The
evening before Thanksgiving Rush Limbaugh was on C-Span TV explaining
that these glorious developments would have been impossible if talk
radio and the conservative movement had not combined to break the power
of the liberal media.
In
the Thanksgiving issue of National Review, editor Richard Lowry and
former editor John O'Sullivan celebrate Bush's reelection triumph over
"a hostile press corps." "Try as they might," crowed O'Sullivan, "they
couldn't put Kerry over the top." There was a time when I could rant
about the "liberal media" with the best of them. But in recent years I
have puzzled over the precise location of the "liberal media."
Not
so long ago I would have identified the liberal media as the New York
Times and Washington Post, CNN and the three TV networks, and National
Public Radio. But both the Times and the Post fell for the Bush
administration's lies about WMD and supported the US invasion of Iraq.
On balance CNN, the networks, and NPR have not made an issue of the
Bush administration's changing explanations for the invasion.
Apparently,
Rush Limbaugh and National Review think there is a liberal media
because the prison torture scandal could not be suppressed and a
cameraman filmed the execution of a wounded Iraqi prisoner by a US
Marine. Do the Village Voice and The Nation comprise the "liberal
media"? The Village Voice is known for Nat Hentoff and his columns on
civil liberties. Every good conservative believes that civil liberties
are liberal because they interfere with the police and let criminals go
free. The Nation favors spending on the poor and disfavors gun rights,
but I don't see the "liberal hate" in The Nation's feeble pages that
Rush Limbaugh was denouncing on C-Span.
In
the ranks of the new conservatives, however, I see and experience much
hate. It comes to me in violently worded, ignorant and irrational
emails from self-professed conservatives who literally worship George
Bush. Even Christians have fallen into idolatry. There appears to be a
large number of Americans who are prepared to kill anyone for George
Bush.
The
Iraqi War is serving as a great catharsis for multiple conservative
frustrations: job loss, drugs, crime, homosexuals, pornography, female
promiscuity, abortion, restrictions on prayer in public places,
Darwinism and attacks on religion. Liberals are the cause. Liberals are
against America. Anyone against the war is against America and is a
liberal. "You are with us or against us."
This
is the mindset of delusion, and delusion permits no facts or analysis.
Blind emotion rules. Americans are right and everyone else is wrong.
End of the debate.
That,
gentle reader, is the full extent of talk radio, Fox News, the Wall
Street Journal Editorial page, National Review, the Weekly Standard,
and, indeed, of the entire concentrated corporate media where
noncontroversy in the interest of advertising revenue rules.
Once
upon a time there was a liberal media. It developed out of the Great
Depression and the New Deal. Liberals believed that the private sector
is the source of greed that must be restrained by government acting in
the public interest. The liberals' mistake was to identify morality
with government. Liberals had great suspicion of private power and
insufficient suspicion of the power and inclination of government to do
good.
Liberals
became Benthamites (after Jeremy Bentham). They believed that as the
people controlled government through democracy, there was no reason to
fear government power, which should be increased in order to accomplish
more good.
The
conservative movement that I grew up in did not share the liberals'
abiding faith in government. "Power corrupts, and absolute power
corrupts absolutely."
Today
it is liberals, not conservatives, who endeavor to defend civil
liberties from the state. Conservatives have been won around to the old
liberal view that as long as government power is in their hands, there
is no reason to fear it or to limit it. Thus, the Patriot Act, which
permits government to suspend a person's civil liberty by calling him a
terrorist with or without proof. Thus, preemptive war, which permits
the President to invade other countries based on unverified assertions.
There
is nothing conservative about these positions. To label them
conservative is to make the same error as labeling the 1930s German
Brownshirts conservative.
American
liberals called the Brownshirts "conservative," because the Brownshirts
were obviously not liberal. They were ignorant, violent, delusional,
and they worshipped a man of no known distinction. Brownshirts'
delusions were protected by an emotional force field. Adulation of
power and force prevented Brownshirts from recognizing implications for
their country of their reckless doctrines.
Like
Brownshirts, the new conservatives take personally any criticism of
their leader and his policies. To be a critic is to be an enemy. I went
overnight from being an object of conservative adulation to one of
derision when I wrote that the US invasion of Iraq was a "strategic
blunder."
It
is amazing that only a short time ago the Bush administration and its
supporters believed that all the US had to do was to appear in Iraq and
we would be greeted with flowers. Has there ever been a greater example
of delusion? Isn't this on a par with the Children's Crusade against
the Saracens in the Middle Ages?
Delusion
is still the defining characteristic of the Bush administration. We
have smashed Fallujah, a city of 300,000, only to discover that the
10,000 US Marines are bogged down in the ruins of the city. If the
Marines leave, the "defeated" insurgents will return. Meanwhile the
insurgents have moved on to destabilize Mosul, a city five times as
large. Thus, the call for more US troops.
There
are no more troops. Our former allies are not going to send troops. The
only way the Bush administration can continue with its Iraq policy is
to reinstate the draft.
When
the draft is reinstated, conservatives will loudly proclaim their pride
that their sons, fathers, husbands and brothers are going to die for
"our freedom." Not a single one of them will be able to explain why
destroying Iraqi cities and occupying the ruins are necessary for "our
freedom." But this inability will not lessen the enthusiasm for the
project. To protect their delusions from "reality-based" critics, they
will demand that the critics be arrested for treason and silenced. Many
encouraged by talk radio already speak this way.
Because
of the triumph of delusional "new conservatives" and the demise of the
liberal media, this war is different from the Vietnam war. As more
Americans are killed and maimed in the pointless carnage, more
Americans have a powerful emotional stake that the war not be lost and
not be in vain. Trapped in violence and unable to admit mistake, a
reckless administration will escalate.
The
rapidly collapsing US dollar is hard evidence that the world sees the
US as bankrupt. Flight from the dollar as the reserve currency will
adversely impact American living standards, which are already falling
as a result of job outsourcing and offshore production. The US cannot
afford a costly and interminable war.
Falling
living standards and inability to impose our will on the Middle East
will result in great frustrations that will diminish our country.