Moderation is a fatal thing. Nothing succeeds like
excess.
Oscar Wilde
Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice.
Barry Goldwater
Who could be against moderation in one’s
personal habits and conduct? People are
usually better off by not doing too much or too little of life’s basics –
eating, drinking, exercising, relaxing, etc.
The “mean” was a centerpiece of Aristotle’s ethics – best is a life
somewhere in a midway between excess and deficiency. “Moderation” thus in most any conversation
comes with approval and commendation. Extremes are dangerous: extremists are
disagreeable and obnoxious.
The word “moderation”
applied to an individual’s action or habits both describes and approves of
what he does. A “moderate” drinker is
approved of because he habitually hits the proper balance of enjoying the
pleasures of a toxic substance with the disciplined, limited (measured) intake
of it so as to avoid intoxication and damage to his health. Pleasure, sobriety and good health are all
good things and moderation in this example is what brings these all together in
a piece. There is no exact amount of consumption that can describe moderate
drinking – “moderation” is inevitably and usefully imprecise and somewhat
relative – because circumstances and people are endlessly variable.
In discussions
of politics, however, beware of moderation!
“Moderation” when applied to politicians collapses completely into
partisan approbation disguised as analysis and description. Political pundits and commentators, for
example, routinely speak of “moderate Republicans,” a locution they employ to
distinguish those so designated from other Republicans – who are what? “Extreme,” “right-wing,” “radical,”
“out-of-the-mainstream.” Moderate Republicans are, in effect, good Republicans, that is, ones that the
pundits and commentators approve of.
What then is a
“good Republican”? A good Republican is
a Republican who resembles or talks like a Democrat. The supposed description contained in the
phrase “moderate Republican” is really nothing more or less than disguised
approval. The pundit highly approves of
Democrats and thus those who insist on distinguishing themselves from Democrats
merit approval only insofar as they resemble Democrats. When the “moderate Republicans” like John
McCain or Jon Huntsman compete against other Republicans they are as “moderate
Republicans” objects of high praise for the mainstream commentators, but when
they eventually come to joust with Democrats, then…well… they are just Republicans and as such members of
an inferior, discredited political caste who must then endure the riffs of
condescension, derision and contempt from the inhabitants of the fourth estate.
This ideological
and partisan use of moderation favored by our mainstream political commentators
and reporters is routinely pointed primarily against Republicans and is evidenced
by the fact that one rarely if ever encounters the mention of “moderate
Democrats.” If so, who are they? Who then are the Democrat “extremists” who
are distinct from them and who merit the kind of disapproval showered upon
Republican “extremists”?
There are no
“moderate Democrats” as distinct from other ones because all Democrats are by
nature balanced, reasoned, and above all, moderate. Thus while there may be some variation among
them relative to particular policy, no Democrat will be labeled “extreme”
because to be extreme is to be other than a Democrat, outside of that virtuous
orbit. This point can be made with a
question: if President Obama is a
“moderate Democrat”, who in the Party represents the extremists on the Left?
Edward Kennedy as measured on the ideological spectrum was far on the Left region of the Party but at some point in his career he achieved apotheosis and was treated by the mainstream media a pillar of political rectitude, sound reason and moderation. There is some irony in this given Senator Kennedy’s conspicuous lack of moderation in his personal life – his alcoholism, womanizing and abandonment of a young woman companion to drown in the back seat of his car while he conferred with his political handlers.
Edward Kennedy as measured on the ideological spectrum was far on the Left region of the Party but at some point in his career he achieved apotheosis and was treated by the mainstream media a pillar of political rectitude, sound reason and moderation. There is some irony in this given Senator Kennedy’s conspicuous lack of moderation in his personal life – his alcoholism, womanizing and abandonment of a young woman companion to drown in the back seat of his car while he conferred with his political handlers.
Since the Kulturkampf of the 1960s pushed American
culture to the Left and with it the entire Democrat party, its leading constituents
now are composed of teacher unions, trial lawyers and Hollywood actors and
directors. The culture-shaping institutions including the universities, the
entertainment industry and the media are now dominated by an ideology of
collectivism and thus the Democrats as the party increasingly of the Left has
established its politics as “the norm”
and its candidates as uniquely virtuous, empathetic and rational. If you are not a Democrat, you are “abnormal,”
which is translated by the pundits into the more specific attributes of stupid,
mean and greedy. No longer do the
Democrats call themselves “liberals”; they are now “progressives” and since
“progress” must be good and what any normal person would desire,
non-progressives must be out of touch reactionaries who “cling to guns or
religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them…”
The “moderate
“Republican” subterfuge by the contemporary Left is a small part of its practice
of “velvet Stalinism”. Velvet Stalinists
share the same premise as their pioneering iron-fisted precursors – power is
not to be shared nor critics respected or spared. President Obama in an unguarded moment made
this premise explicit during the 2010 congressional campaign in an interview
with Univision when he said: “[W]e're gonna punish our
enemies, and we're gonna reward our friends ...” Politics for Stalinists, iron-fisted and
velvet, alike, is war. The object thus is to destroy the opposition because it
is responsible for all the malignancies that plague society. In those early days when Stalin was building
the socialist workers paradise, the dissenters and unenthused were physically
removed from political competition – shot or sent to the Gulag.
Today’s
Stalinists not possessing quite the monopoly of force as the General Secretary
of the CPSU, deal with their competitors by simply pronouncing them to be unfit,
thus there is no obligation have to contest their criticism or ideas. Nor should they have to since they are by
definition “out of the mainstream.” The
competitors are assigned to realm of the stupid, the greedy, the mean-spirited,
Fascists, Nazi’s and racists, categories that mean that the opposition should
be taken seriously except as a pathological aberration.
Moderation is
wonderful, but it is meaningless in politics.
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