By James Bowman on 4.24.03 @ 12:03AM
Hysterical anti-Americanism and bad taste from a Brit writing in the U.K.'s leading conservative paper!
Professor Lionel Tiger, writing in the Wall Street
Journal, says of the death of Dr. Robert Atkins that "No one
can say 'we told you so' as they did when Jim Fixx the jogger guru
died young or Adele Davis the diet autocrat died at all." Look
again, Prof. In the same day's London Daily Telegraph,
Adam Nicolson does his best to draw a moral lesson from the
passing of Dr. Atkins, noting that, as he had slipped on the ice
and hit his head, a kind of hubris may be diagnosed in the
following way. "A life devoted to the cheating of the stomach was
brought to an end by a combination of foot failure and skull
failure. He had attended for so long to the middle (he suffered at
one stage from a triple chin); but it was the extremities that let
him down."
I'm all for smug moralizing at the expense of the health nuts,
but isn't this pushing things just a little too far? You'd have to
use far more interpretative ingenuity than could possibly be good
for you to conclude that in slimming the Atkins way there was any
promise, express or implied, of being protected from icy sidewalks.
Nor does Nicolson stop there. He goes on to make the connection
between Atkins and Fixx (though not Miss Davis) -- and Thomas
Midgely, the American inventor of the guided missile, which he is
said to have called a "robot bomb" -- though he can hardly have
done so, as the bomb dates from the First World War and the word
"Robot" from Karel Capek's play R.U.R. of 1920 -- as well
as leaded gasoline for cars and refrigerants using
chlorofluorocarbons.
Midgely, says Nicolson, "wreaked more damage upon this planet
than any human being, or any single organism, who has ever lived,"
by these inventions -- which may just be the howlingest hyperbole
ever penned by human hand. The alleged "robot bomb" is said to be
"the first guided missile, from which every smart weapon is
lineally descended." But of course that means that Midgely is a
huge benefactor of human kind, since the bombs that kill people
en masse are of the dumb, unguided variety. By putting
lead in our petrol, Midgely is said to have been guilty of
"poisoning the world's children and destroying the earth's
atmosphere," though both the words "poisoning" and "destroying" may
be just a tad excessive, especially as the chlorofluorocarbons are
subsequently said to have been responsible for "destroying still
more" of the atmosphere, which thus could hardly have been
destroyed by the lead. Nor can it be destroyed even now, as we're
still breathing it.
But the logic of Midgely's disastrousness for humankind is
clearly a secondary, or tertiary, consideration here. Nicolson has
other fish to fry. For after his triumphs as a chemist and
inventor, poor Mr. Midgely contracted polio and subsequently
strangled himself in the clever arrangement of ropes and pulleys he
had set up to get himself into and out of bed. Serves him right,
thinks Nicolson, for poisoning all those children and destroying
all that atmosphere. Again, you might be inclined to think this
rather a harsh judgment. Did his inventions, however unwittingly
harmful, imply any claim of immunity either from polio or from
accidental strangulation? These are misfortunes that might, or
might at that date, have happened to anybody.
Nicolson can't be bothered with such details, as he has now at
last got his real target in his sights: the United States of
America, whose "governing mentality" is said to be either "You can
have it all" or "Hang the consequences."
"Atkins, Fixx, Midgely: it is unfair to label America with these
men, but there is something profoundly American about their
stories. This country is now more deeply in bed with America than
at any time since the heyday of Margaret Thatcher's love affair
with Ronald Reagan.
"The core of Thatcherism -- no compromise, do what your
instincts tell you and deal with the consequences later, don't
pussyfoot with middle-roadism when you can see your own path
clearly ahead -- was, in its way, as American as the Atkins, Fixx
and Midgely stories are. It, too, became tangled in its own ropes
and pulleys, tripping up on the pavement, collapsing when out for
its all too usual jog.
"This is not a European habit of mind and the American path
which Blair has taken over Iraq bears all the marks of Midgely-type
thinking: turn to the simple and powerful idea; transform that idea
into a powerful force; apply that force with uncompromising vigour;
and only then look for collateral damage."
The number of errors, both of fact and of inference, in that
little passage, makes the proposal of Midgely's unique villainy
look like a model of logic. Let's list them:
(1) Mrs. Thatcher had no "love affair" with Ronald Reagan, but
her alliance with the U.S. during his administration was the norm
and not the exception for post-war British governments, and was
consistent with some harsh criticisms, for example at the time of
the invasion of Grenada.
(2) It would be news to Mrs. Thatcher that part of what made up
"the core" of Thatcherism was "do what your instincts tell you and
deal with the consequences later." Mrs. Thatcher was a stout Whig
rationalist and would have had no truck with "instincts," whereas
consequences were of immense concern to her, particularly the
consequences of inaction.
(3) There is no guessing what he means by saying that
Thatcherism "became tangled in its own ropes and pulleys" or the
rest of it. Mrs. Thatcher herself was forced out of the premiership
by a cabal of her parliamentary colleagues while the doctrines
associated with her name - fiscal and monetary discipline,
industrial retrenchment, taming the trades unions - have remained
in place, even under a Labour government, at least up until Mr.
Brown's most recent budget.
(4) To imply that making war -- for what else is "the American
path which Blair has taken over Iraq"? -- is more characteristic of
Americans than Europeans is just laughable. Who started the really
big wars of the last century, anyway? You know, the ones America
had to bail her European friends out of?
(5) Never in the history of warfare has any combatant taken more
care to look for in advance and to try to forestall collateral
damage than the U.S. has in Iraq. If Mr. Nicolson knows of a
counter-example, I should be glad to hear of it.
But then, Nicolson didn't even know that smart bombs save lives.
That his piece of shoddy reasoning and hysterical anti-Americanism
should appear in Britain's leading conservative paper is profoundly
depressing.
topics:
Trade, Iraq, Unions