I loved R.
Emmett Tyrrell’s column today about the angry liberals —
particularly this wonderfully and appropriately sarcastic passage
about their purported “openness to experience”:
You will recall how open to experience liberals have been when
we attempted to introduce vouchers, charter schools, missile
defense, and supply-side economics. Liberals are wildly curious
about conservative positions on all manner of issues, and as for
openness may I suggest you light up a fat cigar, say in an outdoor
café, or ride your bicycle without a helmet. See how open our
liberal friends are then.
It reminded me of a story a lifelong friend told me years ago.
This friend of mine just kinda sorta follows current events, but
isn’t particularly political. Well, he was walking across his
campus at Dartmouth one day with a friend of his, and the friend, a
self-professed “liberal,” was explaining how things are. “You,” the
liberal said to my friend, “seem pretty open-minded about [subject
X], so I don’t understand why you are so close-minded about
[subject Y]. On the other hand, you really are open-minded about
[Z], but that’s why I can’t figure out why you are so close-minded
about [A, B, and C]….”
“After a few minutes of this,” my own friend later told me, “it
was sort of like a light bulb went off in my head. If I agreed with
him, I was open-minded, but if I disagreed, I was close-minded —
even though it is the same mind in my head involved in every case.”
So… “He’s the one with the rigid orthodoxy, not me.” And:
“Basically, since he was being so judgmental and the only way I
qualified as open-minded was if I shared his position, and since
all his positions are liberal, and since he judged me to be
close-minded far more often than I was open-minded — well, I guess
that makes me a conservative! Although it does seem like it’s more
work to be a conservative, because that means that instead of
accepting ‘open-minded’ orthodoxy, I actually have to think for
myself!”