By James Bowman on 11.21.05 @ 12:06AM
From Shakespeare upside down to LaRouchean Democrats.
...So I went to a performance of Shakespeare's Winter's
Tale at the Kennedy Center the other night. It was directed by
Edward Hall, the son of Sir Peter, and performed by an all-male
British company called Propeller. The performance was lively and
energetic and had particular fun -- as you might expect -- with the
sheep-sheering in Act IV. Perhaps it was because the female parts
were all taken by men, but the company avoided any real engagement
with the moral and spiritual issues raised by the play. They
galloped through the first three acts, had a wild party in the
fourth and then in the fifth blew a raspberry not only at the
recent conventions of the theatre but at Shakespeare himself. For
the final scene -- in which King Leontes is finally made
spiritually whole after 16 years of bitter penitence for having
made a false accusation against his wife, Queen Hermione, and his
best friend, Polixenes, his lost child is returned, he is
reconciled to Polixenes and Camillo and the statue of Queen
Hermione comes to life -- is all played as a dream. It ends with
Leontes alone on the stage, all his happy recoveries having turned
away and abandoned him as they fade away into the starry darkness.
Thus do Mr. Hall and Propeller take a play about the possibility of
redemption and turn it into a play about the impossibility of
redemption. The only question is, do they or do they not reckon
they're giving us our Shakespearean money's worth? What are we
complaining about, after all? All the Shakespearean words are
there, aren't they? My guess is that they don't even care that they
have flipped the play's meaning. The point was merely to show off
their own cleverness in showing that it could so easily be
flipped. That's post-modernism to a T.
****
The recent suicide bombing of a Jordanian wedding in Amman, like
last Friday's of a mosque in Khanaqin, Kurdistan, are reminders
that the enemy takes rather a different view from the Democrats
about those famous links between 9/11 and Saddam Hussein. The
opposition to President Bush grows ever more shrill in insisting
that there was no such link and that therefore the invasion of Iraq
was a completely gratuitous act on the President's part. But what
is the link between a wedding party in Jordan or worshippers in an
Iraqi mosque and the jihadists' supposed sense of grievance against
the U.S. and her allies? The woman would-be bomber who survived the
blast in Amman claimed to have been avenging her brothers who had
been killed by American troops. But what had their deaths got to do
with a wedding party in Jordan? She seemed to take it for granted
that her act would be understood as a natural response to her
brothers' deaths. In the same way, it seems probable that al-Qaeda
very well understood that the American invasion of Iraq was a
natural response to 9/11, even if the Democrats never have
understood it. In an honor culture, attacking the family and
friends of your enemy is often a more devastating riposte than
attacking the enemy himself.
****
It's no surprise, of course, but what the media and their
political allies don't seem to understand about the debate on
torture is that it's not really about torture at all but about who
gets to define what torture is. Those who would write statutory
restrictions on torture into the law would take that power away
from the security forces who are carrying out all the most
dangerous operations against a ruthless enemy and hand it over to
judges, or international bodies, who may well have a political
agenda of their own. You don't have to be in favor of torture to be
against handing over to the highly politicized opponents of the war
yet another stick with which they can beat the administration. For
the same reason, endless disingenuous calls like that of Richard
Cohen last Thursday for the President to admit his
mistakes in the conduct of the war have no other end than weakening
him politically and so curtailing his ability to continue
conducting the war. In politics, no one ever acknowledges a mistake
unless the acknowledgement is itself for political advantage. Could
it be that Richard Cohen doesn't know this? But of course he's only
pretending not to know it, because the call for confession or
apology is also a political maneuver on the part of the
opposition.
****
As I was passing along the street on Friday, I heard some guy
who was handing out leaflets talking about "LaRouche's plan for
rebuilding the country." There you have it, yet another exercise in
LaRouchean solipsism (see my "Beast-Man Politics" from the New
Criterion of February, 2004). It has long been a commonplace
that American politics is flirting with narcissism, but this may be
its true destination: where every politician gets to define for
himself the political realities his policies are designed to deal
with. So far as Lyndon LaRouche is concerned, it's always 1933 and
FDR's first hundred days are about to begin. Rebuilding the
country. What is the man talking about? We've just had more than 20
years of almost continuous economic growth. Building and rebuilding
have been going on for decades, but LaRouche isn't going
to change his portfolio of measures designed for a country in
ruins. That's how he fancies himself coming into office, like a
second FDR, and he's not about to change it just because reality
has changed in the last 70 years. And yet today, he's not the only
Democrat living in his own political world. That's the point
President Bush was trying to make in attacking those who would
"re-write history." Once again, LaRouchism begins to look like the
future of the Democratic Party.
topics:
Law, Iraq