One almost never sees any op-ed of any kind anywhere respond to criticism. For some reason unknown to me, the Post’s Outlook section features another article by Anne-Marie Slaughter, dean of Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
In the first article, she argued that partisanship is separating our nation into separate parties. Here are the two parties: on the one hand, you have the virulent Rovians of the Bush administration–dedicated to party at almost any cost–on the other you have some bloggers, some guy who wrote an op-ed, and maybe some think-tankers. These people–these bloggers (and some anonymous commenters nutpicked from bloggers’ sites) on the left are the proper partisan complement to Bolton, Rove and Cheney. Notice a problem anyone? Well. Many did. And so they criticized her for such a silly comparison. It should be government figure versus government figure (or if not available, then national party leader). But it’s Dick Cheney versus op-ed guy.
Aside from that, Slaughter advances the idea that people are devoted to “the characteristic of being devoted to a view” rather than to a view. It might be more proper to say that people hold views in a more entrenched fashion–they’re less willing to compromise and so forth, because their views have grown so incompatible. That way the problem remains where it should be, with the content of peoples’ views (not with the way they hold them). Bipartisanship, for its own sake, is a silly goal. And even Slaughter knows this:
>I was not condemning passionate criticism of the Bush administration on issues like supporting torture, the conduct of the war in Iraq, or illegal wiretapping. On the contrary, I share it. In my new book, “The Idea That Is America,” I call for a critical patriotism that is honest about our failings and insists on holding our government and ourselves to the values we proclaim as a nation. If we are going to pledge allegiance to “liberty and justice for all,” it is incumbent on all of us to stand up and denounce what is currently being done in our name at Guantanamo and at various secret CIA prisons.
She’s “partisan” about these things. But that’s what people are partisan about–CIA prisons, preemptive war, and so forth:
>This reaction should not be partisan. It should be, and is beginning to be, the reaction of decent people across the political spectrum who are standing up not for their party but for their country.
After all, one party thinks those things–preemptive war, and so on–are good things. That’s their party’s position. Objecting to it–as Slaughter does–is bound to be “partisan.”
As Matt K commented a couple days ago, our national discourse takes yet another hit. If all these columnists can muster by way of cultural criticism are weak, borderline tu quoque, “a pox on both your houses”-type comparisons, why even bother? it a waste of newsprint. Rather than cutting jobs, these flagging broadsheets could probably save more money by just not printing this dreck. It’s wearying, really. There’s no serious content to these pieces. It’s basically, the “look, they do it, too” defense of bully pulpit neo-conservativism. No rigor, no challenge, just so much axe-grinding and Luntzian wordplay. Blech.
I’m beginning to think that the problem with opinion discourse in this country is that it’s run by pundits. Pundits, perhaps, ought not to exist; no one can possibly know enough about those things they write to have a credible opinion. It’s neat to have an opinion, it’s cool that some organize them with justifications, but as it often turns out those justifications are serially bad and the opinions grossly uninformed. Not to get all pox-on-both-your-houses, but this goes for many a lefty blogger who fancies his armchair opinions ought to matter as much as the next partially informed guy. Blogs are great for our ability to access the thinking of experts in real time, they’re not so great for overly articulate kids to pontificate about foreign policy.
I’m sorry jc, but this is the funniest typo I’ve ever seen. From the second paragraph in the article above,
“on the one hand, you have the virulent Rovians of the Bush administration–*dedicated to party at almost any cost*”
Can’t you just see Rove, shirt untucked, remaining hair standing straight out, plowing through a gauntlet of aged nuns with an AK-47 just to get to the last case of Schlitz? Now that’s someone whose dedicated to PARTY!
Thanks Nevyn, as the video link points out, I had your meaning in mind:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYZre8kEsuw