Right, Left, Truth, and Observable Reality

Quite a while back when I was posting on the now-defunct Themestream.com I fisked an essay written by another Themestreamer. (I did a lot of that.) His piece was entitled “The Aims and Abilities of Liberals and Conservatives” and while I don’t have a copy of the entire essay, I quoted from it extensively in my response, Liberal v. Conservative: Both are Necessary – which I also posted to this blog back in June of last year. I called the author “John Doe” in the posting here, but for clarity I’d like to make it known that the author I was fisking was Marriah Star, self-described philosopher and utopist. Feel free to peruse his site, because I believe that Mr. Star is the prototypical example of the modern big “L” Liberal.

What inspired this essay was one of the points of Mr. Star’s piece as I parsed it in Liberal v. Conservative:

Mr. (Star) writes that “Liberals are nomads” who are open-minded and have widely varying viewpoints due to their “various travels”, and who have a hard time getting together because they “live in separate truths, with no single reality dominating their lives”. This is, he says, in opposition to conservatives who “exist in cliques” because they “largely possess one mind.” (“We are Borg. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.”) Conservatives, he writes, have the ability to mobilize very quickly by repeating the same thought until they convince themselves of it.” (I cannot help, however, in reflecting just how fast the Liberals mobilized themselves and repeated “we must count all the votes” until they convinced themselves that it had not happened.) (“No Blood for Ooooiiiiilllllll!!!!” comes to mind presently. And “BUSH LIED!” And others, but I digress.)
“Conservatives”, he says, “may not communicate the truth, but they have the ability to change reality so that it reflects their truth.”

Now, let me quote David Brooks from the New York Times yesterday:

Every election year, we in the commentariat come up with a story line to explain the result, and the story line has to have two features. First, it has to be completely wrong. Second, it has to reassure liberals that they are morally superior to the people who just defeated them.

In past years, the story line has involved Angry White Males, or Willie Horton-bashing racists. This year, the official story is that throngs of homophobic, Red America values-voters surged to the polls to put George Bush over the top.

Now let me illustrate how the LEFT has “mobilize(d) very quickly by repeating the same thought until they convince themselves of it.”


Steve Sack, Minneapolis Star-Tribune


Rob Rogers, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Nick Anderson, Louisville (KY) Courier-Journal


M.E. Cohen, freelance


Matt Davies, New York Journal-News


John Branch, San Antonio Express-News


Chris Britt, Illinois State Journal-Register


Ann Telnaes, Tribune Media Services.

Add also: The Boston Globe‘s Scott Greenburger, The San Jose Mercury News, and on and on and on.

In response to Mr. Star’s assertion that conservatives “have the ability to mobilize very quickly by repeating the same thought until they convince themselves of it,” I wrote:

Excuse me? If Liberals “live in separate truths” then what makes the Conservative version of “truth” any less valid than the myriad Liberal versions? Because more than one person believes it at any one time? This strikes me as psychobabble. Is there “truth” at all? How does one judge? It seems to me that the objective criteria is: is your version of “truth” consistent with observable reality? If not, it doesn’t matter if you’re Liberal or Conservative, you’re wrong.

It seems apparent now that liberals do not, in fact, “live in separate truths.” They are instead largely a Borg-like collective just waiting for their marching orders from their ideological masters, telling them what to think about what just happened to them. As “Sad American” attempted to explain to the Ideological Left in her open letter to the Democrats, How You Could Have Had My Vote, a lot of people in the ideological middle are more than capable of ignoring the endlessly repeated memes of either the Left or the Right and make up their own minds. In contrast to novelist Jane Smiley’s assertion that “Red Staters” are “unteachably ignorant”, “Sad American” illustrates that they’re infinitely able to learn – and reject the teachings of their supercilious, condescending, and outright insulting would-be masters.

It would appear that the “radical middle” still has at least a tenuous grasp on observable reality, and can discern when the Left’s version of “truth” has strayed outside it.

And it would seem to me that Mr. Star’s assertion that it is conservatives who repeat the same thought until they convince themselves of it, and are able to change reality so that it reflects their truth is a bit of psychological projection of the most obvious sort.

UPDATE, 11/8: Eugene Volokh points to this Daily Kos post by Tom Schaller (associate professor of political science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, who has written for the Baltimore Sun, Boston Globe, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post and Salon) that includes the following:

Marching order #1, therefore, is this: No matter whom you talk to outside our circles, begin to perpetuate the (false, exaggerated) notion that George Bush’s victory was built not merely on values issues, but gay marriage specifically. If you feel a need to broaden it slightly, try depicting the GOP as a majority party synonymous with gay-haters, warmongers and country-clubbers. Because I, for one, am tired of hearing whiny complaints from conservatives that, not only do I not have values, but that I fail to properly respect the values of people who are all too happy to buy into, no less perpetuate, inaccurate caricatures of the 54+ million Americans who voted Tuesday for John Kerry.

Criticizing the GOP ain’t gonna build us a new national majority. But the process is brick by brick, or perhaps, brickbat by brickbat. We didn’t decide the rules of engagement, but that’s what they are and so we may as well start firing away. Oh, and Ralph: Thanks for the help.

It would appear that “Marching Order #1” has very quickly made the rounds. RTWT. ESPECIALLY the comments. And all of Prof. Volokh’s take on it, too.

In Reference to the “Purple State” Post Below

Powerline’s “Big Trunk” made the point a bit more clear in his post The 3 percent solution:

When the electorate rejected George McGovern in 1972 and Walter Mondale in 1984, it did so on each occasion by a margin of roughly 20 percent. The McGovern/Mondale/Kerry view of the United States has made enormous inroads in the past twenty years. It is less than three percent short of a majority and the trendline seems to be moving in its favor. Shouldn’t we be asking what we need to do to roll it back before it crosses over to majority status?

Look closely at that map again and consider what over six decades of public school indoctrination in Leftism has done to the population of this country. What can we do to roll it back? Because, in the main, it appears that the best we’ve been able to accomplish has been a holding action.

Remember: Statist vs. Statist-lite.

More on The Divide

Ravenwood links to USAToday’s by-county map showing the separation between Red and Blue America:

(Alaska should be red, but Alaska doesn’t report by county.) One of his commenters has a link to a more detailed PDF version.

Actually, though, those maps are quite misleading. It’s not a simple binary function – it’s analog. Via Boing Boing I found an analog by-county map of the continental U.S. showing the degree of “Red” or “Blue” each county has by interpolating USAToday’s county-by-county data with US Census Bureau data, and that map should give you some pause for thought. (Click on the image for a larger, more legible version. The black areas are where data is in conflict or missing.)

It’s true that Democrats are most heavily concentrated in urban areas and Republicans in rural ones, but it’s not, as I said, a binary separation as the USAToday map depicts. Remember: 51-48%. That’s a pretty tight division.

We shouldn’t forget that. And remember this, too. The Leftist Moonbats and the Right-Wingnuts are just a small part of those percentages.

There’s a bunch of people not that far apart. This isn’t North vs. South.

And there’s a whole bunch who don’t bother to vote at all. Where do they fit in?

OK, I Was Wrong

I admit it.  I’ve said on numerous occasions that I thought the Dims would figure out that Kerry wasn’t electable and they’d replace him like they replaced Torricelli in N.J., but it appears that they’ve convinced themselves that Kerry’s can win.

Of course, they’ve got 100 days to figure out that he can’t and really do a Torricelli on him, but I don’t think that’ll happen now.

Mea culpa.

Pass the Word

John Moore, author of Useful Fools is a fellow Arizonan and a Vietnam vet.

And John is not happy with the Democrat frontrunner for President.

No, I’d say John is pretty damned irate at the white-washing Kerry is receiving in the press when it comes to his “heroic war record” and his service in Vietnam. So John would like some help from the blogosphere in spreading the truth, rather than the elaborately stage-managed propaganda that we’ve been seeing.

Please read his link-filled post Kerry Smeared His Country and The Press is Hiding It, and send a link to it to all your friends.

Hell, maybe even Prof. Reynolds will pick up on it.

Howell Raines as Gollum

By now I’m sure almost everyone in the blogosphere has heard of, if not read the political phillipic by disgraced and ex-New York Times editor Howell Raines that was printed in Britain’s Guardian. Andrew Sullivan has commented, Dean Esmay, Dodd Harris, and of course, Glenn Reynolds. According to Technorati, there are fifty-three links to the story. Here’s number fifty-four.

I’ve not read all the links, but the few I have read have concentrated on the fact that Raines doesn’t seem to see John “Lurch” Kerry as much of a candidate. Dean Esmay’s latest post touches on the part of the piece I’m going to concentrate on here:

I particularly enjoyed these thoughts on former New York Times editor Howell Raines’ recent screen (I think he meant “screed”) in The Guardian from someone who used to work for the guy. These updates, too.

It’s all part and parcel with an elitism and a condescension I’ve mentioned many times before. It all goes like this: “We’re liberals. This means we’re broad-minded and have a tradition of being thoughtful. Thus the only explanation for people in disagreement with us on any important issue is that they are stupid, dishonest, or evil.”

I left a comment on Dean’s site this morning, but I want to expand on it here.

Hopefully if you’re one of my regular readers you’re familiar with Henry Louis Mencken, one of my favorite sources for pithy quotes. Henry wrote oh-so-many years ago,

“The government consists of a gang of men exactly like you and me. They have, taking one with another, no special talent for the business of government; they have only a talent for getting and holding office. Their principal device to that end is to search out groups who pant and pine for something they can’t get and to promise to give it to them. Nine times out of ten that promise is worth nothing. The tenth time is made good by looting A to satisfy B. In other words, government is a broker in pillage, and every election is a sort of advance auction sale of stolen goods”.

Let me concentrate on just that portion of “Howlin’ Mad’s” screed.

…which raises the question of what Kerry needs to do to win in a campaign that’s going to become the political equivalent of a street fight. I believe Kerry can do it, but I feel less sure of that now than I did in the primaries. Every time I talk to a reporter who has covered him, new doubts creep in about his ability to connect with voters.

The difference between him and Bush is that Kerry represents the liberal, charitable wing of the Privilege party and George W represents the conservative, greedy wing of the Privilege party.

Now for the hard part of the performance challenge – the economy. Two and a quarter centuries into its history as a nation, America has the most unfair tax system ever and the greatest gap ever between rich and poor. Even a real populist, however, would have trouble taking on these issues frontally. As Al From of the Democratic Leadership Council noted, Americans aren’t antagonistic toward the rules that protect the rich because they think that in the great crap-shoot of economic life in America, they might wind up rich themselves. It’s a mass delusion, of course, but one that has worked ever since Ronald Reagan got Republicans to start flaunting their wealth instead of apologising for it. Kerry has to understand that when a cure is impossible, the doctor must enter the world of the deluded.

What does this mean in terms of campaign message? It means that he must appeal to the same emotions that attract voters to Republicans – ie greed and the desire to fix the crap-shoot in their favour. That means that instead of talking about “fixing” social security, you talk about building a retirement system that makes middle-class voters believe they will be semi-rich someday. As matters now stand, Kerry has assured the DLC, “I am not a redistributionist Democrat.”

That’s actually a good start. Using that promise as disinformation, he must now figure out a creative way to become a redistributionist Democrat. As a corporation-bashing populist, I’d like to think he could do that by promising to make every person’s retirement as secure as Cheney’s investment in Halliburton. But that won’t sell with the sun-belt suburbanites. Not being a trained economist like, say, Arthur Laffer, I can’t figure out the exact legerdemain that Kerry ought to endorse. But greed will make folks vote for Democrats if it’s properly packaged, just as it now makes them vote Republican, and in terms of the kind of voters Kerry must win away from Bush, I think the pot-of-gold retirement strategy is a way to work. Forget a chicken in every pot. It’s time for a Winnebago in every driveway.

Well! The mask has obviously slipped off, being lubricated with the foam from his mouth.

Here we have the unabashed Leftist, unaware of his hypocrisy waving from his unzipped fly. As Mencken put it:

Democracy is the theory that the common man knows what he wants, and deserves to get it good and hard.

And he’d never met Raines. First, let me start at the top. Howell is concerned with Kerry’s ability to “connect with the voters,” though Kerry “represents the liberal, charitable wing of the Privilege Party.” So what is Howell’s suggestion?

LIE.

After all, Howell has so much experience at it as editor of the NYT. He should be an expert in crafting an image with a hidden agenda, right?

Let’s continue.

“Two and a quarter centuries into its history as a nation, America has the most unfair tax system ever and the greatest gap ever between rich and poor.” Really? The “Most unfair tax system ever?” I’d put that back at the passage of the 16th Amendment when “soak the rich” was the battle-cry. The tax originally ranged from a mere 1% on the first $20,000 of taxable income to only 7% on incomes above $500,000.

Remember, this was 1913. Twenty-thousand dollars a year would be an income of more than $360,000 today, adjusted for inflation.

Yeah, that’s “fair.” Raines wants to go right back to it, making the “rich” pay for everything again.

And “the greatest gap ever between rich and poor”? I suppose you could stretch the point by using Bill Gates as the upper end, but surely things were far worse during the Depression – when, according to this piece:

According to a study done by the Brookings Institute, in 1929 the top 0.1% of Americans had a combined income equal to the bottom 42%. That same top 0.1% of Americans in 1929 controlled 34% of all savings, while 80% of Americans had no savings at all.

Jane Galt made an interesting point in a 2002 post:

Has the qualitative life experience of the rich really increased, while the poor stayed stagnant? Since the 50’s? 60’s? 70’s? I would argue it’s the reverse. The head of GM’s life is not, qualitatively, much better than that of the head of GM in the 50’s. The poor, on the other hand, have more space, better food, more and better clothes, color televisions, VCR’s, automobiles. . . items that were beyond the wildest dreams of the poor in the 1950’s.

Or the 1930’s for that matter. The difference between a squatter’s shack and the Biltmore.

Why this concentration on the disparity in income? Because it’s a dividing line the Left wants to use, and cannot. Why? Because:


“…Americans aren’t antagonistic toward the rules that protect the rich because they think that in the great crap-shoot of economic life in America, they might wind up rich themselves. It’s a mass delusion, of course….”

The Left wants to fire up envy in order to engineer social change, and are unsuccessful because Americans believe it is possible to get rich – an idea Howell Raines causes “mass delusion.”

Really? The two men I work for were middle-income salarymen in the late 1970’s, and in 1980 they risked everything they had to start a business.

They’re pretty damned wealthy today. They won the crap-shoot, through hard work. Raines seems to think Americans believe it will just fall out of the sky into their laps. We know better. That’s why we know that we can end up, if not rich, then pretty damned well off if we’re willing to work to achieve it. That’s the tradition of America: Come here, work hard, sacrifice and you can be rich! And compared to most other nations in the world, our middle class is fabulously wealthy.

This seems beyond the Left’s ability to grasp. They seem to believe that everyone should receive an equal portion, handed out to the proles by the Party – who, of course, are “more equal,” and thus entitled to do the handing out. Keeping the best for themselves, of course, because they’re entitled.

But they don’t have that power, and cannot seem to understand why not. As Dean said, “…the only explanation for people in disagreement with us on any important issue is that they are stupid, dishonest, or evil.” So to achieve power they will do whatever is necessary, including – but not limited to – mass deception. Kerry must use “deception” and “legerdemain” to convince the populace that he’s not a “redistributionist Democrat,” so that he can achieve office where he will be a redistributionist Democrat.

And yet they revile Bush for lying?

The Democrats are the Doctor, you see. It won’t hurt, and anyway the pain is for our own good. We have to be cured of our delusions that being affluent is good, that keeping the money we earn is right. Just hold still, the frontal lobotomy won’t take a minute.

Here’s what I said in my comment to Dean’s piece:

They speak in terms of “Secret Agendas” and “Secret Plans” because that’s how THEY think. It’s projection – “If WE do it, they MUST.” One of the problems the left, both here and in Europe had early on in the Bush administration, was an inability to grasp that he said what he meant, and meant what he said. So simplisme.

We generally understand that politicans lie to us. As Mencken said, every election is an advance auction sale of stolen goods, with nine out of ten promises made by the candidates being merely hot air. The difference is, at least in my case, I believe the Republicans generally would like to make it easier for me to pull myself up by my bootstraps and work towards creating wealth for myself. I believe the Democrats want to take whatever wealth I’m able to acquire and redistribute it. And I believe that the Democrats will lie to me

and everyone else until they’ve acquired enough power to do so.

And they cannot understand why we oppose them. We must be evil and greedy as well as stupid, but we’re not so stupid that we don’t see through them, so they have to be even more “tricksy.”

Suddenly I see Howell Raines in the role of Gollum. And the Democrat Party as Orcs.And socialism is their Sauron.

I Would Be Willing to Go to Jail for Assault

If I ever meet Ted Rall:

A couple of days ago I linked to this Ted Rall column where he actually said some things I agree with. At that time I stated:

I don’t know how much of what Rall states in this piece reflect his actual beliefs and how much of it is a lie, but given Rall’s history…

But it’s damned disconcerting when someone as foul as Rall states opinions I agree with. I feel like I ought to take a shower and scrub with steel wool.

Stainless steel wool and sulfuric acid.

I’m all for the First Amendment.

If I ever meet Rall, I’m going to demostrate my freedom of expression with a knuckle sandwich.

I live in Tucson, Ted. You’ve got my email address. Drop me a line if you’re ever in town. We’ll do lunch.

(Hat tip Instapundit and Michele.)

UPDATE 5/4: Also via Prof. Reynolds, this absolutely astounding dissection of Ted Rall’s mental state by Jeff Goldstein of Protein Wisdom.

If I had written that (thank Jebus I know I’m not capable) I would have showered with acid and steel wool.

Here’s a Story About More Dead “Mercenaries” the Left can Cheer About

Only these were translators.

Excerpts:

Craig Drobnick of Marysville wears a bracelet of black anodized aluminum. The words etched in the metal say: Todd Drobnick, KIA 23 Nov. 03, Mosul, Iraq.

KIA means killed in action, and in a way, Craig’s brother was.

A senior manager in charge of a team of translators working for San Diego defense contractor Titan Corp., Mariner High School graduate Todd Drobnick dodged 15 attacks from small-arms fire, rocket propelled grenades and homemade bombs during his last seven months.

When he died, in a head-on collision with a petroleum truck near Mosul, he wasn’t a soldier. But the 35-year-old, fluent in Russian and Arabic, a veteran of the 1991 Persian Gulf War, was buried with full military honors and posthumously awarded a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star.

I wasn’t aware those honors could be given to civilians, but I don’t disagree with his receiving them.

The accident that claimed Drobnick’s life killed another linguist working for Titan. They were the 12th and 13th Titan translators to die in Iraq — felled by attacks from insurgents, accidents or illness — since major combat operations officially ended last spring. The 14th, last week, was Emad Mikha, who had managed the meat department in a supermarket in Pontiac, Mich., before he signed up with Titan to take advantage of his proficiency in Arabic.

In San Diego, Titan executives declined to comment on their linguists program. One explained privately that the company had no desire to appear as though it was seeking publicity from the tragedies. Indeed, this is a sensitive time for Titan. Lockheed Martin Corp. has offered to buy the company for $1.66 billion, but allegations that Titan made illegal payments to foreign officials have threatened to nix the deal.

The Titan Web site doesn’t put a sheen on its translating jobs, which pay up to $108,000 a year, most of that tax-free: “12-hour shifts and in excess of 60-hour weeks in order to provide continuous contract linguist support that this 24×7 operation requires; must be familiar with the local culture, conduct oneself in accordance with local customs, and deal unobtrusively with the populace; must be willing and capable to live and work in a harsh environment.”

See! See! Another corrupt money-grubbing corporation employing greedy mercenaries who don’t even pay their fair share of taxes! F*%k ’em!

Bite me.

Give it a read.