Deneen again!!
In his most recent diagnosis of the state of America’s political soul,
the journalist and political thinker E.J. Dionne begins with a simple
thesis. In the opening pages of Our Divided Political Heart, he
asserts that “American history is defined by an irrepressible and
ongoing tension between two core values: our love of individualism and
our reverence for community.” The inevitable “creative tension” between
these two commitments, he argues, is the source of ongoing American
debate as well as American strength. We need to hold firmly to both
values, as difficult as that can be in practice.
Dionne, predictably, argues that the political Right is beholden to individualism (not wholly un-true) and that the political Left is the Party of Community.
Deneen dismantles--actually, nukes-- his argument.
...There is no mention in Dionne’s 300-page book, for instance, of the
campaign commercial that launched President Obama’s re-election
campaign, “The Life of Julia.” Julia is portrayed over the course of her
life as the beneficiary of a bevy of government programs; notably, with
the exception of one slide, she is constantly pictured alone. She
appears to be especially reliant upon the government because there is no
evidence of any support of family, community, church, or friends in her
life. In her middle age, she (on her own accord, apparently) “decides”
to have a child, and in one scene is shown sending young “Zachary” off
to school; he is never to be seen again for the rest of her life. It is
the very picture of the Leviathan—in this world, there are only
individuals and the state....
Not to worry. Deneen criticizes the (R) brand, too.
...Dionne is correct on two main points: a major element of the Republican Party today is dominated by individualistic tendencies...
One hears "rugged individualism" (seemingly) 1000X/week on Limbaugh's program. But Ron Reagan was no "rugged individualist"-promoter. That phrase came from the pen of Teddy Roosevelt, the Progressive. No surprise that TR begat Wilson, (etc.), begat Roosevelt, (etc.) begat Obama.
Final shot at Dionne:
...You will search in vain for the health of our actual communities in the
pages of this book—written by one of America’s most celebrated
communitarian thinkers—unless you unreflectively accept that
“government” and “community” are the same thing. But that view is
finally nothing more than the “quest for community” gone awry, something
Dionne, more than anyone, should realize.
Indeed.
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