Thursday, May 13, 2010
Food for Thought?
[Cross-posted at ReligionLeftLaw.]
"We are experiencing
just one
more aftershock from the libertarian eruption that we all, whatever our
partisan leanings, have willed into being. For half a century now
Americans
have been rebelling in the name of individual freedom. Some wanted a
more tolerant
society with greater private autonomy, and now we have it, which is a
good
thing—though it also brought us more out-of-wedlock births, a soft
pornographic
popular culture, and a drug trade that serves casual users while
destroying
poor American neighborhoods and destabilizing foreign nations. Others
wanted to
be free from taxes and regulations so they could get rich fast, and they
have—and it’s left the more vulnerable among us in financial ruin,
holding
precarious jobs, and scrambling to find health care for their children.
We
wanted our two revolutions. Well, we have had them.
Now an angry group of Americans wants to be freer still—free from government agencies that protect their health, wealth, and well-being; free from problems and policies too difficult to understand; free from parties and coalitions; free from experts who think they know better than they do; free from politicians who don’t talk or look like they do (and Barack Obama certainly doesn’t). They want to say what they have to say without fear of contradiction, and then hear someone on television tell them they’re right. They don’t want the rule of the people, though that’s what they say. They want to be people without rules—and, who knows, they may succeed. This is America, where wishes come true. And where no one remembers the adage 'Beware what you wish for.'”
--Mark Lilla, "The Tea Party Jacobins," New York Rev. of Books, May 27, 2010, avaiable in full here.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/05/food-.html