By James Bowman on 9.18.07 @ 12:07AM
Truth is now synonymous with liberal opinion -- and woe to him who disagrees.
"Let's face it, if the mothers ruled the world, there would be
no goddamned wars in the first place," said Sally Field at the Emmy
Awards on Sunday. Mixing up its categories of taboos, the New
York Times calls "goddamned" (which it forbears to repeat) "a
vulgarity" rather than a profanity, but it doesn't reflect on the
vulgarity of the Hollywood-style self-righteousness, presumably
because it's too much like its own. Let's face what, exactly? Her
opinion? For how on earth can she possibly know what would or would
not be the case if mothers ruled the world? If mothers ruled the
world it wouldn't be the world anymore -- that's about all we can
be sure of and therefore all that we have to "face." But she speaks
as if her mere speculation were the most unarguable and ineluctable
of realities. Well, there's a lot of it going around. I think of it
as a form of media madness.
Was there anyone in the media whose easy certainties about the
situation in Iraq were dented by the testimony before Congress of
General Petraeus last week? When MoveOn.org notoriously called him
"General Betray-Us," it seems not to have been intended as an
allegation of treason against his country -- even MoveOn hasn't as
yet quite arrived at the point where it is prepared to say that
anyone who agrees with or supports the President is a traitor to
his country -- so much as it was a howl of protest that the General
has dared to disagree with the media consensus. The same kinds of
people are constantly complaining, according to Howard Kurtz in the Washington Post,
that the media are not treating opinion as fact often enough. "Too
many in the Washington press corps want to pretend they are leaving
the question of 'what is truth' to their readers -- refusing to
admit that there is even such a thing as truth," he quotes Arianna
Huffington as saying. "The administration has faith that, because
of the way too many in the press operate, all it has to do is sow
doubt."
In other words, as far as she is concerned, if there is any
doubt it can only be as a result of the administration's
disinformation. But aren't some things genuinely doubtful? Not to
the media mad. "SIR, I don't know, actually," wrote Frank Rich, quoting General Petraeus at
the head of his column in the New York Times on Sunday as
if a confession of ignorance was itself an admission of guilt -- as
doubtless it is for Mr Rich. "The fact that America's surrogate
commander in chief, David Petraeus, could not say whether the war
in Iraq is making America safer was all you needed to take away
from last week's festivities in Washington," he went on to write.
"On the sixth anniversary of the day that did not change
everything, General Petraeus couldn't say we are safer because he
knows we are not."
This is typical of the author not only in its leaden ironies
("surrogate commander in chief"; "last week's festivities") but in
the remarkable arrogance, born of media madness, in his simply
assuming that he knows not only what the General professes not to
know but also that the General really knows it too and just
declines to say so. Why not, then, go on to the obvious conclusion
that the "surrogate commander in chief" is being as dishonest and
cowardly as Mr. Rich supposes the real one to be in not saying what
he knows? The columnist ventures as far as a touch of scorn at the
"disingenuous talking points" of Petraeus/Crocker testimony but no
further -- perhaps on the grounds that anything stronger would be,
as he says of the "General Betray-Us" advertisement, "a
counterproductive distraction." It's not, as he also writes, a
"left-wing brand of juvenile name-calling" if the General really
is, as he believes, betraying his duty to the truth.
Media madness doesn't strike only the media. Just look at Alan
Greenspan, who is quoted in the London Sunday Times as
saying, "I am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to
acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about
oil." However good the former Federal Reserve chairman may be as an
economist, he clearly hasn't much notion of diplomatic and military
matters, and yet he is prepared to announce that his insight into
the true causes of the war are only "what everyone knows." Like Mr.
Rich and Mrs. Huffington, he pretends to think that what he
pretends to know is the only possible viewpoint. It's a rhetorical
tic that is becoming increasingly commonplace in a media which is
becoming more and more reluctant to give space to dissenting
opinions and in which Howard Kurtz can only bleat pitiably and
without apparent irony to Mrs. Huffington and her kind that
"Capturing reality is harder than it seems."
Well, who'd have thought it? Certainly not Kurt Andersen, the
lead of whose column in last week's New York magazine
solemnly informed us that, "as everyone knows, the Republican Party
has spiraled into disrepute." By "everyone," of course, he means
"everyone in my social set, or the media culture which I am now
writing to flatter." And his telltale assumption that he is writing
only for people of similar beliefs is borne out by the rest of the
piece, which concludes as follows:
In other words, it's time for our tragic
cheerleader-in- chief, a president allergic to pessimism or doubt,
to suck it up and soberly admit that this glass really is half
empty, and isn't going to fill up no matter how hard we wish and
hope. That's what grown-ups -- daddies, mommies, all of us --
do.
Note his failure to understand the metaphor of the glass half-empty
and half-full. It's not "really" one or the other but both
simultaneously. Such a stupid rhetorical own goal is solely the
consequence of his abdication of the polemicist's duty to persuade
for the far easier work of finding new ways to tell his audience
what they already believe and want to hear. Talk about
cheerleading!
James Bowman is a resident scholar at the Ethics and
Public Policy Center, media essayist for the New
Criterion, and The American Spectator's movie critic.
He is the author of the recent book, Honor: A History (Encounter
Books).
topics:
Books, Hollywood, Military, Iraq, Oil