We’re
All Defeatocrats Now
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
In George Orwell’s
Oceana, the wordsmiths at the Ministry of Truth conjure up new truths
daily, as they purge unwelcome old truths from history with the
help of the Memory Hole. Their efforts are constantly aimed at keeping
the populace under control, confused and off-balance – "We
are at War with Eastasia – Eurasia is our ally." "We are
at war with Eurasia – Eastasia is our ally." Fear abides. The
only thing citizens of Oceana have to hang on to is Big Brother
– who is, mystically, the personification of the Inner Party – which,
in turn, represents the best interests of the people of Oceana.
Just ask the torturers at the Ministry of Love. Power is their love
potion.
And just to
make sure that no party minds begin to wander, the gang at the Ministry
of Truth shares their rage in the daily Two-Minutes Hate, domestic
opposition to Big Brother. The party needs the Two-Minutes Hate
to keep even its members in line.
All this comes
to mind as the neocons scramble to preserve the last shred of their
credibility as the American people turn against their war and their
lies. As all their other arguments for the war have turned up empty,
the neocons now scream hatefully at their critics. Anyone who opposes
them they accuse of advocating "defeat" in Iraq. Some
of the more usual suspects actually preen as they wallow in their
neologisms. The latest appears to be that the enemy of America is
not Osama bin Laden, it is the "defeatocrats"
– who currently happen to comprise a majority of the American people.
The charge
is usually hurled with a vengeance, accompanied by an angry, unforgiving
scowl. This primal scream is eerily reminiscent of the bitterness
that flourished in the endless mutual screeds launched by Karl Marx
and the other leftists (the "Left-Hegelians") of his generation.
They all opposed the bourgeoisie, to be sure, but they saved their
genuine, burning hatred for one another. No vulgarity was too vile
to be employed in their constant attacks on their competitors on
the left for supremacy in the ideological struggle for power. As
Dostoevsky later observed, with these socialist atheists, "everything
was permitted."
And so too,
it appears, among the neocons. As the war winds down, they will
undoubtedly continue to call their opponents names (many were once
their allies, but never mind: neocons abhor permanent alliances
– domestically, at least). When the curtain falls, the last of them
will be manning the parapets and flinging his most potent remaining
weapons – vulgar epithets.
This latest
concoction – "defeatocrat" – deserves a brief moment of
our attention. It constitutes a critical ingredient of a broader
and rather coarse ideological sleight of hand that often surfaces
on the left – in fact, it might be called a central feature of leftism.
In the classic imperial fashion of the Pharaoh, of Caesar, of Louis
XIV, of Stalin, of Mao, and of their favorite symbol, Hitler, the
neocon ruler identifies himself with the nation, and so his personal
defeat becomes indistinguishable from the defeat of the nation.
The logical
observer who rejects the Dictatorship of Relativism will find refreshment
in parsing this latest artifact of neocon Doublethink. Such investigation
can refresh the sober mind wonderfully. When the neocons scream
that ceasing Mr. Bush’s unconstitutional war would mean "defeat
for America," they are propounding a logical fallacy, based
on a false premise, namely, that "George W. Bush" is "America"
– thus:
Major premise:
Withdrawing from Iraq would be a profound and permanent defeat for
George W. Bush
Minor premise:
Bush is America
Conclusion:
Therefore, withdrawing from Iraq would be a profound and permanent
defeat for America.
Q.E.D.
Now we know
better, don’t we? And so do the neocons. In fact, western man has
known better ever since Socrates described tyranny as the tyrant’s
nightmare imposed on the polis.
But today’s
tyrant is not the polis. Since Socrates, the emergence of philosophy
(and the attendant rise of logic, metaphysics, and ethics) is irreversible.
While Pharaoh was indeed the embodiment of ancient Egypt, whose
father was the Nile and whose children were divine, that mythical
cosmos is worlds away from our constitutional republic. Like their
royals Christian forbearers (until the modern period), our Founders
understood all too well the fallen nature of man. They were careful
to place stringent limits of power on every officeholder. They also
recognized the Divinity as the source of our liberties, not as a
characteristic of aspiring tyrants.
To continue
with our Socratic reflection, consider: a ruler’s imagination has
strayed so far from reality that his forays of power have led the
republic into profound danger. Our Constitution’s authors were much
more familiar with Socrates than the politicians of our current
generation. Hence, many contemporary observers feign surprise, even
horror, to discover that the Constitution accords to the Congress,
and to the people, the legitimate power to curb the Executive’s
forays in fantasy.
A solid majority
of the American people have emerged from the fog of war propaganda
to come to their senses. They now realize that it does not constitute
a "defeat" of America to withdraw U.S. military forces
from an imprudent and illegal war, and to restore the Executive
to its Constitutional limits. Rather, it is a victory for the Constitution,
the rule of law, and the rule of right reason by the virtuous people
of Federalist 57, on whom the founders placed the ultimate authority
for the legitimate exercise of government power.
However, it
does constitute a defeat for this particular Chief Executive, if
indeed he has invested all the remnants of his legitimacy in the
triumph of his imaginings – even as they approach the intensity
of the nightmare of Socrates’s tyrant. But, as another tyrant used
to say, "let’s make one thing perfectly clear":
A defeat for
Bush’s errant Iraq nightmare is not a defeat for America.
Just don’t
tell Big Brother.
August
3, 2007
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2007. All Rights reserved.
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