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Stop the ‘Progressive’ Mob and Understand American History Before Removing Statues and Monuments

Americans’ historical ignorance and defensiveness about race have given the mob the upper hand. This must change or America will cease to exist.

Hardly a day goes by when we don’t hear about another historical monument or statue being vandalized, defaced, toppled, or destroyed by angry mobs of left-wing “woke” activists determined to exorcise from the public sphere alleged “racists,” “imperialists,” “bigots,” “misogynists,” and “traitors.”

This is grievously wrong. No matter how you feel about the relative merits of a particular statue or monument, no one has a right to destroy these artifacts of history.

If they are to be taken down, that should happen only after much deliberation and through the lawful and legitimate political process, not through violent, lawless, and destructive mobs.

Federal, state and local officials deserve our contempt for their knowing refusal to protect our nation’s historical monuments and statues from vandalism and destruction. This is nothing less than a rank dereliction of duty.

Wanton Destruction. Friday night, for instance, police officers from the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C. watched and did nothing as a progressive mob used rope and chains to topple a statue of Confederate General Albert Pike before setting the statue on fire.

It is fairly obvious that this entire Jacobin effort is aimed at deconstructing and delegitimizing the American Founding and Western Civilization.

The mobs, after all, make few if any distinctions. Thus they have targeted any and all historical figures found guilty, it seems, of sinning against 21st Century progressive orthodoxy.

Indeed, the list of targeted figures includes: George Washington, Christopher Columbus, Ulysses S. Grant, Francis Scott Key, Catholic missionary Junipero Serra, and Winston Churchill.

Historical Ignorance. Unfortunately, most Americans—even, and perhaps especially, those with elite academic credentials—are poorly educated.

That is because for decades now, secular progressive orthodoxy has infused American education, from kindergarten through college, with a self-hating, anti-American and anti-Western bias.

Consequently, most Americans are defensive at best and all-too credulous at worst when the progressive mob accuses iconic American and Western historical figures of being the moral equivalent of Adolph Hitler.

And of course, the worst thing that you can be called in 21st Century America is a “racist.” That is the ultimate scarlet letter in our politics today. For these reasons, the progressive mob is having its way and running amuck and unopposed.

Distinctions. Meanwhile, some public figures of good faith are trying to draw distinctions that they believe are legitimate, and which will protect, say, George Washington and Winston Churchill, while sacrificing more debatable figures such as Confederate War General Nathan Bedford Forrest.

I understand and respect this sentiment, but appeasing the mob is a mistake. This will only strengthen and embolden the mob.

Indeed, now is not the time to try and draw distinctions between allegedly legitimate and illegitimate statues and monuments. Now is the time to circle the wagons and to unalterably oppose the mob and its wanton acts of destruction.

Now is the time to try and understand our history and why these statues and monuments were created and erected in the first place. Then and only then should we consider taking down (not destroying) any of our historical statues and monuments.

The Confederacy. The most vulnerable pieces of art and remembrance are those that pay tribute to Confederate soldiers and generals. I will address these in a separate piece.

But what is worth noting now is that the vast majority of Confederate soldiers did not own slaves and did not see themselves as fighting on behalf of slavery.

Why, then, did they fight; and why do we have statues and monuments that honor them?

Isn’t that something we should understand, discuss and debate before removing these artifacts of history? And in any case, can we not all agree that mob vandalism and destruction of our nation’s history is unacceptable and will not be tolerated?

The End. If what historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. called The Vital Center doesn’t speak up soon in defense of the American experiment, then the America we have known and loved for more than two centuries will cease to exist.

Of course, that’s exactly what the progressive mob wants.

Feature photo credit: KTVZ.com—the toppled statue of George Washington in Portland, Oregon.

Intellectual Intolerance and the Abandonment of Classically Liberal Values Threaten to Destroy America

The New York Times’ apology for publishing Sen. Tom Cotton’s Op-Ed, and the NFL’s repudiation of Drew Brees’ commitment to honoring the American flag, are inflection points that do not bode well for the United States. 

We have observed that groupthink is a serious problem in America today: that it distorts our public dialogue and debate on issues ranging from the coronavirus to law enforcement and public safety, race relations, and other matters of public policy.

Intertwined with groupthink is intellectual intolerance, closed-mindedness, and an unwillingness to allow for the legitimacy of different points of view that may not accord with our own.

Groupthink prevents people from thinking outside of the proverbial box, while intellectual intolerance and closed-mindedness punish them for even thinking about doing so.

This is, obviously, dangerous because it stifles fresh thinking, creativity and innovation. It also is completely contrary to everything that the United States of America was founded upon.

Ours is a classically liberal republic that was founded upon classically liberal values such as freedom of thought, the right to private property, and free enterprise.

The First Amendment prevents the government from abridging our freedom of speech. However, the values that underlie the First Amendment—intellectual tolerance, open-mindedness, robust and vigorous debate, et al.—have long suffused American institutions and American society more generally, especially at the elite level.

Not anymore. Increasingly, it seems, the American elite are abandoning classically liberal values for more contemporary illiberal and authoritarian values.

Thus freedom of thought no longer is seen as an unalloyed good with inherent and intrinsic worth. Instead, speech is judged by how it makes us feel—or, more importantly, how it makes politically important groups and constituencies feel.

Is the speech or thought dangerous or politically incorrect? Does it hurt or harm people? Does it promote hate? Does it violate our communal norms and sense of propriety and justice? Does it threaten our “safe space” and ability to contribute and function to the commonweal?

If so, then, I’m sorry, but your “freedom of speech” ends because it is in contradistinction to the “public good.”

Censorship. Of course, the illiberal authoritarians never admit that they are censors. They correctly note that the First Amendment applies to government, not to institutions and individuals. While this is technically true from a strictly legal perspective, it also misses the point:

The freedom that we Americans enjoy has never depended solely or even mainly on what the government does or does not do. Instead, our freedom has depended on what institutions do—especially our elite, private sector institutions in business, academia, and the media.

Indeed, these institutions serve as our cultural arbiters. They set the tone for what is and is not permissible.

And, for most of American history, they championed classically liberal values. That they increasingly refuse to do so is highly disconcerting and worrisome. Consider, for instance, two big news items that illustrate this troubling trend:

Item One. The New York Times this week published an op-ed by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas) arguing that, in accordance with the Insurrection Act, President Trump should deploy the active duty military or National Guard to cities and states plagued with violent rioting.

The purpose of such a deployment, the Senator explained, would be to restore domestic peace and tranquility and ensure that peaceful protesters can exercise their First Amendment rights without fear of bodily harm or injury.

Agree or disagree, this is a perfectly fair, reasonable, and legitimate argument—especially given that people have been shot, killed, beaten, and run over by violent rioters in the past week.

Yet, Cotton’s op-ed has provoked howls of outrage on social media from dozens of New York Times reporters who ludicrously assert (reportedly with a straight face) that Cotton’s argument endorses military occupation and state violence, promotes hate, and puts black Times reporters in danger.

This is absurd and nonsensical. Yet, as a result of this hullabaloo, the Times has gone to extraordinary lengths to explain and justify its decision to publish Cotton’s op-ed, while giving undue deference to its illiberal authoritarian critics and employees.

Group Think. And now, amazingly, after more than 800 of the paper’s staffers signed a letter protesting the op-ed’s publication, the Times has issued a statement saying the essay fell short of the newspaper’s standards and should not have been published.

“We’ve examined the piece and the process leading up to its publication,” Eileen Murphy, a Times spokeswoman, said in a statement.

“This review made clear that a rushed editorial process led to the publication of an op-ed that did not meet our standards. As a result, we’re planning to examine both short-term and long-term changes, to include expanding our fact-checking operation and reducing the number of op-eds we publish.”

In other words: the mob has spoken and we get it. We will appease the mob and aspire never to repeat this “mistake” by publishing “dangerous” and “wrongheaded” op-eds.

Item Two: New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees was asked by Yahoo Finance about the “take-a-knee” protests by some players in the National Football league.

These players refuse to stand for the playing of the national anthem. Instead, they take a knee, ostensibly to protest “systemic racism” and police brutality in law enforcement.

Brees’ response:

Well, that’s not an easy question to answer… God created us all equal. We all have a responsibility to love each other and to respect other. I try to live my life by two basic Christian fundamentals:

Love your Lord with all your heart, mind and soul; and love your neighbor as yourself. And I think that we accomplish greater things as a community, as a society, and as a country when we do it together…

These are trying times for our country… I think we all recognize the changes that need to take place…

We need to find ways to work together to provide opportunities for one another: to continue to move our country forward to a bigger and better place.

Brees then was a follow-up question about the “take-a-knee” protest.

“Now it’s coming back to the fore,” said Dan Roberts,

and a lot of people expect that we will see players kneeling again when the NFL season starts. I’m curious: how you think the NFL will and should respond to that… And  what is your responsibility as a leader in times like this…?

Brees’ response:

Well, I will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America or our country.

Let me just tell you what I feel when the national anthem is played and when I look at the flag of the United States.

I envision my two grandfathers, who fought for this country during World War II, one in the Army and one in the Marine Corps: both risking their lives to protect our country and to try and make our country and this world a better place.

So every time [that] I stand with my hand over my heart looking at that flag and singing the national anthem, that’s what I think about.

And, in many cases, it brings me to tears, thinking about all that has been sacrificed—not just [by] those in the military, but for that matter, [by] those throughout the civil rights movement of the 1960’s, and all that has been endured by so many people up until this point [emphasis added].

And is everything right about our country right now? No, it’s not. We still have a long way to go.

But I think what you do by standing there and showing respect for the flag with your hand over your heart is it shows unity. It shows that we are all in this together.

We can all do better. And that we are all part of the solution.

This is a perfectly reasonable and fair-minded point of view shared by millions of Americans and military veterans, black and white, who believe that the American flag and national anthem are and ought to be unifying symbols for Americans of all hues, colors, and ethnicities.

Intellectual Intolerance. Yet, Brees’ response has provoked howls of outrage—as if he had just pledged his allegiance to the Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan rather than extol the example of the Civil Rights movement, which ended Jim Crow and ensured black voting rights, as well as the example of his two grandfathers who enlisted in the U.S. military to help fight World War II.

Hall of Fame tight end Shanon Sharpe, for instance, could barely contain his contempt for Brees. Sharpe issued a long filibuster-like rant on the Fox News television show Undisputed in which he called Brees’ remarks “insulting,” and said that Brees’ attitude is what has made “the black fight [for equality] so hard” or difficult.

Brees, Sharpe added, should retire from football because he no longer can command the respect of his black teammates.

Retired Pro Bowl safety and ESPN analyst Ryan Clark declared that Brees showed he “doesn’t care that black people are being killed without justice being served… I’m not surprised,” he said. “I already knew who he was.”

“He just doesn’t care,” agreed All-Pro nose tackle Damon Harrison Sr.

Brees’ teammate, Malcolm Jenkins, told him that:

People who share your sentiments, who express those, and [who] push them throughout the world, the airwaves, are the problem. And it’s unfortunate, because I considered you a friend.

I looked up to you. You’re somebody who I had a great deal of respect for. But sometimes, you should shut the f— up.

Dissent. Of course, it defies all reason and understanding to conclude from Brees’ comments that he “just doesn’t care” about the difficulties and obstacles that confront African Americans. But what’s noteworthy about the reaction from many of Brees’ peers is their rank intolerance for contrary points of view.

You either agree with them about taking a knee during the national anthem (ostensibly to protest “systemic racism” and allegedly widespread “police brutality”), or you are indifferent to, or opposed to, fairness, justice, and racial equality.

They will brook no dissent. Different perspectives are not just mistaken or misguided; they are morally repugnant and utterly beyond the pale.

Maoist-Like Recantation. Sadly, Brees has since apologized and recanted, and is now obediently reciting the left-wing, “progressive” creed—to wit: “WE ARE THE PROBLEM,” his wife dutifully wrote on Instagram, as if she had just come out of a Maoist struggle session. “We are not doing enough. I am sorry. We are sorry.”

“We must stop talking about the flag and shift our attention to the real issues of system racial injustice, economic oppression, police brutality, and judicial and prison reform,” Brees dutifully wrote.

NFL Commissioner, Roger Goodell, meanwhile, issued a video statement in which he felt compelled to state that the league “condemns racism and the systematic oppression of black people. 

We, the National Football League, admit we were wrong for not listening to NFL players earlier and encourage all to speak out and peacefully protest.

We, the National Football League, believe Black Lives Matter.

I personally protest with you and want to be a part of the much needed change in this country.

Without black players there would be no National Football League. And the protests around the country are emblematic of the centuries of silence, inequality, and oppression of black players, coaches, fans, and staff…

The irony is that center-left elites say we need to have “an honest dialogue” about race in America, only they don’t really mean that. Because the minute the “dialogue” doesn’t proceed according to how they’ve scripted it, they browbeat the dissenters into submission.

Thus we don’t have an “honest dialogue.” Instead, we have a dishonest monologue, with the dissenters staying quiet because they don’t wish to be libeled as racists and bigots.

Shannon Sharpe, though, is right about one thing: the American flag is supposed to stand for something. It’s supposed to stand for the classically liberal values—including, notably, freedom of thought—upon which our country was founded.

Unfortunately, those values are now under assault by illiberal authoritarians who refuse to acknowledge the legitimacy of points of view that differ from their own.

And when highly influential institutions such as the New York Times and National Football League abandon these values because of a zealous commitment to what they perceive to be a greater good—in this case, racial equality—they endanger not just that allegedly greater good, but the entire American experiment in (classically liberal) self-government.

A republic if you can keep it, warned Benjamin Franklin. America has survived many trials and tribulations to be sure; but increasingly, it looks like Franklin’s warning was prophetic, and not because of anything Trump or the government did or did not do.

Instead, the fault lies with us, the citizenry, and especially our elite, who are rapidly abandoning their commitment to the classically liberal, foundational values that have been our guideposts for more than two centuries.

Most republics have ended up on the ash heap of history because they rotted from within. There is no guarantee that the American republic will be any different.

Feature photo credit: CBS News (Sen. Tom Cotton) and Black Sports Online (Drew Brees).

J-L Cauvin Does the Greatest Impersonation of Donald Trump That You’ve Ever Seen—and Heard!

Thanks to Twitter, I stumbled upon this wonderfully entertaining and amazingly spot-on impersonation of Donald Trump. The gentleman’s name is

J-L Cauvin. As you can see, he is an extraordinary talent.

https://twitter.com/JLCauvin/status/1242515702688485376

What makes Cauvin’s impersonation of Trump so compelling, I think, are three things, three rare gifts that he has:

First, like all great impressionists, Cauvin captures his subject’s voice and inflections to a tee. Indeed, the timbre and intonation of his voice all truly sound like Trump’s. It is remarkable. Cauvin obviously has a great ear.

Second, Cauvin perfectly captures Trump’s facial expressions, contortions, and mannerisms. It is, amazingly, like watching The Donald.

Third, Cauvin is a great writer. He not only looks and sounds like Trump; he speaks like Trump! Thus he perfectly captures Trump’s rhetorical tics and unique style of speaking.

Cauvin’s satirical spoof on Trump’s Easter message (above) is pure brilliance and a joy to behold. In fact, Cauvin is so good that I cannot help but wonder: why has he not received greater national attention?

For example, why has he not been on Saturday Night Live? Cauvin is much more entertaining than Alec Baldwin, who does a very weak and decidedly unentertaining Donald Trump.

The reason may be that Cauvin is too good. He is laugh-aloud entertaining, and his impersonation has the effect of humanizing Trump. And humanizing Trump is the very last thing our progressive denizens of pop culture want to do.

Trump, to them, is a monster, and he must be depicted as such.

It’s too bad because wit and humor can help soften and leaven the political polarization that plagues our country.

But even were that not the case, there is intrinsic wisdom and beauty in great art that is worth contemplating for its own sake. And great art should be considered as such irrespective of the subject whom it depicts.

All of which is to say: Donald Trump may a less-than-admirable human being; but J-L Cauvin’s depiction of Trump is, nonetheless, admirable and impressive—and well worth the moments of levity that it engenders.

Finding Humor Amid the Doom and Gloom of the Coronavirus

The coronavirus has cast a pall over the country. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has urged Americans to cancel events with 50 or more people, and President Trump has declared the COVID-19 outbreak a national emergency.

The need for extreme social distancing to prevent our hospitals and our healthcare system from being overwhelmed and brought to the breaking point may mean that this emergency extends throughout the summer, Trump warns.

The stock market, meanwhile, has lost nearly a third of its value (32 percent) since Feb. 12. As a point of comparison, “between Oct. 24 and Nov. 13, 1929 [at the start of the Great Depression], stocks fell by 33 percent,” reports Bloomberg’s Joe Nocera.

During such depressing times, it is important to find instances of levity or black humor to help relieve the stress and anxiety that threaten us all. Here are two such instances that we think will bring a smile to your face.

First, you know things have gotten bad when even Islamist terrorist groups are warning their adherents to avoid London, Milan, and Paris because, well, it’s gotten too damn dangerous there!

Second, professional and collegiate athletes have all been canceled. March Madness? Gone! Spring Training? Hasta la vista! Opening Day? Not this year!

Professional basketball and hockey? No dice! The PGA Tour? Forget about it! The Kentucky Derby? Not in Kentucky and not in any of these United States!

Heck, even professional bowling (if that’s your thing) probably has been canceled, given the CDC’s edict—er, I mean, recommendation!—against gatherings of 50 or more people.

Yet, not to worry: ESPN “has you covered” with 24/7 programming. But covered with what, exactly? Not sports, because there are none anymore. Instead, ESPN has you covered with wall-to-wall bloviation!

Now, look: I love Stephen A. Smith as much as the next red-blooded-American sports fan. But as good as he is—and he is very good—there’s only so much of him that you can take in any one day or week.

Ditto Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon. Pardon the Interruption and perish the thought; but what, exactly, are they gonna argue about if there’s nothing happening in the sports world to argue about?

The good old days? The 1969 Mets? The ’85 Bears? Dentures? Their latest hip replacement surgery? I mean: Come on, man!

Feature photo credit: The Patriot Post.

Ash Wednesday Ashes Are Important Symbols of Faith in Our Secular Culture

If you believe, as I do, that organized religion, and Christianity and Judaism in particular, is a force for good in America, and that our success as a nation is in large part attributable to the prominent role religious faith historically has played in our public life, then it was good to see prominent news anchors this evening—Fox News’ Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum, for instance, as well as CNN’s Chris Cuomo—with ashes on their foreheads.

The ashes are there, of course, because today is Ash Wednesday, which is the beginning of Lent. And Lent is the beginning of the Easter season, which, for Christians, is the most important and solemn time of the year.

Lent is, as Chris Quilpa well puts it in the Suffolk News-Herald, when we Christians “observe and commemorate the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the son of God, our Savior and Redeemer.” It is, as Father Paul Scalia explains, “a time of entering into combat: to ‘take up battle against spiritual evils.'”

But you don’t have to be a Christian to respect and appreciate the significant role Judeo-Christianity has played in American political life and in making the United States one of the freest and most prosperous countries in all of human history.

The great 19th Century social thinker, Alexis DeTocqueville, for instance, “claimed that the first political institution of American democracy was religion,” writes political scientist Michael Novak.

“Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports,” said George Washington in his farewell address.

Certainly, Judeo-Christianity in America has helped to foster certain habits and dispositions—industriousness, a work ethic, thrift, delayed gratification, a sense of reciprocal obligation to our fellow man, et al.—that lend themselves to political and material prosperity

Which is why the decline of religious affiliation in America, especially pronounced it seems in the past 20 years, is worrisome. All of us, as Americans, benefit from our nation’s religious and cultural inheritance. But what happens when that inheritance is exhausted and unreplenished?

Symbols Matter. The display of ashes on Ash Wednesday matter because symbols and symbolism matter. They spark interest and discussion. They incite curiosity and inquiry. They invite reflection and thought. They are a way to bear witness to the faith without being heavy-handed and doctrinaire.

Indeed, when children—and adults—see the ashes, some will ask: Why are they there? What do they mean? Why are they important to some people? And some of these children and adults will follow-up and learn more about Christianity and religious faith more generally.

Some might even become religious believers. But even if they remain agnostic, perhaps they at least will have a newfound respect for the contributions that people of faith can and do make to our commonweal.

Perhaps they will at least appreciate the role of religion in American public life. And, given our history, and given the challenges that confront us, that would not be a bad thing.

Feature photo credit: www.SevenDays.nl.