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For the Most Part, the 2020 Election Is Not About Trump or Biden

Is a presidential election a personality contest between two men—or a clash of two political tribes with divergent views on public policy? Are you voting for someone you like—or for hundreds of people you may never see, known or hear from, but who may dramatically affect your future?

To a disconcerting extent, presidential elections are popularity contests. Voters make an intensely personal decision. They eschew ideology and public policy to vote for the man (or woman) they like best and believe is best prepared to lead the nation in the next four years.

I say disconcerting because while the man or woman at the top obviously matters, and while their leadership abilities (or lack thereof) definitely matter, he (or she) is just one person. And our government is far too big, unwieldy, and complex to be run or administered by just one man.

The reality is that a vote for president is a vote for hundreds of people and scores of policies that, to a surprising degree, operate independently of the president, or with his simple approval or assent.

Tax Reform, for instance, had Trump’s imprimatur, but was crafted by Congressional Republicans well before Trump even came on the political scene.

Thus when you voted for Trump, you were voting for scores of people—in Congress, the Trump administration, in think tanks, lobby groups, and the federal bureaucracy—who gave substantive meaning to Trump’s pledge of tax reform and who made tax reform a reality.

Trade. Likewise on trade. Trump promised to “get tough” with China by ending unfair and discriminatory Chinese trade practices. But it wasn’t Trump who formulated these specific public policies and who actually negotiated with China’s communist government.

Instead, it was Robert Lighthizer, Steve Mnuchin, Peter Navarro and other public policy experts who spearheaded this effort and negotiated the deal.

Political Parties. The point is not that Trump doesn’t matter. The point is that he matters a lot less than you might realize if you understand how our government works and how public policy is formulated and implemented. Yet, the media (and most voters, frankly) are fixated on Trump and his childish and obnoxious behavior.

I get it. Trump is the president, after all.

Still, part of being an informed and educated adult is recognizing that we’re not in high school anymore, and we’re not voting for the prom king or queen. The presidential election should not be a popularity contest; it should be a contest of ideas. 

The reality is that any president, Democrat or Republican, will inevitably reflect the political tribe from which he comes and with which he affiliates. This means that voters must look beyond the man and the personality to the political party, its thought leaders and ideological agenda.

The Supreme Court. Consider, for instance, Supreme Court appointments, federal judgeships and the judiciary. Here, Trump has taken his cues from Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) and the Federalist Society.

In fact, if you want to understand Trump’s judicial appointments, you’re much better off listening to McConnell and the Federalist Society than you are listening to Trump. The president, after all, is shallow and incoherent; McConnell and the Federalist Society are thoughtful and coherent.

Biden is more substantively engaged than Trump, but no less a reflection of the party and movement that guide and direct him. In fact, given his advanced age and obviously waning physical and mental abilities, Biden is arguably more of a political puppet than Trump.

Radical Democratic Agenda. Moreover, the energy and intellectual ferment in the Democratic Party today is clearly on the extreme left, as the party has embraced radical plans to:

  • restructure the judiciary;
  • end the use of fossil fuels, including a ban on fracking;
  • decriminalize illegal immigration;
  • abolish the Electoral College;
  • make Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia bona fide states, each with two U.S. Senators; and
  • inexorably extend the government’s takeover of the healthcare system through “Medicare for All.”

Biden may or may not agree with all of these radical plans. (We don’t know for sure because Biden has been lying low, hiding in his basement, saying very little of substance, and campaigning as little as possible.) But whether he agrees or not with his party’s extreme left agenda is largely irrelevant.

Biden is a good and loyal Democrat who will sign whatever bills House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) and Charles Schumer (D-New York) send his way—just as Trump has been a good and loyal Republican who has signed whatever bills McConnell and then-House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin) sent his way when the Republicans controlled Congress.

The bottom line: there is a lot more on the ballot this fall than simply two opposing candidates.

There are two opposing political parties, two divergent political philosophies, and two teams of candidates vying for control of the Senate and the House. And there are scores of policy analysts and public policy administrators who work for these two opposing teams or political tribes.

Trump and Biden may be the faces that you see, but there are a lot more faces—and arguably more important faces—behind the scenes working to shape America’s future; and, depending on who wins the election, they may get their chance. 

Understand this and please vote accordingly. Policy, not personality, is what matters most.

Feature photo credit: The Shtick.

The Fight We Want and the Justice We Need: Amy Coney Barrett

This is not just a fight for one Supreme Court nominee. It is a fight for the rule of law, the restoration of Constitutional government, and the right of women to live freely without being stereotyped by the political and cultural Left.

President Trump reportedly will select Amy Coney Barrett to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court.

In a better and more politically mature country, this would be significant news, of course, but hardly the occasion for a titanic political fight, with far-reaching ramifications that promise to resonate deeply throughout the wider culture.

Yet, both the Left and the Right, conservatives and progressives, Democrats and Republicans, view this nomination as critically important and a landmark event in American history.

Judicial Overreach. That is because the courts and the judiciary increasingly have played an outsized role in American politics. Public-policy decisions that, by all rights under the Constitution, should be decided by the American people through their elected representatives have been decided instead by unelected judges.

The Left generally has welcomed and promoted judicial overreach because it has allowed them to short-circuit the legislative process and to achieve their political and public-policy objectives through judicial decree.

For this same reason, of course, the Right generally has lamented and opposed judicial overreach because it has denied them even the possibility of achieving their political and public-policy objectives legislatively and at the ballot box.

Hence the present moment, where nominations to the Supreme Court have become politically momentous events that promise to radically alter our public-policy universe. But this is not what the American Founding Fathers intended when they created an independent judiciary.

The Founding Fathers viewed the judiciary as performing an important but limited role: interpreting and applying the law in a narrowly prescribed technical sense, not creating new rights that correspond with our evolving sense of justice.

If the courts had remained faithful to this original purpose, then we would be spared all of the Sturm und Drang that now surrounds Supreme Court nominations.

Instead of being political spectacles, where underhanded partisans try to destroy the nominee, we would have more low-key affairs in which the Senate performs its advise and consent role with little notice and little fanfare.

Left-Wing Attacks. Of course, as the Wall Street Journal points out, the vicious and savage attacks on Supreme Court nominees have come exclusively from one side: the political left.

The low-blows started with the smearing of Robert Bork in 1987 and they culminated in the attempted character assassination of Brett Kavanaugh two years ago. Democratic nominees, by contrast, have been treated fairly and respectfully by conservatives.

But as a married woman with seven children—including a special needs child and two adopted children from Haiti—Barrett is much more difficult target to smear and defame.

And that is why her nomination is so critically important: because it promises to restore, finally and belatedly, the Constitutional balance of power between the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government; and because it promises a fair and honest fight—a fight which will help illuminate for the American people what is at stake and the proper role of the judiciary in our system of government.

Conservative Disappointment. I say finally and belatedly because conservatives have been trying for decades to rein in the courts through judicial appointments, but with limited success and much disappointment.

Robert Bork, for instance, never made it to the Supreme Court after being smeared by the Left and narrowly voted down by the Senate. His replacement, Anthony Kennedy, was no originalist.

Kennedy, in fact, voted to uphold an utterly manufactured Constitutional right to abortion, while spearheading a series of decisions that culminated in an equally fabricated Constitutional right to same-sex marriage.

To avert a contentious Senate confirmation fight, George H. W. Bush gave us David Souter, who turned out to be reliably liberal or left-wing justice. And George W. Bush gave us Chief Justice John Roberts, who has inexplicably sided with the Left in several key decisions involving, for instance, Obamacare and the U.S. Census.

Even Neil Gorsuch, a Trump nominee, has surprised and disappointed conservatives by finding new “progressive” meaning in statutes long considered fixed and settled.

For this reason—because conservative justices can occasionally stray and be heterodox and unpredictable in their thinking—it is probably necessary to have six originalists on the Court before Constitutional order can be restored.

A Justice Barrett would be, essentially, the Court’s sixth originalist.

Cultural Significance. Barrett’s ascension to the high court also will have far-reaching political and cultural significance. She is a practicing Catholic who takes her faith seriously and, as mentioned, is the mother of seven children, including a special needs child and two adopted children from Haiti.

As such, she represents a type of woman in America—conservative and religious, educated and accomplished, professional and family-oriented—that progressive cultural denizens in Hollywood and the media ignore, ridicule, and caricature.

Yet there are millions of such women in America today and their voices deserve to be heard and recognized.

A Justice Barrett, simply by being who she is, will help ensure that these women—our wives, mothers, sisters, and daughters—no longer are ignored, ridiculed, and caricatured.

In short, this is the fight we want and the justice we need. Barrett’s nomination is the culmination of a decades-long effort to restore Constitutional government in America. The country will be notably freer and immeasurably better off when that is achieved.

Feature photo creditThe Federalist.

10 Inconvenient Questions for Democrats About the Fight Over the Supreme Court

  1. Where in the Constitution, exactly, does it prohibit a president from appointing someone to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court in an election year?
  1. Previous American presidents—including Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Woodrow Wilson—nominated Supreme Court justices in an election year, and the Senate confirmed those nominees before the election.

Other American presidents—including John Adams, Ulysses S. Grant, and Calvin Coolidge—nominated justices after the election but before the inauguration; and those nominees, too, were confirmed by the Senate.

Were these American presidents guilty of some illegal or damnable transgression—or instead, were they exercising their lawful authority under the Constitution?

  1. Assume the shoe was on the other foot, so to speak. It is Sept. 18, 2012. Obama is president; he is up for reelection but trailing in the polls; the Democrats control the Senate but risk losing control after the election; and Justice Scalia has died.

Would not Obama nominate a new justice to replace Scalia, and would not Senate Democrats act to confirm Obama’s nominee?

  1. Long-standing Senate tradition (not law) allowed for use of the filibuster to prevent judicial nominees from being confirmed by the Senate. Stopping a filibuster requires 60 votes.

Practically speaking, given the makeup of the Senate, to reach the 60-vote threshold typically requires at least a bare minimum of bipartisan support.

However, in 2013, Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) prohibited use of the filibuster for most judicial nominees. Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) then followed suit in 2017 and eliminated use of the filibuster for Supreme Court nominees.

This allowed Senate Republicans to confirm Trump appointee Brett Kavanaugh with just one Democratic vote; and it will allow Senate Republicans to approve Ginsburg’s replacement with, potentially, no Democratic votes.

Given this history, was it a mistake for Harry Reid to eliminate the filibuster for judicial nominees? Did this not pave the way for Senate confirmation of Trump’s three Supreme Court nominees?

  1. Since the middle of the 20th Century, Democrats and leftist have relied upon the courts, or the judicial branch of government, to achieve political and public policy objectives that they never could have achieved legislatively—for example:
  • banning voluntary school prayer;
  • requiring abortion on demand;
  • mandating various and sundry environmental protection measures, school and prison reforms; and now:
  • dictating federal immigration policy and state voting requirements.

Has it been it a mistake to rely so heavily on the courts and the judiciary to achieve your political and public policy objectives—especially since Republican court appointees are often unwilling to accede to assertions of judicial supremacy vis-a-vis the executive and legislative branches of government?

  1. Do you believe there are any limits on the jurisdiction of the courts, or is every political and policy issue justiciable?
  1. Some Democratic leaders—including House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler (D-New York)—have called on Senate Democrats to expand the size of the Supreme Court and pack it with more liberal or activist judges.

Justice Ginsburg, however, said court-packing is a bad idea because it would undermine the Court’s legitimacy and weaken public trust in the institution.

Who’s right about expanding or packing the Court: Chairman Nadler or Justice Ginsburg?

  1. An independent judiciary free of political coercion or control is one of the pillars of American democracy.

Yet in recent years, this independence has been threatened by Democratic Senators such as Charles Schumer (D-New York), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-Rhode Island), and Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut), all of whom have warned that unless the Court rules in a “progressive” direction, it risks being brought to heel and radically restructured.

Can we not agree that while we certainly can criticize Supreme Court decisions, we ought to refrain from demanding that the Court rule a certain way or risk suffering some vague but ominous-sounding consequences?

Do not such threats strike at the very heart of judicial independence?

  1. Some Senate Democrats—including Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) Marie Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Kamala Harris (D-California)—have suggested that practicing Catholics who belong to Catholic religious organizations, such as the Knights of Columbus, should be disqualified from federal judgeships.

The reason: practicing Catholics have religious beliefs that are opposed to progressive orthodoxy on a range of issues (such as abortion and same-sex marriage) where progressive orthodoxy has been incorporated into the Constitution and established as new rights.

The Constitution, however, expressly prohibits a religious test for governmental service; and prominent Catholics such as President John F. Kennedy (a Democrat) and Justice Antonin Scalia (a Republican) have expressly said that their religious faith does not override the oath that they take to the Constitution of the United States.

Who’s right about whether practicing Catholics should be disqualified from the federal judiciary because of their religious faith: Senators Durbin, Hirono, and Harris, or President Kennedy, Justice Scalia, and the Constitution?

  1. Liberal interest groups and Democratic Senators have viciously and savagely attacked the character and good name of a series of recent Republican Supreme Court nominees—including Robert Bork, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh.

Bork and Alito, for instance, was accused of being racists; Thomas was accused of sexual harassment; and Kavanaugh was accused of participating in a gang rape. The evidence for these accusations was utterly lacking. The charges reflected a partisan political desire to destroy these nominees before they could ascend to the high court.

Can we refrain from the politics of personal destruction and instead, debate the merits, qualifications, and judicial philosophies of Supreme Court nominees? Is that asking too much in this, the world’s greatest democracy?

Feature photo credit: Kevin Dietsch/UPI.

The Scalia-Ginsburg Friendship Should Be Our Political Model Today

The battle over Trump’s next appointment to the Supreme Court should be heated and intense, but civil and respectful. Justices Scalia and Ginsburg would not have wanted it any other way.

The death of Ruth Justice Bader Ginsburg Friday means that there will be, as the Wall Street Journal rightly notes, a “titanic fight over her successor.” This is fitting and appropriate.

The stakes, after all, are very high: The future direction of the Supreme Court, our essential civil liberties, and the rule of law are all at risk.

Indeed, as Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) points out, the Second Amendment right to bear arms is being erased from the Constitution because of the high court’s neglect. And religious liberty decisions typically are decided by a 5-4 margin and on narrow technical grounds that fail to reflect the overriding importance of this essential First Amendment right.

Judicial Power-Grab. Moreover, more left-wing “progressive” justices may well mean that the Court will legislate new and costly entitlements into the Constitution—a “right to healthcare,” for instance.

Sounds farfetched? Maybe. But so, too, did a Constitutional right to homosexual marriage—until it became politically fashionable and the object of a concerted legal campaign.

The result was the Court’s 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges decision that redefined marriage to include same-sex unions—an idea genuinely never contemplated by the American Founding Fathers who wrote the Constitution.

So yes, there is a lot at stake with this newest Court vacancy: whether we will remain a free and self-governing people, or whether we will be ruled by nine unelected judges who, increasingly, usurp from us our decision-making authority under the Constitution.

Scalia and Ginsburg. That said, we all can and should learn from the example set by Justice Ginsburg and the late great Justice Antonin Scalia. These two legendary jurists were ideological opposites and long-standing judicial sparring partners; yet they enjoyed a deep and abiding friendship.

Justice Ginsburg, of course, was the leader of the Court’s left-wing “progressives”; Justice Scalia the leader of the Court conservatives.

Their judicial opinions frequently clashed, especially on big, high-profile cases involving the Second Amendment, religious liberty, affirmative action, property rights, and state sovereignty. Yet, these two opposing jurists had great affection for one another and were genuinely the best of friends.

Justice Scalia’s son, Christopher, relays this wonderful and telling story from Judge Jeffrey Sutton during a visit Sutton had with Scalia before the justice’s death in 2016:

The Scalia and Ginsburg families regularly socialized. They celebrated every New Year’s Eve together, for instance. And yet: the two justices never allowed the intensity of their judicial disagreements to ruin or obstruct their personal friendship.

How to Fight. “I attack ideas; I don’t attack people,” is how Justice Scalia wisely put it. Good and wonderful people, he observed, can harbor or espouse very bad ideas. That means they are mistaken; it does not mean they are bad or deficient in character or morals.

In other words, politics is one thing; character is another thing; and, if you cannot distinguish between the two, you are allowing your politics to blind you to the decency and humanity of your fellow citizens, both left and right.

This is something all of us would do well to consider as we prepare for what will no doubt be a pitched political battle involving the next and newest justice of the Supreme Court.

High-Stakes Battle. This battle promises to be highly emotional and deeply felt—on both sides. The intensity and passion will be palpable. Everyone knows that there is a lot riding on this appointment. The next justice may well serve on the Court for 40 years or more.

But let us all strive to be fair-minded, judicious, and even-tempered. Let us all realize that, in the United States of America, our domestic political opponents are not our enemies; they are our friends, neighbors, and family members. 

Let us all try to emulate the wonderful and worthy example of Justices Scalia and Ginsburg.

Civility. Let us disagree without being disagreeable. Let us vigorously engage the political debate without engaging in the politics of personal destruction. Let us recognize that, despite our profound disagreements, there is far more that unites us than divides us.

And, when the fight is over, let us come together as Americans who share a common political lineage and a worthy political goal: liberty and justice for all in these United States.

Surely, that is what Justices Scalia and Ginsburg would have wanted. And certainly, that is the example they set in their own lives through a deep and abiding friendship that transcended political and ideological differences.

May their example be our reality.

Feature photo credit: The Kalb Report, YouTube.

Yes, Let’s Rewrite History—Just Don’t Falsify It While Doing So

Historical Revisionism is nothing new and it’s actually a good thing. The falsification of history, however, is a more recent development; and that, obviously, is a bad thing.

On both the left and the right today, there’s a lot of concern about “rewriting history.”

“The entire effort to rewrite American history makes my blood boil,” writes a reader in the Fence Post, a nationwide agricultural newspaper that reaches more than 80,000 readers weekly.

“The Civil War happened. That’s a historic fact… The history of the Civil War will not go away just because it’s protested today.”

A left-wing writer, likewise, complains that the Democratic Party “is clearly uninterested in truth or accountability, and is more than willing to rewrite history to advance its political goals.”

Why does the writer say this? Because President Obama had the audacity this week to praise his predecessor, George W. Bush, for having “a basic regard for the rule of law and the importance of our institutions of democracy.”

Balderdash! says the writer, and Obama should know better.

Rewriting v. Falsifying. Of course, what these and other observers are criticizing is not the rewriting of history per se, but rather the falsifying of history as they see it. In truth, history is constantly being rewritten in light of new events and circumstances to glean lessons from the past.

This is a good and laudatory thing and something that should be encouraged. 

Some of the best history, in fact, is history that has been rewritten by historians who look back upon our past from a new angle or fame of reference to draw insights that may have been hidden or obscured by previous interpretations of history.

In 1957, for instance, an unknown assistant secretary of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, Bray Hammond, wrote a magisterial history, Banks and Politics in America: From the Revolution the Civil War, that completely upended the history of Andrew Jackson and the Jacksonian era in American politics.

In so doing, Hammond took direct aim another great work of history, The Age of Jackson, by the acclaimed Harvard historian, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. The Age of Jackson (1945) was itself a work of revisionist historical scholarship that won rave reviews.

Both Hammond and Schlesinger, in fact, won the Pulitzer Prize for History for their respective books and have contributed mightily to our historical understanding.

Both books were sincere, good-faith attempts to interpret and make sense of the past. However, they employed contrasting analytical frameworks that created widely divergent narrative histories.

For Schlesinger, the Age of Jackson was all about class conflict and the efforts by the working and laboring classes to seek redress from the government against business domination and control. In so doing, Schlesinger argued, Jackson was the precursor to Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal.

Schlesinger thus broke from the previously dominant historical narrative, which argued that sectional differences, not class differences, defined American politics in the Age of Jackson; and that Jackson himself was the political embodiment of the country’s ascendant western frontier.

Hammond, meanwhile, offered an altogether different interpretation dubbed the entrepreneurial thesis.

Hammond argued that the Jacksonian era was, indeed, defined through class conflict. However, the class conflict pitted not the laboring classes against the business interests, but rather a new class of entrepreneurs and speculators who conspired against the old monied interests. This new class was eager for easy money to fuel their entrepreneurial and speculative ventures. 

The Jacksonians, Hammond argued, employed virtuous and high-minded democratic rhetoric to conceal their true motives and true objectives, which were self-interested and self-serving. And the end result of their attack on America’s Second National Bank, Hammond wrote, were economically damaging and reverberated for decades.

All three of these historical interpretations—the initially dominant sectional conflict thesis, Schlesinger’s class conflict thesis, and Hammond’s entrepreneurial thesis—involved rewriting history.

However, none of these interpretations involved falsifying history, and that is a crucial distinction. The essential historical facts in question were all agreed upon and not in dispute.

What was in dispute (and still is to a considerable extent) is how to interpret and apply those facts to our understanding of history.

To be sure, sometimes newly discovered facts are unearthed that alter our understanding of history. That certainly was the case with Banks and Politics in America: From the Revolution the Civil War.

Because he worked for the Federal Reserve, Hammond understood banking and finance in a way that Schlesinger and previous historians simply did not. Thus he was able to bring to light new facts that helped to explain how the Second Bank worked and what its demise meant for the U.S. economy.

Still, in the main, the disagreements here are not about the facts of history; they are about the interpretation and application of those facts.

False History. This is not to say that all interpretations of history are equally valid or legitimate. To the contrary: there is such a thing as bad, biased, and simply false history or historical writing. Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States comes to mind.

Historian Michael Kazin (no conservative, by the way, but rather, a man of the left) called A People’s Historya Manichean fable… better suited to a conspiracy-monger’s website than to a work of scholarship.” Another reviewer called the book “absolutely atrocious agit-prop.”

In short, Zinn was a Marxist political activist, not a serious and fair-minded historian, and there is real difference between these two types. But for serious historians, disagreements in interpretation and analysis can be legitimate and illuminating.

The real risk is that an historian can become so blinded by his frame of reference that he distorts or falsifies history by omitting or glossing over other critical facts and perspectives that complicate or contradict his thesis.

James Bouie. This is what appears to have happened to New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie.

Although Bouie is a journalist, and not an historian per se, he is, nonetheless, a serious student of history. However, in his zeal to argue that America’s black slaves were not simply passive victims, but instead, had real agency and self-awareness, he offers up a very bad and inaccurate historical account.

“Neither Abraham Lincoln nor the Republican Party freed the slaves,” Bouie brazenly asserts in a recent column.

They helped set freedom in motion and eventually codified it into law with the 13th Amendment, but they were not themselves responsible for the end of slavery. They were not the ones who brought about its final destruction.

Who freed the slaves? The slaves freed the slaves.

This is complete nonsense. As National Review’s Dan McLaughlin points out in a thorough debunking of Bouie’s thesis:

Bouie is right that black Americans played a significant role in contributing to the abolitionist movement, the escalating sectional tensions that led to secession, the transformation of the Civil War in the North from a war for the Union to a war of liberation, and the Union’s victory.

He is wrong to claim that those contributions in and of themselves were enough to bring about the end of slavery, and that Lincoln, the Republicans, the Union Army, and the majority of the American population were merely passive conduits, bobbing like a cork on the unstoppable streams of history.

Bouie skips the crucial step. All the abolitionist agitation in the world only mattered because the people with real political, military, cultural, and economic power in America—the federal government, Northern state governments, the military, the churches, the leaders of the economy, and ultimately, the voting public—eventually chose to side with the abolitionist movement.

It was not a given that they would; in the 1820s and 1830s, they had chosen not to.

In short, Bouie took a legitimate historical insight—that America’s black slaves helped to effect their emancipation—and blew it up into a holistic explanation when it quite obviously is nothing of the sort.

Historical Moment. So, what does this have do with our present political and historical moment?

Well, American history today is under fire and under review in a way that it has not been in quite some time if ever. Indeed, the very legitimacy of the American founding is being called in to question, as “woke,” left-wing radicals seek to advance a far-left agenda.

For this reason, we are seeing historical statues and monuments being toppled, vandalized and defaced as new historical narratives are introduced into the public debate and foisted upon the public.

In key respects, these new historical narratives are really not new. They’ve been adopted in colleges and universities, elementary and secondary schools, for decades, and they are not entirely bad.

They typically give greater historical weight to the experiences of blacks, Indians or native Americans, women, and other marginalized groups.

Cultural Marxists. But as with Howard Zinn’s People’s History and James Bouie’s column, these narratives often are highly politicized and distorted, and designed to advance an explicitly left-wing political agenda.

Their intent is to deconstruct America and create a new country that will embody Marxian and socialist ideals.

But whereas Marx believed that capitalism could be undermined by appeals to the proletariat or working class, his modern-day heirs recognize that America’s greatest source of vulnerability and weakness lie in its racially troubled past; and that appeals to white guilt and black racial grievance are far better suited to deconstruct and remake the United States.

This means that we should be wary and discerning of new historical narratives, and equally wary and discerning of historical groupthink and consensus.

Simplistic and reductionist histories that attempt to explain the past through one narrow prism are especially suspect. History, like life itself, is complicated and typically results from a variety of sometimes seemingly irreconcilable factors and decisions.

All of us, moreover, are going to have to become better consumers of history. This means referring to source documents—many of which are available on the Internet—and making our own assessments of the past.

Patriots, meanwhile, liberal and conservative, must engage in their own historical revisionism. We must rewrite history for a new generation of Americans: poorly educated, ill-informed, and lacking in historical knowledge and perspective.

This new generation has been fed a lie—to wit: that American history is a source of shame; and that Western Civilization itself is a mistake that must be corrected. But in truth, what must be corrected is this false and dangerous narrative.

That means rewriting history in light of modern-day circumstances to illuminate the past for a people increasingly haunted by the darkness. 

Feature photo credit: Historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. via the Washington Examiner.