Monday, August 21, 2006

Our enemies: Overt and covert

Betsy Newmark posts today, Our enemies among us.

Michael Barone has a rock-solid column today about how the forces of moral relativism serve as covert enemies who seem to secretly pull for the United States to lose because they are convinced that no culture is better than another, but somehow American culture is worse.

At the center of their thinking is a notion of moral relativism. No idea is morally superior to another. Hitler had his way, we have ours -- who's to say who is right? No ideas should be "privileged," especially those that have been the guiding forces in the development and improvement of Western civilization. Rich white men have imposed their ideas because of their wealth and through the use of force. Rich white nations imposed their rule on benighted people of color around the world. For this sin of imperialism they must forever be regarded as morally stained and presumptively wrong.

Our covert enemies go quickly from the notion that all societies are morally equal to the notion that all societies are morally equal except ours, which is worse.

These are the ideas that have been transmitted over a long generation by the elites who run our universities and our schools, and who dominate our mainstream media. They teach an American history with the good parts left out and the bad parts emphasized. We are taught that some of the Founding Fathers were slaveholders -- and are left ignorant of their proclamations of universal liberties and human rights.

We are taught that Japanese-Americans were interned in World War II -- and not that American military forces liberated millions from tyranny. To be sure, the great mass of Americans tend to resist these teachings. By the millions they buy and read serious biographies of the Founders and accounts of the Greatest Generation. But the teachings of our covert enemies have their effect.

Of course, this distorts history. We are taught that American slavery was the most evil institution in human history. But every society in history has had slavery. Only one society set out to and did abolish it. The movement to abolish first the slave trade and then slavery was not started by the reason-guided philosophies of 18th century France. It was started, as Adam Hochschild documents in his admirable book "Bury the Chains," by Quakers and Evangelical Christians in Britain, followed in time by similar men and women in America. The slave trade was ended not by Africans, but by the Royal Navy, with aid from the U.S. Navy even before the Civil War.

Nevertheless, the default assumption of our covert enemies is that in any conflict between the West and the Rest, the West is wrong. That assumption can be rebutted by overwhelming fact: Few argued for the Taliban after Sept. 11.

But in our continuing struggles, our covert enemies portray our work in Iraq through the lens of Abu Ghraib and consider Israel's self-defense against Hezbollah as the oppression of virtuous victims by evil men. In World War II, our elites understood that we were the forces of good and that victory was essential. Today, many of our elites subject our military and intelligence actions to fine-tooth-comb analysis and find that they are morally repugnant.
Unfortunately, this is the view that predominates in our universities and our media. As Barone concludes, "Our covert enemies don't want the Islamo-fascists to win. But in some corner of their hearts, they would like us to lose."
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A nice post by Betsy. I hope she doesn't mind my grabbing it in the middle of a busy day so I can bring you something ASAP about Barone's column.

I'll email Betsy later today and also say more about Barone's column in a post this evening.

John

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

There was an article in the N&O today about how history is being reported more "from a minority standpoint."

This is fine, of course, since it subtracts from the study of the founders. Wonder if they'll plan to pull a day from Black History Month for La Raza week?

-AC