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September 8, 2008
by HERBERT
E.
MEYER
In every war there is one decisive battle. This battle doesn't end the
war; a great deal of hard fighting lies ahead. But in retrospect it's the
moment when one side's ultimate victory -- and the other side's ultimate
defeat -- were sealed. In our Civil War this decisive battle was
Gettysburg. In World War II, it was Midway.
Unexpectedly -- perhaps even astonishingly -- this year's presidential
campaign is shaping up as the decisive battle in the Culture War that's
been tearing apart our country for decades.
On one side are the Traditionalists. We believe that church and State
should be separate, but that religion should remain at the center of life.
We are a Judeo-Christian culture, which means we consider those ten things
on a tablet to be commandments, not suggestions. We believe that
individuals are more important than groups, that families are more
important than governments, that children should be raised by their
parents rather than by a village, and that marriage is a sacred
relationship between a man and a woman. We believe that rights must be
balanced by responsibilities, that personal freedom is a privilege we must
be careful not to abuse, and that the rule of law cannot be set aside when
it becomes inconvenient.
We believe in economic liberty, property rights, and in giving purposeful
and industrious entrepreneurs the elbowroom they need to start and run
their businesses -- and thus create jobs for all the rest of us -- with a
minimum of government interference. We recognize that people in other
countries see things differently, and we are tolerant of their views. But
we believe that despite its imperfections the United States is history's
most blessed country, and when attacked we will defend this country with
our lives.
Tuning Out, then Tuning In
On the other side of this culture war are the Left-Wing Liberals. They are
uncomfortable with our traditions, with the inevitable inequalities of our
free-market economy, and with our military power. They dislike our values,
our morality, and our unabashed displays of patriotism. At first -- back
in the 1960s -- they were content merely to develop and pursue their own
radical culture within ours. They tuned out, turned to drugs, and pushed
the level of sexual license to a point our country had never known. They
were so distressed by our imperfections that they refused to recognize or
celebrate our achievements.
Then they tuned in, and developed a political agenda whose logical outcome
would be the overthrow of the American Revolution itself. While we believe
that power flows from God to the people, they believe the supreme power is
the State, which decides what rights, if any, should be allowed to the
people. And because there is no God above the State, there also is no
truth; no such thing as right or wrong, good or evil. Since they
are working to do good -- by their definition of the word --
whatever crimes they commit along the way don't matter. But if we are bent
on doing what they define as harm, they will use any legal trick in
the book to stop us. In short, the rule of law means whatever they want it
to mean at any given moment.
They believe that rights are more important than responsibilities, that
groups are more important than individuals, and that one's stand on public
issues is more important than one's private actions or morality. And while
they are careful never to condone the tactics of our country's foreign
enemies, they always see some justification in our enemies' cause. They
don't actually want us to be defeated by our foreign enemies; they wish
merely to see us humbled and humiliated by them.
So great is this gulf between the Traditionalists and the Left-Wing
Liberals -- and so irreconcilable are the differences -- that our
decades-long political struggle has amounted to a kind of second Civil
War. And for several years now, it's been a stalemate. This is why so many
elections are so close, why so many Supreme Court decisions are split 5-4,
and why we've been unable to act decisively on any of the issues that
confront us - the war, the economy, energy, healthcare, border control,
immigration, and all the rest.
One way or the other, the Culture War's stalemate is about to be broken.
Study history, and you will learn that there are two kinds of wars: There
are short military ones, such as World Wars I and II, in which armies and
navies collide until one side wins and the other loses. And there are long
ideological wars, such as the Cold War, in which short bursts of fighting
are separated by long periods of political maneuvering. In these long
ideological wars, the outcome isn't determined by firepower but by will.
That's because the aggressor's objective isn't to kill the defenders, but
to wear them down until they no longer have the courage and stamina to
keep resisting.
The defenders win only when they stop merely resisting -- in other words,
trying just to not lose -- and start playing offense. For example, by the
late 1970s the Free World's will to resist the Soviet Union's endless
challenges had nearly evaporated. Détente was just a palatable word for
surrender. And then -- unexpectedly and virtually at the same moment --
three individuals most people had never before heard of exploded onto the
scene and into power. They were Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and Pope
John-Paul II - none of whom, by the way, had any foreign policy experience
before taking office. Their objective wasn't to "not lose" the Cold War,
but rather to end it with victory for the Free World. Together they threw
the switch from playing defense to playing offense, stunning the Kremlin's
over-confident leaders who believed that history was on their side. Within
a decade, the Cold War was over and the Soviet Union had ceased to exist.
McCain Throws the Switch
By choosing Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate -- and by staking his
own claim to the presidency on "Country First" more than on any specific
policy initiative -- John McCain has thrown the switch and put us
Traditionalists onto the offense. By doing so he has unleashed the energy
and the will to victory among Traditionalists that have been dormant for
so long the Left-Wing Liberals mistakenly assumed we'd lost. And by taking
the over-confident Left-Wing Liberals so completely by surprise, McCain
has stunned them into revealing themselves for the vicious phonies that
they are.
As a result, what started out as a typical campaign between Republicans
and Democrats -- each party trying to hold its base while attracting
enough independent voters to win -- has exploded into the Culture War's
decisive battle.
Commanding the Traditionalist armies is a war hero whose personal courage
and patriotism have overwhelmed any disagreements within the coalition
about specific policies and issues. His second-in-command is a pro-life
hockey mom with genuine executive talent, star quality, and the most
valuable asset of all in politics: a common touch. Commanding the
Left-Wing Liberal armies is an elegant, eloquent cosmopolitan whose most
striking talent is his ability to push past everyone else to the front of
the line. His second-in-command is the U.S. Senate's leading plagiarist,
whose only undeniable talent is his ability to use Senate confirmation
hearings as a platform from which to trash honorable Republican appointees
such as Bill Clark, Robert Bork, and Clarence Thomas.
In the coming weeks we're going to hear a lot from these four candidates
and their surrogates about the war, the economy, energy, healthcare,
border control, immigration, and all the other issues that confront us.
And we'll be talking and arguing about these issues among ourselves - at
the dinner table, with our colleagues at work, with our friends and
neighbors at barbeques and at the kids' ball games.
But this election isn't really about these issues. This election is about
who we are.
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