Living
Large in a Shrinking Cocoon
Never have liberal ideas been so
firmly entrenched within America’s core elite institutions. Never have those
institutions been so weak and uninfluential.
These are frustrating times for the
American left. Legislative power has slipped from its hands; the states are
more Republican than at just about any time in living memory, and as President
Obama nears the end of his term, it seems far more likely than otherwise that,
Republican or Democrat, his successor will stand well to the right of the
incumbent. As I noted in the first essay in the series, the foreign policy disasters and the financial crash of
the George W. Bush administration opened a path to the White House for the most
liberal President in history and gave Democrats overwhelming majorities in the
Senate and the House back in 2008. Jubilant liberals believed that a new era
had dawned, and when they weren’t comparing Obama to Lincoln, they were calling
him the “Democratic Reagan” who would reset politics for the left just as
Reagan once did for the right.
Six years later, the dream is
looking shopworn. President Obama is deeply unpopular, the Democratic
majorities are gone with the wind, and poll after poll after poll demonstrates
that Obamacare, the Democrats’ signature legislative accomplishment in the Age
of Obama, is more of an albatross around the party’s neck than a star in its
crown.
Some of this could change. The slow
but persistent improvement in economic conditions has finally begun to register
with voters; consumer confidence is up and, if the economy continues to improve
through 2016, President Obama’s poll numbers should strengthen. The racial
polarization that so tragically spiked in the last three months could gradually
fade away. And the concatenation of foreign policy and security disasters from
the Libyan anarchy to the series of Syria and Iraq fiascoes to the Russian
invasion of Ukraine could look less frightening and less like an implosion of
America’s world position in two year’s time. The lame duck could still swagger
off the stage in the end.
But right now that doesn’t look
probable, even to liberals. Eric Alterman, one of the left’s most articulate
advocates, summarizes the situation with his customary frankness in the Nation:
The Obama presidency has been a
devil’s bargain for Democrats. Despite the considerable policy accomplishments
to its credit, the administration’s political impact has been virtually
catastrophic. Since Obama’s victory in 2008, Democrats are down seventy seats
in the House and fifteen in the Senate, giving an increasingly reactionary
Republican Party the power to stymie most if not all of the Democrats’ agenda.
But this actually understates the damage. Democrats are now the minority in
over two-thirds of the nation’s partisan state legislative chambers, their
worst showing in history. In twenty-three of these, Republicans will control
the governor’s office, too. (The corresponding number for Democrats is just
seven.)
Alterman cites two core reasons for
the disaster. On the one hand, Democrats haven’t recognized that many of the
policies they like on “good government” grounds are political poison. In
particular, Obamacare and the immigration amnesty are alienating voters:
The Affordable Care Act and the
executive order expanding the rights of undocumented immigrants were certainly
the right thing to do from the perspective of Democratic values, but both are
politically poisonous at present. Obamacare undermines a key Democratic
constituency badly in need of help: labor unions. The immigration order fires
up anti-immigrant passion among working-class voters while benefiting an ethnic
group—Latinos—whose voter-participation levels remain anemic, even allowing for
the restrictive election laws passed by Republicans.
Beyond that, Alterman argues, the
Democrats’ turn to social rather than economic issues (gentry liberalism vs.
populism) hasn’t been helpful. Focusing on “immigration, reproductive rights,
same-sex marriage, gun control, etc.” at a time when real wages are stagnant or
declining for most Americans is a recipe for political failure.
But this analysis, cogent as it is,
raises another question: why were liberals so feckless in power? Why did they
blow the historic opportunity that the Bush implosion gave them?
What liberals are struggling to come
to grips with today is the enormous gap between the dominant ideas and
discourse in the liberal worlds of journalism, the foundations, and the academy
on the one hand, and the wider realities of American life on the other. Within
the magic circle, liberal ideas have never been more firmly entrenched and less
contested. Increasingly, liberals live in a world in which certain ideas are
becoming ever more axiomatic and unquestioned even if, outside the walls, those
same ideas often seem outlandish.
Modern American liberalism does its
best to suppress dissent and critique (except from the left) at the
institutions and milieus that it controls. Dissent is not only misguided; it is
morally wrong. Bad thoughts create bad actions, and so the heretics must be
silenced or expelled. “Hurtful” speech is not allowed, and so the
eccentricities of conventional liberal piety pile up into ever more improbable,
ever more unsustainable forms.
To openly support “torture”, for
example, is close to unthinkable in the academy or in the world of serious
journalism. For a university professor or a New Yorker writer to say
that torture is acceptable under any circumstances is to court marginalization.
A great many liberals don’t know anybody who openly supports torture, and a
great many liberals are convinced that the concept of torture is so heinous
that simply to name and document incidents will lead an aroused public to rally
against the practice—and against the political party that allowed it.
Thus a group of journalists, human
rights activists, and others relentlessly pursued allegations of CIA use of
torture, not only as an important moral duty but also as an effective political
strategy. It flopped. As we’ve seen, the revelations about CIA methods left
most Americans still telling pollsters that they favor torture when national
security is in question. “Torture” may be unthinkable to well meaning academics
and human rights activists, but the argument hasn’t been won—hasn’t really even
been engaged—among the broader public. The left silenced and banished critics;
it didn’t convert or refute them. The net result of the liberal campaign to
“hold the CIA accountable” wasn’t to discredit the Bush administration; the
campaign simply undercut claims by liberals that the left can safely be
entrusted with security policy. A group of liberal journalists and politicos
worked very hard to make Dick Cheney’s day.
Similarly, the liberal hothouses
that so many university campuses are today encourage students to adopt
approaches to real life problems that, to say the least, are counterproductive.
Take, for example, the recent attempts by law students at Harvard, Georgetown,
and Columbia to have their exams postponed due to the stress they suffered as a result of the Ferguson
controversy. “This is more than a personal emergency. This is a national
emergency,” said the anguished Harvardians asking for an extension. Said the
fragile and delicate souls from Georgetown,“We, students of color, cannot
breathe…. We charge you to acknowledge that Black Lives Matter.”
One thinks of the school beneath the
sea in Alice in Wonderland, where students were taught “reeling,
writhing, and fainting in coils.”
Fortunately for us all, liberalism
didn’t use to be such a pallid and shrinking thing. People like Sojourner
Truth, Frederick Douglass, Thurgood Marshall, and Martin Luther King were,
thank goodness, made of sterner stuff than the frail flowers of the
contemporary Ivy League. The people who actually helped black people in
American history down through the centuries faced more injustice, brutality,
and casual public racism than our delicately and tenderly raised hothouse
elites could imagine in their wildest dreams. Serious people understand that
the existence of injustice is a reason to get tougher and work harder, not a
reason to whine to the dean about your emotional turmoil. Truth, Douglass,
Marshall, King, and tens of thousands of others knew that the people who want
to change the world need to be tougher, smarter, harder working, and stronger
than the people who don’t care. This may not be fair, but having emotional
meltdowns over it won’t help you or anybody else.
Are these shrinking violets and
sensitive souls really preparing for careers in the law? If you are a
lawyer and a grand jury returns an unjust indictment against your client, are
you going to come down with a disabling attack of the vapors that keeps you
from concentrating on your legal work as you struggle with the unfairness of it
all? If so, the legal profession is not for you. You need another and less
challenging profession, perhaps involving the preparation of fair trade herbal
teas for elderly Quakers in a quiet suburb somewhere.
But liberals today face more
problems than cocooning. They face the problem that, even as the ideas in
liberal institutions become ever more elaborate, intricate, and unsuited to the
actual political world, liberal institutions are losing more of their power to
shape public opinion and national debate. Forty years ago, the key liberal
institutions were both less distanced from the rest of American society and
significantly more able to drive the national agenda. The essentially
likeminded, mainstream liberals who wrote and produced the major network news
shows more or less controlled the outlets from which a majority of Americans
got the news. There was no Drudge Report or Fox News in those days, much less
an army of pesky fact checkers on the internet. When liberal media types
decided that something was news, it was news.
If the Sandy Hook massacre had taken
place in 1975, it’s likely that the liberal take on gun violence would not have
been challenged. But these days, an army of bloggers and a
counter-establishment of policy wonks in right leaning think tanks are ready to
respond to extreme events like Sandy Hook. After the 2014 midterm, Gaffy
Gifford’s old congressional seat will be filled by a pro-gun rights Republican,
and polls show support for “gun rights” at historic highs. Liberal strategies
don’t work anymore in part because liberal institutions are losing their power.
Meanwhile, many liberals are in a
tough emotional spot. They live in liberal cocoons, read cocooning news
sources, and work in professions and milieus where liberal ideas are as
prevalent and as uncontroversial as oxygen. They are certain that these ideas
are necessary, important and just—and they can’t imagine that people have solid
reasons for disagreeing with them. Yet these ideas are much less well accepted
outside the bubble—and the bubbles seem to be shrinking. After the horrors of
the George W. Bush administration, liberals believed that the nightmare of
conservative governance had vanished, never to return. Aided by the immigration
amnesty, an irresistible army of minority voters would enshrine liberal ideas
into law and give Democrats a permanent lock on the machinery of an ever more
powerful state.
That no longer looks likely; we can
all look forward to eloquent laments, wringing of hands, impassioned statements
of faith as the realization sinks in. There will be reeling, there will be
writhing, and there will be fainting in coils. In the end, we can hope that
liberalism will purge itself of the excesses and indulgences that come from
life in the cocoon. The country needs a forward looking and level headed left;
right now what we have is a mess.
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