July 4th, Revisited

July 4th is a holiday for all Americans, of whatever persuasion, to celebrate America, but we live in a time when Left and Right increasingly view each other as un-American. Like many others on the Right, I came from the Left (whether or not I really am on the Right is a question I’ll let pass for now, but it’s clear that many of my friends — and many more of my former friends — think I am), and so, once again, I think it in order for me to revisit/recycle/reprint perhaps the last occasion in which I appeared in print with my former colleagues.

As I wrote, here, nearly six years ago (and reprised here, two years ago), I “was in sympathetic and close association with The Nation for a number of years” and “continued to publish there a bit after I left, but with decreasing frequency as my views and the magazine’s began to diverge even more.”

On one occasion the editor, Victor Navasky (whom I still regard as a fine fellow), rejected something I had submitted as too far beyond the pale, but, perhaps for old times’s sake or maybe simply a commendable bid for a bit of diversity, he asked me contribute to a special July 4 issue on “Patriotism” that, as it turned out, contained a large number of short statements by various writers in The Nation’s orbit.

I would say, given the company I was in, my piece was way out in right field. But, given that company, it was so far out that it’s a mistake to regard me as having any company there at all. I can’t link it because that was back in the days before the Internet, even before computers. You can find it in Nexis or the library in the July 15, 1991, issue, but you needn’t.

You needn’t, because I’m posting it in its entirety, again, here:

FOR TOO LONG THE LEFT HAS TOO EASILY REGARDED patriotism as the first refuge of scoundrels. Perhaps the main source of this longstanding discomfort with patriotic sentiment is that patriotism celebrates, at least in theory, the national community as a whole while the left, especially in theory, is oppositional, outside, dissenting. Traditionally class based, with workers viewed as the engine driving society to a better future, the left is now largely a collection of racial, ethnic and gender interests plus some academic defenders of multiculturalism–progressives all, but with no agent of progress and hence no real reason to believe in progress, in sight or in mind.

With little to unite it except opposition to the dominant culture, the left today has lost both the desire and the ability to lay claim to any significant portion of the landscape of American values. Equal opportunity? It has a disparate impact. Free speech? It protects racist and sexist epithets. Self-determination? A principle useful only for bashing the Russians or protecting oil sheiks. This is overstated, to be sure, but not by much. From what precinct of the left today could an authentic voice claim something like “This land is your land, this land is my land . . .”? Patriotism is an expression of solidarity, a principle long favored on the left, but the term itself reveals our predicament. Solidarity of whom? With whom? For what? It is a far but revealing cry from “Solidarity Forever” to “Solidarity in Support of Diversity,” a banner displayed during the recent controversy over affirmative action at Georgetown Law School.

That’s a hard flag to rally around.

It will be interesting to see whether the election of President Obama makes this statement no longer relevant.

Say What? (2)

  1. Richard Nieporent July 5, 2008 at 11:10 am | | Reply

    The term Progressives is an oxymoron. The Left has become regressive. From their economic theories where they are against globalization, their environmental beliefs where they are against the benefits of modern civilization to their political theories where they are against free speech and equality, the Left is against everything that supports the freedom of the individual. Instead, they want a society in which we are totally controlled by the state. The end result of their Progressivism is Authoritarianism where there is no individual freedom.

  2. Cobra July 12, 2008 at 11:09 am | | Reply

    John Rosenberg writes:

    >>>”With little to unite it except opposition to the dominant culture, the left today has lost both the desire and the ability to lay claim to any significant portion of the landscape of American values. Equal opportunity? It has a disparate impact. Free speech? It protects racist and sexist epithets. Self-determination? A principle useful only for bashing the Russians or protecting oil sheiks.”

    Richard writes:

    >>>”The term Progressives is an oxymoron. The Left has become regressive. From their economic theories where they are against globalization, their environmental beliefs where they are against the benefits of modern civilization to their political theories where they are against free speech and equality, the Left is against everything that supports the freedom of the individual. Instead, they want a society in which we are totally controlled by the state. The end result of their Progressivism is Authoritarianism where there is no individual freedom.”

    What we have here, readers, are two selections eerily similiar to the corporatocracy/Phil Graham/WMPS theology. It’s indicative of a RIGHT winged viewpoint all too common these days, where wealth and power should be concentrated into the fewest hands, and any action made to challenge that concentration is deemed “unpatriotic”, or “unAmerican.”

    This right winged theory that has warped the Bill of Rights, where you can be arrested for wearing a t-shirt or carrying a sign outside of a McCain Town Hall meeting…

    http://majikthise.typepad.com/majikthise_/2008/07/woman-arrested.html

    …And have your 4th Amendment rights stripped and violated at the President’s whim:

    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/43123.html

    “Individual freedom” to today’s right winger stops at the entrance to my bedroom, or a woman’s uterus.

    Today’s right winger LOVES “globalization” when it means the exploitation of natural resources and cheap, non-unionized foreign sweat shop labor, but can’t stand the multicultural strings attached to dealing with foreign governments and ethnic groups that might actually want to look out for their own best interests.

    IMHO, the end result of today’s right winged ideology is Fascism, the unrestrained millitary-industrio complex and the control of government by corporations, superceding the will of the people.

    –Cobra

Leave a Reply to Cobra Click here to cancel reply.