Dissent depends on point of view
Steve Smith took some shots at my column about William Bennett some
weeks ago that rather cleanly missed the point I was trying to make.
I’ve been hoping Lolita Harper would pick up on it, but since she
didn’t, I’ll leave it there except for one reference that seems to me
worth further exploration.
He called my piece one of “the predictable responses of the left
... to Bill Bennett’s out-of-control video poker gambling habit.” It
was the “predictable responses of the left” that caught my attention
because it offers such a clear example of the labeling that infects
social and political rhetoric these days.
We’re going to be seeing and hearing a lot of it in the months
ahead, so it occurred to me that I could provide a service by
offering a brief dictionary of terms that need to be redefined to
understand their political implications. Here are some of the more
frequent examples of labeling being used in political and social
criticism:
* A “liberal” is a bleeding heart whose primary mission in life is
to take hard-earned money from other people and give it to indigents,
bums, welfare cheats and similar undeserving malcontents who didn’t
grow up in middle-class suburbs. Liberals look to more government to
address social inequities as long as the rich pay for it.
* A “conservative” is someone who is certain that the poor --
including children -- got that way because they were lazy. Providing
them with more help would be counter-productive because it would only
reward laziness. Conservatives look to less government so they can
better protect what they have.
* The “left” is anyone more liberal, and the “right” anyone more
conservative than the current critic.
* “Whining” means expressing views contrary to those of the
critic, whose opinions are always honest, straightforward, earnest
and backed up by formidable research. Contrary opinions are
“whining,” and are offered up only by whiners.
* “Facts” are bits and pieces of information assembled to support
a particular point of view. There are good facts and bad facts. Good
facts are those assembled by the critic. Bad facts are those cited by
the person whose views are being criticized. Facts may or may not be
true. There is a limitless supply of “facts” from which to choose for
the critic and the person being criticized to support conclusions
they mostly reached before they started looking for facts.
* “Dissent” means expressing views that don’t conform absolutely
to the pro forma policies of authority. Perhaps the most prominent
dissenters in our history were the men who signed the Declaration of
Independence. When the same group wrote the Constitution, they felt
it important to protect dissent in the nation they created, and
nowhere did they suggest it might be unpatriotic. Dissenters are
accepted as a necessary evil by the prevailing establishment as long
as they don’t express themselves, at which point they become either
whiners or traitors.
* “Colorful” refers to lies expressed in literate language that
covers up a paucity of research.
* “Ill-informed” means that the person under attack has selected a
set of facts on which to support his premise that is different from
the set of facts that appeal to his critics.
* “Irrational” and “irresponsible” mean that the conclusions being
criticized do not logically follow the critic’s “facts.”
* A “cheap shot” is irony that draws blood and is either not
perceived as irony by the critic or is regarded as a tactic that only
the critic can legitimately use.
* “Thinly disguised propaganda” refers to arguments that the
critic can’t logically refute.
* “Learned professor” is a catchall for academics whom everyone
knows to be impractical -- and sometimes dangerous -- liberals,
leftists, dissenters and fuzzy thinkers who never met a payroll.
* A “straw man” is an argument or position that can only be
assailed by ridiculing it as irrelevant.
* A “larger problem” is one the critic would rather debate than
the problem on the table.
These examples -- limited by space -- only scratch the surface of
political rhetoric.
There are dozens of other examples, which I’ll be happy to take a
shot at defining if you want to send or phone them in to the Pilot.
Meanwhile, to save the readers’ time looking for examples, I’ll be
happy to admit that I’m as guilty of labeling as Steve Smith or even
William J. Bennett, and I should properly be judged hypocritical if I
don’t follow my own advice.
I would never, however, suggest that attacking Bennett’s critics
is a predictable response of the right. I checked with the members of
my poker group and found that some suspect leftists have been known
to expose their children to Bennett’s “Book of Virtues” and some
suspect rightists think he got what was coming to him. This is
admittedly a small sampling, but I consider it as accurate as most
polls.
From a deep sense of serving the public, I’ll keep you posted from
time to time on new examples of political rhetoric. Let me know if
you would like to add some of your own.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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