How Liberals Lost a Liberal
By Dennis Prager
Tuesday, April 15, 2008The Democratic
Party's preoccupation with the question of when America will leave Iraq
rather than with how America will win in Iraq reminds me of how and why
this nearly lifelong liberal and Democrat became identified as a
conservative and Republican activist.
I have identified as liberal all my life. How could I not? I was
raised a Jew in New York City, where I did graduate work in the social
sciences at Columbia University. It is almost redundant to call a New
York Jewish intellectual a liberal. In fact, I never voted for a
Republican candidate for president until Ronald Reagan in 1980. But I
have not voted for a Democrat since 1980.
What happened? Did I suddenly change my values in 1980? Or did
liberalism? Obviously, one (or both) of us changed.
As I know my values, the answer is as clear as it could be -- it is
liberalism that has changed, not I. In a word, liberalism became
leftism. Or, to put it another way -- since my frame of reference is
moral values -- liberalism's moral compass broke. It did so during the
Vietnam War, though I could not bring myself to vote Republican until
1980. The emotional and psychological hold that the Democratic Party and
the word "liberal" have on those who consider themselves liberal is
stronger than the ability of most of these individuals to acknowledge
just how far from liberal values contemporary liberalism and the
Democratic Party have strayed.
Here are four key examples that should prompt any consistent liberal
to vote Republican and oppose "progressives" and others on the left.
The issue that began the emotionally difficult task of getting this
liberal to identify with conservatives and become an active Republican
was Communism. I had always identified the Democratic Party and
liberalism with anti-Communism. Indeed, the labor movement and the
Democratic Party actually led American opposition to Communism. It was
the Democrat Harry Truman, not Republicans, who made the difficult and
unpopular decision to fight another war just a few years after World War
II -- the war against Chinese and Korean Communists. It was Democrats --
John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson -- who also led the war against
Chinese and Vietnamese Communists.
Then Vietnam occurred, and Democrats and liberals (in academia, labor
and the media) abandoned that war and abandoned millions of Asians to
totalitarianism and death, defamed America's military, became anti-war
instead of anti-evil, became anti-anti-Communist instead of
anti-Communist, and embraced isolationism, a doctrine I and others
previously had always associated with conservatives and the Republican
Party. This change was perfectly exemplified in 1972, when the
Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern ran on the platform
"Come home, America."
This in turn led to the liberal embrace of the immoral doctrine of
moral equivalence. As I was taught at Columbia, where I studied
international relations, America was equally responsible for the Cold
War, and there was little moral difference between the U.S. and the
U.S.S.R. They were essentially two superpowers, each looking out for its
imperialist self-interest. I will never forget when the professor of my
graduate seminar in advanced Communist Studies, Zbigniew Brzezinski,
chided me for using the word "totalitarian" to describe the Soviet
Union.
I recall, too, asking the late eminent liberal historian Arthur
Schlesinger, in a public forum in Los Angeles in the late 1970s, if he
would say that America was, all things considered, a better, i.e., more
moral, society than Soviet society. He said he would not.
It was therefore not surprising, only depressingly reinforcing of my
view of what had happened to liberals, when liberals and Democrats
condemned President Ronald Reagan for describing the Soviet Union as an
"evil empire."
Identifying and confronting evil remains the Achilles' heel of
liberals, progressives and the rest of the left. It was not only
Communism that post-Vietnam liberals refused to identify as evil and
forcefully confront. Every major liberal newspaper in America condemned
Israel's 1981 destruction of Saddam Hussein's nuclear reactor (in which
one person -- a French agent there to aid the Israeli bombers, and who
therefore knowingly risked his life -- was killed). As The New York
Times editorialized: "Israel's sneak attack … was an act of inexcusable
and short-sighted aggression."
Most Democrats in Congress even opposed the first Gulf War,
sanctioned by the United Nations and international law, against Saddam
Hussein's Iraq and its bloody annexation of Kuwait.
And today, the liberal and Democratic world's only concern with
regard to Iraq, where America is engaged in the greatest current battle
against organized evil, is how soon America can withdraw.
There were an even larger number of domestic issues that alienated
this erstwhile liberal and Democrat. But nothing quite compares with
liberal and progressive abandonment of the war against evil, the most
important venture the human race must engage in every generation.
I can understand why a leftist would vote for the party not one of
whose contenders for the presidency uttered the words "Islamic terror"
in a single presidential debate. But I still cannot understand why a
true liberal would.
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