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Stardate 20021202.1502
(Captain's log): Anthony, in
Canada, was inspired by the end of this
post to write to me recently as follows:
Re: "For us as citizens, then, it becomes
necessary to pick leaders and then trust them to lead, and accept
that they will do things which they cannot explain. We must trust
them, and understand that they cannot trust us. All we can do is
to hope we've picked well. History will tell those of us who
survive whether we did."
If the above statement is true, then you, and the rest of the
U.S. citizens as well as us who also bear the brunt of your
leader's decisions, are right and truly fucked. Such a venal,
cowardly morally-bankrupt group of chiken-hawk mandarins beholden
to the most vile special interests have never before succeeded in
seizing power and wielding it so mindlessly.
You talk of Zhukov. Rumsfeld and Bush and Cheney will make him
look like a piker.
I don't mind principled sacrifice in time of crisis. I do not,
and I think most of the rest of the world that you seem to
belittle on a regular basis also do not, believe that this
administration in the U.S. is capable of grasping the nuance of
the struggle ahead. Churchill would have. Eisenhower as well. Bush
strikes me, using the WWII template, as more of a Stalin;
interested more in raw power and then couching that cupidity in
patriotic aphorisms.
What is truly sad is that the rest of us will continue to pay
the price for his folly. Especially those of us who cannot
influence democratically the choice of 'leader of the free
world.'
I responded:
"If the above
statement is true, then you, and the rest of the U.S. citizens as
well as us who also bear the brunt of your leader's decisions, are
right and truly fucked. Such a venal, cowardly morally-bankrupt
group of chiken-hawk mandarins beholden to the most vile special
interests have never before succeeded in seizing power and
wielding it so mindlessly. You talk of Zhukov. Rumsfeld and Bush
and Cheney will make him look like a piker."
I'm afraid I don't agree. I think that this country was
unbelievably lucky in how the 2000 election came out, and I
shudder to think of how Al Gore would have dealt with this.
I voted for Gore, and now I'm really glad he
lost.
I'd just like to mention in passing that if you are writing to
someone who holds a position radically different than your own, then
to use this kind of invective and hyperbole is counter-productive if
you hope to persuade him to your own point of view. It's a really
good way to preach to the choir, or to prove your bona fide to
others on your side, but not a good way to influence your
opponents.
It's like those guys who sometimes set up a soap box in a busy
street and preach about how we're all damned and how the end of the
world is coming. If such a person ever actually converted anyone,
I've never heard of it. But I'm not sure that deep down that's truly
their motivation; what they're really doing is to prove to
themselves, to their fellows, and to God, that they're truly
committed to whatever-the-heck sect it is they're part of. I don't
think that anti-war bloggers are all quite that nuts, but it does
seem as if much of what they write is primarily posturing, more for
purposes of proving their own ideological purity than to actually
influencing anyone.
Anthony himself characterized this as a "rather histrionic
attack" in a later letter, so I have hope. Whether you actually
think this kind of thing is true, saying it this way discredits you;
it's bad tactics. It's worth making the effort to come across as
even-tempered and reasonable, instead of relying on slogans and
volume and a rising blood pressure.
He has now written again:
"I'm afraid I
don't agree. I think that this country was unbelievably lucky in
how the 2000 election came out, and I shudder to think of how Al
Gore would have dealt with this. I voted for Gore, and now I'm
really glad he lost."
This really puzzles me. I have heard a number of Americans say
the same thing, and I'm baffled. Exactly how would Gore have done
anything worse than what Bush has done? What do you see in Bush
that the rest of us miss? Is there something, besides arsenic, in
the water down there?
To continue with the WWII analogy, to do anything other than
what Bush did would have shown leadership. Truman when he came to
office was presented with the decision on whether to drop the
bomb. However, it was not really a decision; the forces within
Washington were so aligned that not to drop the bomb would have
required more fortitude and political capital than Truman had at
the time. Similarly, to do anything else but to attack Afghanistan
would have required more fortitude and political capital than Bush
had. In such circumstances, who the man in office is is
irrelevent. And therefore, Gore would have done the same as Bush.
This, therefore, is the root of my puzzlement. If Gore would have
done the same as Bush, then why the relief that Bush
won?
I keep running into this attitude from those on the left: the
only way you can demonstrate independence is by doing something
other than what your enemy wants you to do.
It is, perhaps, a natural failing of the young. They prove their
independence from their parents by doing things which scandalize
them, which is why each generation seeks new and better ways to make
themselves look really strange by earlier standards. (My
generation's men grew their hair long. Kids now are into tattoos and
body piercing.) But I'm afraid that it's a substitute for thought.
It isn't independence, it's just contrarianism.
The Women's Liberation movement was driven by this in the early
days. If men want women to be beautiful, and valued women because of
their beauty, then the response is for all women to make themselves
ugly. Being beautiful was giving in; so women had an obligation wear
plain unflattering clothes (baggy, to not reveal any curves) and not
style their hair in any way and not make any attempt to be
attractive.
Eventually there was a backlash among women about this and other
aspects of the women's movement as it became increasingly strange.
The backlash said that the women's movement had reacted to the niche
men had been putting women into by creating a different niche and
trying to force all women into it instead. If men had been trying to
keep women beautiful, barefoot and pregnant, then the women's
movement had been (in its most extreme form) trying to make them
ugly, lesbian, career-oriented and childless.
What the backlash said was that trading one set of chains for
another wasn't liberation. Instead of creating new better niches,
they should be working to get rid of niches entirely. The real goal
of "Women's Liberation" was to let every woman make up her own mind,
to be what she wanted to be. Some women wanted to be
homemakers, and that was OK. A lot of them actually liked men and
didn't want to feel guilty because of it. And most of them wanted
kids.
If a woman made herself beautiful because she thought she had to
because men told her to, that was bad. But if a woman made herself
beautiful because she liked being beautiful and because
being beautiful made her feel good about herself, then that was
good. (Or because being beautiful made it easier for her to
manipulate men.) It was the process and motivation which were
important, not the end result. Doing what your purported opponent
wanted wasn't automatically wrong.
On a few occasions I've had some of the more rabid leftist
bloggers throw at me a claim that having the US go to war against
the Arab nations was exactly what Osama bin Laden wanted us to do,
and that by advocating war I was playing into his hands. Leaving
aside for the moment whether that's actually what bin Laden and the
members of his organization wanted (which is open to serious
doubt) it doesn't really matter. If I think that going to war is
the best thing my nation can do, then I will advocate it whether my
enemy wants it or not. To make foreign policy goals simply by
automatically gainsaying what my enemy says is idiocy.
And to decide that because someone goes with the flow that they
are indecisive is also wrong. I ran into that in the OS wars way
back when, with OS/2 users fairly routinely referring to Windows
users as "sheep", with the dual implication of them being shorn by
Microsoft regularly and them doing what the crowd does because
they're stupid. To a great extent, I got involved in the OS wars
(then, against OS/2, and now, with the Mac faithful) to try to
counter that point of view. I use Windows because it is, in fact,
the best solution for me. I've considered the choices carefully and
I fully understand all the ramifications, and the mere fact that I'm
doing the same thing as the majority doesn't mean I'm meekly
following the crowd. It just happens to be the case that the
decision I made, deliberately and consciously, was the same
direction as the majority of desktop computer users.
If you let your opponent make your decisions for you, you paint
yourself into a box. The right way to deal with a situation is to
evaluate it on the merits and then decide what course of action is
the best one available to you, without regard to your enemy's
propaganda. When the President does that, it's leadership. It
doesn't matter whether the decision goes against orthodoxy or agrees
with it, whether it seems to align with what an enemy claims to want
or not. You can't judge leadership from the results. Leadership and
independence in decision making are aspects of the process, not of
the conclusion.
But this idea that the only way you can prove that you're a free
thinker is by reflexively opposing the existing power structure
seems ingrained in the university culture. (Fortunately, most people
outgrow it once they leave the womb and actually start earning a
living.) But this isn't necessarily independence; it's just being
contrary.
It lost the Democrats the last election. Since the Republicans
were favoring war, the Democrats decided they had to oppose it,
though I think it bothered a lot of them because deep down many of
them knew war was necessary. But given the policy bankruptcy of the
Democratic party, they were increasingly casting themselves pretty
much solely as the anti-Republicans.
With respect to the war, they could have chosen a different
position. "They, the Republicans, favor war because they want to
stomp on our enemies. We also favor war in Iraq, but primarily for
the benefit of the Iraqi people, to liberate them from Saddam's
cruelty and to give them a better life. We support this war, but
only on condition that the administration commit to nation-building
afterward to make sure that the biggest winners are the Iraqi
people." I think that's a position a lot of Democrats in Congress
would have supported. But being reflexively anti-Republican forced
them at least publicly to oppose the war outright, instead of
debating the goals and motives behind the decision to go to war. And
since a very strong majority of Americans favor war in Iraq, it cost
the Democrats votes. (Fortunately, when it really came down to it
and when it really required making a decision about the fate of the
nation instead of the results of the next election, a lot of the
Democrats in the Senate voted their conscience and passed the
authorization for war in Iraq without attaching unreasonable limits
to it. I give the Democratic Senators who did that full marks.)
You can end up trying to justify preposterous positions when you
let your opponent choose your position for you. That's probably the
biggest reason you should not do so. You can't for instance, ignore
the possibility that your political opponent (e.g. the other party)
might actually be right about a given issue, and you can't ignore
the possibility that your military opponent (e.g. bin Laden) is an
idiot and that when he is trying to make you attack that he's
digging his own grave.
Anthony's description of Truman's decision to use nuclear weapons
on Japan is, I'm afraid, revisionist fantasy. I've studied that era
very heavily and there can be no doubt that Truman truly made that
decision and wasn't manipulated into it. It was not inevitable. (I
also think that it was the correct decision, but I don't care to go
into that any further at this time; that's for another day.)
I do not believe that it's the case that a passive and easily
manipulated President would have been ended up doing what we did in
response to last year's attack, either. The idea that Bush simply
went with the flow and let war happen (because, of course,
<insert your own comment about low level of Bush intellect
here>) also doesn't survive the light of day.
If Gore would have done the same as Bush, then why the relief
that Bush won? Because I don't believe Gore
would have done the same thing. That's based in part
on the history of the Clinton administration (over which,
admittedly, a Vice President has little influence) and also on the
kinds of speeches he's been making ever since the attack, most
notably in the last six months.
Anthony doesn't agree with what Bush actually decided, but that
doesn't mean that what Bush did wasn't "leadership". It just means
that Anthony doesn't like the direction Bush is leading us.
I do not believe that the decision to take out the Taliban was
something forced on Bush by the existing structure in Washington,
and that pretty much anyone occupying the office would have found it
nearly impossible to do anything else. On the contrary, there's
every reason to believe that the primary motivation for the attack,
and also for the way it was carried out, came from the
White House, out of the inner circle of advisors that Bush brought
with him to Washington after he was elected. (There were reports
last year, after the fact, of the real process which was involved.
Bush let Rumsfeld and Powell and Rice and a couple of other people
debate the issues and present alternatives while he listened. Then
he went away and spent a few hours thinking, and returned and said,
"This is what we're going to do" and started giving orders.)
It is, of course, nearly futile to try to speculate about exactly
what would have happened if Gore had been President; opinions will
vary enormously and it's impossible for anyone to prove that they're
right.
But I think we would have seen something more like Clinton's
reaction to the attacks on our embassies in Africa: launch a few
hundred Tomahawks, make a really fierce speech, say "Let that be a
lesson to you", and then engage in major diplomacy. I think we would
have seen yet another "measured response". Ties with Europe would
have been strengthened and American foreign policy would have come
more into tune with European attitudes. Gore would have listened to
and done what the State Department suggested.
America would have become far more multilateralist – and a lot
more of us would have died in the next al Qaeda attack against us,
because none of this would have significantly reduced their
capabilities or reduced their willingness to attack us.
What we needed, and what we ended up getting, was a Jacksonian
response. Gore is not Jacksonian; his speeches in the last few
months have been very Wilsonian (if not outright approaching Transnational
Progressivism, which is well beyond anything Wilson would have
advocated) and in my opinion a Wilsonian response to this situation
would have been suicidal.
Based on what he's written to me, I suspect that Anthony indeed
favored a Wilsonian approach to the situation. I do not; I think
Jacksonianism was the only path that can save us. It happens that
Bush is following the path I agree with, and one Anthony apparently
despises.
But none of that proves lack of leadership or inability to
demonstrate independence. Even if there were the kind of pressure on
the President to follow the path he did (and that's open to very
significant doubt; if anything, the pressure was the other way) then
the fact that he did what he did doesn't prove that he was
weak-willed or weak-minded. Leadership manifests in the process, not
the conclusion, and sometimes a strong-willed leader will indeed
decide to do what his underlings recommend, because he has decided
that they're right.
Gad; the spell-checker pointed out that I had written
"Demoncratic Party". No, I do not think that. Begone, Freud! Out!
Out!
Update 20021204: Colby
Cosh comments. (Blush)
include
+force_include -force_exclude
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