By Victor Davis Hanson in PJ Media
Eric Holder’s left many baleful legacies: being censured by the
House of Representatives; withholding subpoenaed documents, proving untruthful
about a failed gun-walking caper in Mexico; failing to enforce laws on the
books, from immigration to the elements of the Affordable Care Act; illegally
billing the government for his own private use of a government Gulfstream jet;
snooping on Associated Press reporters; giving de facto exemptions to renegade
IRS politicos; and trying to create civilian trials for terrorist killers like
KSM, one of the architects of the 9/11 attacks. But he will be known mostly for
re-teaching Americans to think of race as essential, not incidental, to our
characters.
He accomplished that unfortunate legacy in a number of ways.
Holder waded into the Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown fatal shootings before
all the facts were known in a manner no local public prosecutor would dare do
so. He claimed that the unpopularity of Barack Obama was due to racial
animosity, apparently forgetful that not long ago, in the era of Bush
Derangement Syndrome, novels and movies were published and produced fantasizing
about the assassination of George W. Bush, who was compared to Nazis and
fascists, by
everyone from Al Gore to John Glenn. I
assume Holder was then quiet about such alarming disparagement of his
president; and also I assume that when Obama in 2009 had near 70% approval ratings,
for Holder the nation was anything but cowardly.
Of course, Holder infamously called
Americans “cowards” for not being as obsessed in the same way with
race as he was. He referred to African-Americans as “my
people,” a sloppy aside that might have gotten any other attorney general
fired for such cheap ethnic chauvinism — except that his own boss had once
called for Latinos to punish
“our enemies” and on the campaign trail had talked of “typical
white person.” Holder chose to drop the New
Black Panther case in a way that highlighted racial matters —
apparently coming armed with clubs to a voting precinct is hardly unusual — in
the same way that he suggested that those states that might require an ID to
vote (in the manner we produce IDs to write a check or use a credit card) were
racist, in the same way that he suggested that states like Arizona that wanted
federal immigration law enforced were acting out of racialist motives.
In other words, in the reprehensible vision of Eric Holder, how we
look governs who we are. He either believes in the desirability of such
racialist exceptionalism out of cultural and historic ignorance — given the
contemporary evidence of where bumper-sticker racial, ethnic and religious
jingoism inevitably leads (cf. e.g., Iraq, Rwanda, the Congo, Serbia, Bosnia,
etc.) — or he cynically assumes that the more the country is polarized
racially, the more elites like himself are called on to adjudicate differences,
and thus advance to positions that they might otherwise not have earned either
by their prior record or their present display of minimal competence.
I do not say that lightly. Holder, remember, prior to his
ascension as attorney general, was largely known for two things, both bad: one,
he navigated Bill Clinton’s disgraceful 11th hour pardon of the late
felon Mark Rich (Rich was in theory facing a possible 300 years in prison for
dozens of felonies [including trading with arch-enemy Iran, then holding U.S.
hostages] when he bolted, escaped arrest and fled to Switzerland). Then-Deputy
Attorney General Holder sidestepped a number of normal Justice Department
procedures and failed to disclose that Rich’s wife (later divorced) had already
given or would be likely to give $1 million to the Democratic Party, $100,000
to Hillary Clinton’s Senate campaign, and nearly a half-million dollars to the
Clinton presidential library. So much for social justice and the deplorable privilege
of the elite.
Holder was also known for his much-reported-on activism with the
tony law firm Covington & Burling, which was suing the Bush administration
on behalf of several terrorists being detained
at Guantanamo. That was an especially unfortunate moral failing, given that
Holder was already under a cloud for another Clinton-era ethical and moral
lapse for engineering the blanket commutation of prison sentences of 16 violent
FALN terrorists (murders, bombings, and terrorist acts) — against the advice of
the FBI and the federal attorneys who prosecuted such criminals. The Puerto
Rican community, it was apparently thought, would be especially thankful to the
Clintons and might display such gratitude in the forthcoming Hillary Clinton
New York Senate election. Holder, in other words, was a consigliore, a fixer of
the sort that Robert Duvall played in the Godfather movies.
But Holder’s sin is not that he was just an ideologue, but rather
than he is also an abject opportunist — the voice of social justice massaging a
pardon for the Wall Street criminal who had endowed his boss so lavishly, the
advocate preening about an unpopular Bush’s supposedly unjust Guantanamo who
once had no problems with a popular Bush opening of the facility, or the man of
the common people Gulfstreaming to a horse race on the public dime. So, too,
Holder was always an entrepreneur about anti-terrorism: whatever the prevailing
general consensus, then Holder was for it without regard for principle. In
2002, in the aftermath of 9/11, when George W. Bush was enjoying record
popularity levels, Holder did not care a whit about the idea of holding
terrorist suspects in Guantanamo without affording them prisoner of war status.
In a 2002 interview with CNN’s Paula Zahn, he intoned
of the Gitmo detainees:
It seems to me that given the way in which they have conducted
themselves, however, that they are not, in fact, people entitled to the
protection of the Geneva Convention. They are not prisoners of war. If, for
instance, Mohammed Atta had survived the attack on the World Trade Center,
would we now be calling him a prisoner of war? I think not. Should Zacarias
Moussaoui be called a prisoner of war? Again, I think not….Yes, and I think in
a lot of ways that makes sense. I think they clearly do not fit within the
prescriptions of the Geneva Convention. You have to remember that after World
War II, as these protocols were being developed, there seemed to be widespread
agreement that members of the French Resistance would not be considered
prisoners of war if they had been captured. That being the case, it’s hard for
me to see how members of al Qaeda could be considered prisoners of war.
Before Holder, Al Sharpton was roundly
derided as a particularly venomous race hustler whose cheap activism had
led to riot and mayhem, a tax-cheat and -delinquent, and a vicious slanderer
forever branded by the Tawana Brawley caper. It was Holder who judged Sharpton
not on his character, but on his race and what his racial fire and brimstone
might do politically for Holder’s boss, and therefore on occasion brought him
into the White House as a key advisor on racial tensions that Sharpton himself
had helped stir up.
Before Holder, Americans were coming to the point that they did
not automatically prejudge interracial violence as a direct consequence of
racial bigotry. But thanks to Holder, not so much now. Trayvon Martin could not
just be a troubled teen who had an unfortunate rendezvous with an edgy Hispanic
George Zimmermann that led to the armed latter having his head pounded, and
then shooting to death his unarmed assailant. Instead, it was a ripe occasion
to condemn
the police and the establishment as intractably racist and in need of
the sort of racial bromides Holder was so eager to prescribe.
Michael Brown could not just be a strong-arm robber, who
manhandled a clerk, stormed
out with stolen goods high on marijuana, walked down the middle of a
road, and then found himself in a violent and fatal encounter with a policeman,
in which the unarmed suspect was killed and the armed policeman apparently
battered — and the facts of the confused case still to be adjudicated.
Instead, the Brown case, too, was a fertile
occasion to exploit, proof that early-1960s-era Bull
Connors still are with us — and proof we need elites like Eric Holder to
shield us from them. Ferguson, after all, was cited by the president in an
oration to the United Nations that Americans can hardly blame others for
bigotry and violence.
Eric Holder did his best to polarize America and confuse it about
race. Interracial violence was to Holder de facto proof of racism — but only
sort of. There have been all sorts of depressing murders and disappearances in
just the last month — each with the potential to reach the Martin-Brown level
of national obsession.
Sometimes a reserve officer used his weapon to shoot the suspect
who did not have a firearm; sometimes the killer for some strange reason had
been treated far too leniently and was let out on early parole to kill an
innocent woman; sometimes the killer had a prior record of murdering and was
never apprehended; and sometimes the murder suspect had a prior record of
criminal activity that for some strange reason was never or only inadequately
prosecuted. In all these cases, there was no editorializing by Holder about
the police or the nature of the crime or the failure of the system to
deal with such barbaric and violent men before they again committed violent
acts.
So this month Holder stayed mum when a young African-American Jesse
Matthew Jr., with a past but apparently little scrutinized criminal record,
was a prime suspect on the lam in the brutal killing of a University of
Virginia white co-ed. So he was not interested in why a young African-American
radical jihadist, Ali Brown, with a habit for prior killing, fatally shot an
innocent white student in his Jeep on the way home. So he had no interest in
why another African-American would-be jihadist and disaffected worker, Alton
Nolen, let out early from parole, beheaded a white woman at work and tried to
kill another victim.
Note how we cringe when I use freely now the distasteful buzzwords
“white” and “African-American.” I emphasize the race of the victim and the
assailant not because I believe that race was necessarily a prime motivation in
any of these cases, much less that Holder should have commented on such lurid
interracial crimes before they came to trial that made headlines, or that
Americans should think race was necessarily vital in fathoming such barbarism,
but because Eric Holder has set an example in this country to racially
contextualize any interracial murder that might be massaged for his own
political advantage, and to find some government or police agency, or society
at large, as culpable for the violence. Race largely determines which
interracial violent act the attorney general of the United States chooses to elevate
to national political importance and to use for his larger political agendas.
The hypocrisy and demagogic manner in which Holder has done so may
well teach other Americans to follow his reprehensible lead — and that will be
unfortunate given that rare interracial violent crime is currently a mostly
politically incorrect and taboo topic. Reasonable and educated people are not
supposed to notice the disparate statistical rate in which blacks attack whites
— at least until Eric Holder taught the country otherwise that race matters
most in their lives and that they remain cowards should they not agree with
him.
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