By Alan Caruba
“Liberalism
has become an ugly blend of sanctimony, self-interest, and social connections,”
writes Fred Seigel whose credentials include being a senior fellow at the
Manhattan Institute. He has written “The Revolt Against the Masses: How
Liberalism Has Undermined the Middle Class”, but you won’t be able to read it
until it is published in January. As a reviewer, I received an advance copy
from Encounter Books.
It hardly
needs to be said that today’s liberals and conservatives loath one another, nor
that the nation is as sharply divided politically as in the days before the
Civil War. Politically, America has swung back and forth between liberal and
conservative administrations as evidenced by the elections of the previous
century and this new one.
Moreover,
many have noticed that there is often scant distance between Democrat and
Republican administrations. Both have been led by patricians, often the
graduates of Harvard and Yale. Seigel refers to them as the “clerisy” defined
as educated people being a class unto themselves.
“Liberalism
has been a very expensive failure,” says Seigel and points to the Obama
administration as an example of “the apparent disdain for the copybook maxims
of faith, family, and hard work.” When liberals go to court to force schools to
remove a daily prayer or a pledge of allegiance to start the day, support
abortion on demand and gay marriage, seek to expand so-called “entitlement
programs” and put as many people as possible on some form of government dole,
this should be obvious to anyone.
The
seizure of one-sixth of the nation’s economy in the form of Obamacare is yet
another example and the failure of this program, passed near midnight by a
straight party vote by Democratic legislators who had no idea what was in the
bill, demonstrates the liberal preference for a massive central government.
“Liberalism
has been dedicated to preserving the problems for which it presents itself as
the solution.”
Seigel
traces the beginnings of liberalism in America. “American liberals don’t like
to compare themselves with other twentieth-century ideologues. But, like all
ideologies that emerged in the early twentieth century—from communism and
fascism to socialism, social democracy, and its first cousin, British
Fabianism—liberalism was created by intellectuals and writers who were
rebelling against the failings of the rising middle class.”
Among the
intellectuals who advanced liberalism was Herbert Croly, the editor and
co-founder of The New Republic whose 1909 book, “The Promise of American Life”,
was the first manifesto of modern American liberalism. Croly “rejected American
tradition with its faith in the Constitution and its politics of parties and
courts.” This reeks of the intellectual snobbery that has dominated liberal
thinking for more than a century at this point.
A
distinguishing element of liberalism has been its admiration of autocratic
leaders and this explains its embrace of dictators from the likes of the German
Kaiser, Lenin and Stalin, through to men like Fidel Castro and his murderous
sidekick, Ernesto “Che” Guevera. The appeal of communism has always played a
large role in the ideology of liberalism.
What
distinguishes liberalism today in the minds of conservatives is its rejection
of the utter failure of communism and its cousin, socialism. One need only look
to Russia and Europe for evidence of this, but it is manifest in America as it
struggles to deal with the costs of New Deal creations such as Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid, absorbing and redistributing some sixty percent of the
national budget. The liberal belief in Keynesian economics whereby the
government maintains the economy through massive expenditures has left America
today with the largest debt in his history.
Liberalism
has been driven by its disdain for America’s middle class that emerged from the
large wave of immigration in the early 19th century and the success
it has had in the business sector, entering the professions, and raising
incomes. Liberalism has a deep distrust of “the masses” while claiming to
represent them.
Liberal
ideology produced Lyndon Johnson’s failed “War on Poverty” and embraced
environmentalism with its doomsday predictions, none of which has come true. It
explains President Obama’s rejection of American exceptionalism. “Liberal
interests never reexamined their assumptions, even when faced with social and
political failure. They never asked why, despite the vast sums expended,
poverty had become worse rather than better.”
At the same
time, in the latter half of the last century, liberals invented a laundry list
of “rights” you will not find in the Constitution such as women’s rights, gay
rights, children’s rights and even the Gaia concept of the Earth’s right to be
protected against human activity.
“It was
attitude and intentions—not outcomes—that matter to liberals,” says Seigel.
Liberalism
is the ideology of intellectuals who looked down on the masses that became
America’s middle class and produced the greatest economy the world had ever
known. Now they exist to live parasitically off of it.
The great
frustration of conservatives is the inability to have a rational debate or
discussion with liberals. They don’t make sense. It is the curse of liberalism.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
4 comments:
Let's hope that what just happened in Australia will happen here soon.
"“It was attitude and intentions—not outcomes—that matter to liberals,” says Seigel".
I thought it was wanting equality of out comes and that people should be given equal opportunity but then it is up to them what they do with that.
Simpleton
Equality of outcomes is an illusion. Take any class of graduates and you will find some will succeed and some will fail.
Great article.
But you must understand that "liberals", "liberal policies" and "liberalism" in Europe, quite contrary, is the opposite of socialism.
Europeian socialists just hates liberals. Because socialists want to regulate, while Europeian liberalists want less power to the state and less regulation.
Just food for thought.
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