THE BELL CURVE -- joseph n. bell
My family goes to a lot of movies, and although our style was cramped
over the holidays by illness, we still managed to see more than a dozen.
Don’t cringe. I’m not going to list the five best or the five worst. But
I would like to single out one that engaged me greatly and that you might
possibly miss simply because of a misleading title.
It’s called “Cradle Will Rock,” and it’s not about a nanny stealing a
baby or the birth of Elvis Presley. It’s about the Great Depression and
politically incorrect ideas and how the artists who expressed them were
treated.
The title is the name of a musical being rehearsed in the mid-1930s for
production by the Federal Theater Project. The FTP was created by the
Roosevelt administration to keep artists at work during the Depression on
the conviction, once held firmly in this country, that their contribution
is critical enough to an open society to merit substantial government
support. It has special significance here because we keep electing a
congressman whose major goal as a public servant appears to be denying
such support to the arts.
“Cradle Will Rock” dramatized the workers’ right to strike at a time when
strikebreakers and goons were being hired to prevent the growth of
corporate unions, a period in American history that is seldom taught in
our schools.
The movie reached me on two levels. First, it caught the dehumanizing
despair of the Depression with graphic accuracy as I remember it. I can
still see those endless lines for everything, but especially for work --
any kind of work. And, second, it also caught the power of ideas to so
threaten people that they would rather expunge than examine them.
In a kind of preamble to the McCarthy hearings almost 20 years later,
Hallie Flanagan -- who headed the FTP -- was called before a committee of
congressional reactionaries who found her ideas so disturbing they not
only forced the government to shut down “Cradle Will Rock,” but attacked
her personally. The movie tells how the theater people -- led by Orson
Welles and John Houseman -- pulled it off anyway.
All of this came at a time when I was puzzling over how to deal -- if at
all -- with personal attacks in the letters column of the Pilot from
people who disagree with my ideas, but know nothing of me personally. My
policy with angry letter-writers has always been to let the critics have
their say and move on. I’ve never had any illusions about the fact that
some of my social and political views are far from the norm in Orange
County.
But there is a line. And I think Steve Smith caught it pretty well on
Christmas Day, when he took umbrage with critics of his column about the
school board’s failure to promote Wendy Leece.
He made two points in particular bearing on my situation: that his
critics got on him for topics he never mentioned in his column, and then
chose to divert attention from the message by unleashing a personal
attack on the messenger.
That pretty well describes two recent letters in the Pilot excoriating a
column of mine in which I took issue with our local congressmen for
trotting out all the old Cold War rhetoric about Communists in dealing
with China.
Douglas Toohey made a legitimate argument against my position, but then
felt required to explain that wasn’t what I was up to at all. I was, he
said, “typical of the academic lightweights who see nothing in political
and foreign policy questions but opportunities to enhance their inflated
self-importance, their sense of superiority over the lowly bourgeois
citizenry that their mediocre educations have taught them to despise.”
Then a letter-writer named Tom Williams anointed me as the world champion
Bill Clinton “behind-kisser.” Although I mentioned Clinton only once, in
a quote from Chris Cox (and Williams has no idea how I feel about the
president or evidence to support his thesis), he is quite certain that my
real motive in writing the column was to “cover Clinton’s behind.”
There is more in the same vein, but you get the idea.
I could say a good deal in rebuttal to the factual arguments in both
letters. Williams’ principal quoted source for his information, for
example, was the right-wing Washington Times, which probably hasn’t
reported that a Stanford University Center for International Security
study has concluded that the Cox committee report was riddled with
factual errors, its language “inflammatory” and its key conclusions
“unwarranted.” Or that the FBI has found no credible evidence that the
alleged Los Alamos spy, Wen Ho Lee, committed espionage, and he has been
indicted, instead, for improperly downloading classified files.
But that’s not the point today. We’re talking here about attacking the
messenger instead of the message. I’ll defend my positions, when
necessary, and I’ve even been known to change my mind. But I don’t know
Toohey and Williams, and they don’t know me, and even if we did know one
another, that should have no bearing on the ideas being challenged.
I suppose a bachelor’s degree from the University of Missouri could be
considered a “mediocre education,” but teaching for 20 years in the UCI
English department of PhDs was a lot more conducive to humility than
self-importance.
I only hope that the ideas I offer up here will stimulate the kind of
healthy debate that makes attacking the messenger not only irrelevant,
but foolish.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
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