In Defense of Incivility
Beware
the press and politicians who bemoan the 'tone' in politics
Jeb Bush was at an event in the Hamptons this
past weekend and was introduced by one of America’s donor elites as someone who
would bring “civility” back to American politics.
Please.
May I say, civility is overrated? Bush clearly agrees with his fellow elitists,
recently calling for “reweaving the web of civility” in American politics while
decrying the “incivility” of conservatism.
The
elites always talk about civility in politics. That is a way to control the
citizenry, by shaming them into silence when focused anger would serve the
Republic better. It’s too bad there was not more incivility over the bailout of
Wall Street.
Wouldn’t
at least a few show trials of the thieves of Wall Street have served as an
example to the people and our children of the sins of ill-gotten wages? There
is something to be said for incivil righteousness.
The last thing we need in American politics
is more civility. What we need is more focused anger. Anger begets debate and
debate beget change. This is Donald Trump’s real contribution to the 2016
presidential contest.
Patrick
Henry did not say, “Give me civility or give me death!”
Liberty is often messy
and yes, uncivil. Freedom is supposed to be disorderly. Nathan Hale’s hanging
was anything but civil. The shot heard round the world was uncivil. Christ’s
martyrdom was uncivil.
Liberalism
is built on order, often masquerading as justice. It is liberals who most often
deride the incivility of talk radio and conservative commentators.
“Civility
is claiming and caring for one’s identity, needs and beliefs without degrading
someone else’s in the process,” said Tomas Spath and Cassandra Dahnke, founders
of the Institute for Civility in Government.
How
gentle. How sweet. How un-American.
This
is another way of saying, “To each, according to his needs, from each,
according to his abilities.”
American
conservatives believe in the free exchanges of ideas — both civil and uncivil.
The gulag was civil in a fashion, as were the re-education camps.
Barack
Obama is too calm, too cool for many people’s tastes. Collectivists are often
that way. Talking calmly about civility while stealing your wallet and your
freedoms. It is anti-intellectual, but it is civil.
A
Planned Parenthood abortion factory is also civil in a way. After all, the
unborn children murdered in the most inhumane fashions only scream in silence.
Would we have had the American Revolution
without incivility? Would we have had the war to free the slaves without
incivility? We weren’t civil to the Empire of Japan nor the Third Reich in
World War II. We weren’t civil in arming indigenous revolutionary forces
fighting the Soviets in the Cold War.
All
of these initiatives came from uncivil conservatives, not civil liberals.
Ronald Reagan understood this with every fiber of his being, best articulating
his view in 1964, when he told listeners that they could “surrender” to the
Soviet threat and thereby gain civility, if also slavery. But he said “You and
I know and do not believe that life is so dear and peace so sweet as to be
purchased at the price of chains and slavery.” Freedom and the struggle for
freedom is often loud.
F.
Scott Fitzgerald once said of the elites, “They think, deep in their hearts,
they are better than we are because we had to discover the compensations and
refuges of life for ourselves. Even when they enter deep into our world or sink
below us, they still think that they are better than we are. They are different.”
Sounds
like somebody we know whose initials are Hillary Rodham Clinton. The rules
don’t apply to her. The same can be said for Michelle and Barack Obama, as well
as John Kerry, but also many Republicans. The essential difference in American
politics today is between the insiders and the outsiders. Ronald Reagan was an
outsider but his vice president, George H.W. Bush, was an insider.
Thomas
Jefferson believed in a “natural aristocracy” where men and women of ambition
could climb to their highest level of achievement, without the heavy hand of
nobility nor bureaucracy aiding them.
This
is the essential difference in America today and 200 years ago. It is not where
you came from. It is where you are going. It is the revolutionary belief in
upward mobility and no one is preordained into a class or sect.
Thus,
American conservatism—uncivil and intellectual, all at the same time—is the
ultimate expression of Americanism. As Reagan said, “Whether we believe in our
capacity for self-government or whether we abandon the American revolution and
confess that a little intellectual elite in a far-distant capitol can plan our
lives for us better than we can plan them ourselves.”
Three
cheers for American incivility.
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