THE HOTTEST BOOK THIS SUMMER is Jonathan Haidt’s The
Righteous Mind, on how liberals and conservatives see the
world differently. Haidt, an NYU psychologist, wrote the book to
explain that conservatives are not the morally repellant
lizardbrains that his fellow liberals take them to be. Instead,
conservatives simply have a different hierarchy of virtues and
place a higher value on freedom, loyalty, and purity (which
explains why we disagree about Obama, Alger Hiss, and Sandra
Fluke).
While there’s something to this, I suggest that ideological
differences have a physiological basis, for liberalism is also
characterized by short-term memory loss. Liberals have an excellent
memory for things that happened, say, four years ago, but quickly
forget things that occurred more recently. For instance: In the
dark days of the Bush era, the left was sharply critical of the
prison at Guantanamo, renditions of prisoners to unsavory allies,
the surveillance programs under the Patriot Act, military
tribunals, and interrogation methods such as waterboarding. Under
the Obama administration, Guantanamo remains open, renditions
continue, domestic surveillance has greatly increased, military
tribunals still try terrorist prisoners, and the inconvenient
interrogation techniques have been replaced by a take-no-prisoners
policy of drone executions, with the president personally selecting
the targets from “baseball cards” of terrorists. Civilian
casualties— CivCas, in the modern dehumanizing argot— are kept
artifi cially low through a policy of counting all military-aged
men in a compound as terrorists, though even then, the drones still
kill some women and children. But none does offend.
Some
might regard this as an example of the rankest hypocrisy. I, more
generously, see it as an early symptom of Alzheimer’s disease, of
synapses going kerplunk. The liberal is like the aged parent who
remembers the Truman administration like it was yesterday but can’t
remember yesterday, and certainly cannot bring to mind what’s
happening today. He struggles valiantly against Herbert Hoover but
draws a blank when someone mentions August unemployment numbers.
His Obama chooses not to enforce laws he dislikes, makes recess
appointments over the weekend, and ignores inconvenient bankruptcy
laws in order to prop up political allies, but the Imperial
Presidency is a memory from four years ago, and what happened in
between is the unknown country.
The short-term memory loss is most apparent when it comes to the
environment. Remember that? We used to talk about it, not so long
ago. Back then there was someone called Al Gore, a bloviating
monster of environmental sanctity whose head seemed always about to
explode into a green mushroom cloud. Where is he now? Under some
1970s pet rock, perhaps? Or is he, along with Cindy
Sheehan,interned in a Code Pink detention camp?
The environment is a useful tool with which to beat Republicans,
since Democrats own the issue. Republicans might profess to care
about the environment, but really can’t be Trusted to spend
wastefully on it. Only Democrats can credibly claim that they’ll
throw money down green rat holes. And yet, how is it that the issue
has so entirely faded from view?
The answer, of course, is that the economy trumps the
environment. A green environment is something economists call a
luxury good. It’s a convenient dogma during fat years and an
inconvenient one in lean years. It’s Michelle Obama’s steak and
arugula, which people eat more of in good times than during a
macaroni-and-cheese recession. We’re happy to spend money on clean
air and clean water in flush times, not when the economy is in the
tank. That’s why rich countries are greener than poor ones, why the
environment fared so poorly in the countries of the former Soviet
Union, and why we haven’t heard much about carbon taxes of late.
The irony is that conservatives provide the prescription for a
sound economy and for the wealth that pays for a clean environment,
while leftists who profess their love for Mother Earth despoil the
environment through wealth-destroying policies.
In expressing his concern for the environment, the liberal is
parasitic upon the conservative’s moral language as well as his
wealth-generating policies. For the most part, he disdains the
conservative’s common-sense morality. Instead, Haidt tells us,
liberals speak of care for others, expelling their compassion like
an octopus expels its ink, indiscriminately and in all directions,
as William F. Buckley memorably described the thought processes of
Eleanor Roosevelt. When it comes to sins against Mother Earth,
however, the liberal sounds like Cotton Mather, thundering against
the most insignificant worm that God ever suffered to crawl upon
the face of the earth. It’s not just that the conservative would
spend too few resources on the environment; it’s that his failure
to do so makes him a moral leper.
THE SAME THEFT of the conservative’s moral language can be
observed when the liberal talks about future generations and the
environment. Liberals generally have myopia about the future, along
with their short-term memory loss about the past. Nothing is
further removed from modern liberalism, for example, than a moral
ecology that shows a concern for the social pathologies unwed
mothers impose on future generations, or the costs same-sex
marriage might impose on the institution of marriage. Such costs
might or might not arise, but the point is that liberals typically
think them irrelevant. Gays have a right to marry, end of question.
And yet when it comes to the environment, the liberal worries that
we are despoiling our patrimony and leaving a ruined inheritance
for our children.
It is, however, the conservative who has a true regard for the
future, for the way in which those alive today are bound up with
those who come before and after in a Burkean social contract. While
the liberal frames the debate about social justice in terms of
payoffs to people around today, not those who will come after, the
question of intergenerational justice, of what we owe future
generations, is—for all its uncertainties and confusion—the
principal moral and political issue of our time. The debt crisis,
whose existence liberals deny, is a crisis precisely because it may
impoverish our children. So, too, is the decline in our
economy.
Average U.S. GDP growth from 2001 to 2010 was 1.69 percent per
year, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development. For some emerging economies, notably China, the growth
rate was on average 10 percent per year over that period. If these
trends continue, the United States will be quickly overtaken, not
only as an economic power but also as a provider of social welfare
and a clean environment. Do not send, therefore, to ask what future
generations want of us; they sincerely want us to be rich, so long
as we don’t pass the bill on to them.
Roger Scruton’s splendid new book,
How to Think Seriously About the Planet, is an attempt
to rescue the conservative’s moral language that the liberal
purloins when he talks about the environment. It is properly the
conservative, writes Scruton, who is entitled to speak of the
environment in terms of debts to future generations. From the
liberal’s memory loss about the recent past and myopia about the
future, the conservative emerges to see the stars.