
Theory of the Enlightened Class
By Dr. James Hitchock Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 11/25/04)
What's the Matter with Kansas? is the title of a book that a
pundit has pronounced the most important political book of this election
year. It deals with a part of Kansas that has been in an economic recession
but where the people still keep voting Republican, and the author claims
that this shows something drastically wrong with the our political system.
The explanation is that the voters quintessential representatives of the
now-familiar "red" that covers most of our electoral map are primarily
concerned about moral values, what are now dubbed the "social issues."
Exit polls in the recent election showed that over 20 percent of voters
named that as their chief concern, which has caused the pundits endless
consternation and puzzlement. How can this be? As someone wryly remarked,
the response from the "enlightened" class has been in effect, "Values? What
are they?"
The French were of course outraged. One commentator pronounced the
electoral results "totally bizarre" and "outdated" (the ultimate putdown),
while another more discreetly observed that "we live on different planets."
If the American voters go against enlightened European opinion, there is
obviously something wrong with the voters.
Maureen Dowd of the New York Times was so enraged that she was
scarcely able to write coherently, as she sneered at "‘values voters,’ as
they call themselves," and accused the Republicans of "dividing the country
along the fault lines of fear, intolerance, ignorance, and religious rule."
A letter to a newspaper warned that the nation is now doomed to four years
of "pietistic posturing, of naked bigotry," while another found that the
Republican victory was due simply to "naked ignorance."
The frenchman who sees the United States and Western Europe as being on
different planets is right, in that issues like abortion are not even on the
agenda in most of Western Europe. The United States, for all its innumerable
sins, is religiously and morally the most traditional society in the West.
To a great extent the red-blue division on the electoral map reflects a
split between the majority of the country that takes such things seriously
and the self-consciously enlightened minority who think that calling someone
religious is a damaging accusation.
The day after the election a commentator was announcing that the issue is
"jobs, jobs, jobs." Of course everybody thinks there should be more jobs.
But, although all presidents claim the ability, it is not at all clear how
much any president can do to improve the economy. The point of chanting
"jobs, jobs, jobs" is to ignore what voters identify as moral values and to
stick with the familiar agenda.
For decades liberals have presented themselves as champions of "the
people" and enemies of the privileged. But whatever validity that claim may
have in terms of economics, it is false when it comes to moral values, where
liberalism has become synonymous with ideas most of the country repudiates.
But instead of undergoing agonizing self-appraisal (should we be seen as
the party of abortion?), liberals change the subject. Don’t the voters
understand that they aren’t supposed to let moral issues influence them?
Liberals suffer a failure of both imagination and intellect they simply
cannot conceive how other people might have a serious agenda different from
their own. Thus they in effect accuse the Republicans of having invented
issues to confuse the voters, as though it were not the liberals themselves
who have used politics to legalize abortion and achieve other goals.
There are assumptions here that are not explicitly stated because they
are indefensible. One is the obligation to go with the apparent tide of
history, so that it is self-evidently a condemnation to claim that the
United States is "outdated" in comparison to Europe. The other is a
quasi-Marxism in which economic self-interest alone is a legitimate motive
in politics.
The Founding Fathers hoped that the citizens would be motivated by
disinterested concern for the good of their country and that politics would
not be reduced to self-interest. That faith in the people has not been
misplaced and, as it turns out, it is also just bad politics to solicit
votes by telling people that they are stupid or wicked, or both.
Hitchcock is a professor of history at St. Louis University.
Copyright ©2004 Arlington Catholic
Herald. All rights reserved. |