, but even he did not become chancellor of the German Reich just because he was a madman" — but also to Stalin: "What Stalinism was to utopian communism, Bushism is to the American creed."
With the illogicality of malice, Mr. Higonnet characterizes Mr. Bush as simultaneously incompetent and omnipotent, feckless and relentless, the bully of his advisers and the dupe of his advisers. Reckoning the sum of these contradictions tells us nothing about Mr. Bush or about America, but it tells us a great deal about the passionate, self-delighting, deeply irresponsible hatred that now prevails even among the most prestigious and best educated precincts of the Left. It is a book that Mr. Higonnet's sympathizers will read with vigorous nods, and everyone else will read with despairing shakes of the head.
Imagine how the poor guy feels now that France has elected a W wannabe? Posted by Orrin Judd at June 6, 2007 10:51 AM
Ronrey?
Posted by: Luciferous at June 6, 2007 11:14 AM"it tells us a great deal about the passionate, self-delighting, deeply irresponsible hatred that now prevails even among the most prestigious and best educated precincts of the Left."
1. These people are "prestigious" to whom, exactly?
2. They're not "best educated"--they're "most" educated.
"Und der Esel sagt, "Ja-a-a-a-a."
We liberated the Philippines, Ja-a-a-a-a.
We crushed the Germans, and the Japanese, Ja-a-a-a-a.
We buried the Motherland of socialism, Ja-a-a-a-a.
We are presiding over the reformation of the spiritual jailhouse, Ja-a-a-a-a.
By linking Bush to Hitler and Stalin, because all three advanced the "creed" of his respective Folk, Higonnet lets us know that he holds the American creed to be of a piece with Naziism and Communism. If we should ever ask for the marks of a folk-enemy and culture-traitor, we have them here before us.
For those of us who keep the American creed, we shall contintue to say yes.
Posted by: Lou Gots at June 6, 2007 12:48 PM
"What Stalinism was to utopian communism, Bushism is to the American creed."
The seems about right.
Posted by: Ibid at June 6, 2007 2:05 PMIbid: please explain.
Posted by: Mike Morley at June 6, 2007 2:52 PMSince he appears French, I guess one shouldn't bring up Robespierre, both Napoleons, Boulanger,
Drumont or any proto fascist antiDreyfusard,
Petain, or Salan (although in retrospect, Salan wasn't half bad.)
Stalinism is a logical outgrowth of utopian Communism. "Be malleable or we'll kill you."
"Bushism" is a logical outgrowth of the American creed. "Don't worry. Here we come."
Posted by: Ibid at June 7, 2007 7:40 AMIt must be utterly maddening for the intellectual left to watch as their ideas are rejected and their influence wanes. From the giddy days of 1968 through the late 1970's it was a great run, but it has been downhill from there ever since, and there is no prospect that there will be a return for them.
It must truly be maddening.
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