Why
Do So Many People Automatically and Angrily Condemn Historical Revisionism?
by
Robert Higgs
Recently by Robert Higgs: Consent
of the Governed?
Over the years,
especially in writing for the general public, as opposed to my professional
peers, I have been struck repeatedly by the frequency with which
certain conclusions or even entire classes of conclusions elicit
not merely skepticism, but angry denunciation. Again and again,
I have been called a fool, a traitor, or an America-hater because
of my commentaries on history and public affairs. Although I take
no pleasure in these denunciations, I find myself not so much depressed
by them as curious about them. I wonder why people react as they
do, especially when my commentary rests as I hope it generally
does on well-documented facts and correct logic.
I surely do
not consider myself immune to errors, of course. But if my facts
are incorrect, the critic has an obligation to say why my
facts are incorrect and to state, or at least to point toward, the
correct facts. If my logic has run off the rails, the critic has
an obligation to state how I fell into fallacious reasoning.
More often than not, however, the critic resorts immediately to
name-calling and to wild characterizations of my statements and
my person. Thus, I have often been called a socialist, a Marxist,
a conservative, an apologist for corporations or the rich, a (modern
left) liberal, or something else that by no stretch of the imagination
properly describes me or my intellectual or ideological position.
Certain topics
are virtually guaranteed to elicit such reactions. When I write
about the welfare state and especially about government programs
ostensibly aimed at helping the least-well-off members of society,
I confidently expect that critics will assail me as a fascist or
as an ivory-tower dweller who has no understanding of how poor people
really live and no compassion for them. When I write about the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor in relation to U.S. economic warfare in 1939-41,
I invariably attract angry personal abuse from people of delicate
nationalistic sensibilities, from those chronically on the look-out
for traitors, and from those who cannot imagine that the nations
leaders, in general, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in particular,
might have deliberately provoked a Japanese attack or refrained
from warning U.S. commanders in Hawaii that an attack was coming.
When people
are offended or otherwise greatly displeased by historical analysis,
they often employ the term historical revisionism as
a synonym for falsified, distorted, or doctored accounts that fly
in the face of what they, their history teachers, and perhaps even
the most respected university historians believe to have been the
case.
The irony of
such use of the term historical revision, which makes
it practically a swear word, is that revisionism is and always has
been an integral part of historical research and writing. As a rule,
professional historians do not seek simply to pile up more and more
evidence for what historians already generally believe. Historians
who proceed in this way cannot expect to make much of a name for
themselves. Instead, historians try to find new evidence and new
ways of interpreting old evidence that change the currently accepted
view. That is, they seek to revise the current orthodoxy. In doing
so, they need not be ideological mavericks, although those who are
may have an additional reason for their revisionist efforts. In
short, revisionism is an unremarkable aspect of workaday historical
research and writing. Why then do so many readers go ballistic about
it?
One reason
why revisionists are sometimes seen as subversives stems from the
tendency of historians in general to accept the most fundamental
aspects of their own society as right and desirable. So, however
much political historians may dispute the details of particular
campaigns, elections, and policy-making by elected officials
and such disputation runs rampant, to be sure one hardly
expects these historians to conclude that the democratic process
itself is little more than a snare and a delusion, a vast apparatus
for fooling the masses into believing that they have genuine control
over how they are ruled. And however much military and foreign-policy
historians may argue with one another about how various wars were
entered into and conducted, one hardly expects these historians
to conclude that wars almost invariably hurt the mass of the people
and benefit, if anyone at all, only the national leadership, its
supporting elite, and a ragtag band of hangers-on (which includes,
we might note, the court historians).
When a historian
strays outside the 40-yard lines within which the bulk of the historical
writing and teaching takes place, however, he is likely to be met
with the dreaded accusation that he is not an honest, competent,
or respected historian, but a revisionist a writer
who seeks to propagate socially destructive and utterly unfounded
ideas in order to rend the fabric of national unity and undermine
the nations virtues. Thus, one who challenges the standard
account of Pearl Harbor can expect not simply to be disbelieved,
but also to be personally condemned and vilified. Readers will say
that he dishonors the brave men who gave their lives to preserve
our freedoms, and so forth. Many people possess a loaded ideological
gun with a hair trigger, and the slightest shake suffices to cause
them to fire away. Moreover, they shoot first and reserve their
fact-checking and more careful thought for later, if indeed they
ever reach that stage.
One is tempted
to suspect that such quick-draw reactions reveal an underlying lack
of confidence in their own beliefs. If my views are so manifestly
stupid and anti-social, why respond to them at all? Is it not more
sensible to ignore them than to spend time in lavishing calumny
on their author? In the age of the Internet, however, many people
seem to get their kicks by denouncing and insulting anyone who offends
their own sensibilities and their own cherished beliefs. Anyone
who seeks examples of ad hominem arguments may easily collect them
by the thousands and perhaps by the millions at the websites that
feature news and commentary on public affairs. Every other species
of logical fallacy may be found there in abundance as well, but
my guess is that the ad hominem fallacy occurs more often than any
other. Moreover, few people even seemingly well-educated
people seem to be able to stay on point. So if a revisionists
argument cannot be refuted, his critics freely set up and knock
down straw men that they represent as the offender himself. Careful
reading is not the most notable activity of those who engage in
such flailing away. Many attackers do not even complete their reading,
but begin their assault on an author immediately, after having read
only a few sentences or paragraphs, as they sometimes admit.
Well, nobody
ever promised the revisionist a bed of roses, especially if he challenges
ideas that are widely accepted and valued. Americans want to believe
that their nation is the greatest that ever was, that they themselves
are better than other people in almost every way, including morally.
They want to believe that at least some of their government leaders
were virtuous and heroic, that their soldiers sacrificed more nobly
than the enemys did, that their country is the last, best
hope of humanity, blah, blah, blah. Much of this catalogue of taken-for-granted
outlooks and beliefs is ludicrous, but woe unto the writer who laughs
out loud at it. Revisionist, revisionist! the mobs will
cry, expressing the demand that he get out of the country
and the hope that every species of bad luck and personal misfortune
will befall him. If I were one of those social psychologists who
enjoy labeling any ideological trait they dislike as a form of mental
illness, I might declare that the hair-trigger enemies of historical
revisionism are a gaggle of sickos.
Reprinted
from the History News Network.
December
10, 2011
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. He
is also a columnist for LewRockwell.com. His
most recent book is Neither
Liberty Nor Safety: Fear, Ideology, and the Growth of Government.
He is also the author of Depression,
War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy, Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 and Against
Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society.
Copyright
© 2011 Robert
Higgs
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