Here's an essay worth reading, based on three short books about Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
A pull-quote which reverberates today:
...Moynihan’s older liberalism identified deeply with America even as it
acknowledged its failings. It respected facts and evidence. But the new
liberalism, the radicalism of the late sixties that captivated educated
elites, was shot through with an irrational anti-Americanism. “Radical
politics,” explained Michael Novak at the time, “is so much the province
of the affluent . . . that it fairly reeks of class bias,” a bias
against “middle America.” Moynihan feared that “a society suffused with
the alienation of its elites” would be “a society that courts—if not
totalitarianism, at least statism.” He saw “totalitarian seeds in the
new politics of who thinks what, and who feels how.” Moynihan understood
that anti-Americanism was a useful lever for liberal elites who
insisted that their inclinations be propitiated lest they undermine
American society from within....
As the essayist sees it, Moynihan was a modern-day Burke.
Well. Nothing has changed; if anything, it's worse. Sic transit....
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