Author Topic: Genuine Culture War: Accept No Substitutes  (Read 57 times)

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Offline Kamaji

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Genuine Culture War: Accept No Substitutes
« on: February 17, 2022, 05:27:05 am »
Genuine Culture War: Accept No Substitutes

What do we expect today from Republican politicians running against “cancel culture”?

By Matthew Walther
February 17, 2022

Well, it’s happened. As I write this, Democratic pollsters are sounding the alarm about the not exactly remote possibility that their candidates could be vulnerable to “culture war” arguments from the GOP. As far as I can tell by “culture war,” they do not have in mind issues such as abortion or (remember when?) prayer in public schools, but a somewhat looser grouping of enmities and half-formed resentments. The bottom line is that Republicans want to portray their opponents as out-of-touch, hypocritical, and schoolmarmish, utterly joyless scolds, dupes of facile quasi-religious manias, and all-around haters of fun.

They’re probably right about all of these things. I fully expect Democrats to lose ground in the House and the Senate; in fact, Republicans gaining control of both chambers next year is not an absurd hypothetical. But the reasons why are worth considering.

The amazing thing about the new culture wars—in which I’ve hardly been  a noncombatant myself—is just how self-serving they are for Republicans. When voters say that the single most important issues are “cancel culture” and “wokeness,” GOP politicians don’t have to solve the supply chain crisis or develop a sane response to Russian aggression. After telling us that they had a better idea than Obamacare (i.e., their own ’90s-era plan) for more than a decade, they don’t have to come up with a replacement.

More to the point, they don’t even have to do anything about gender ideology or the new wokeified race science of white women teenagers, about how being on time for things and taking pride in your work are vestiges of white supremacy or any of the other new bugbears. All they have to do is mumble along with vague slogans about how what the unspecified other side is doing is bad (and occasionally funny).

Social conservatives should be wary of carrying water for the GOP here. If the last administration showed us anything, it was that we should demand more from Republican presidents—especially those who find themselves with control of both houses of Congress and a de facto majority on the Supreme Court—than pointless uplift. Before, during, and after his presidency, Trump was admired less for anything he actually accomplished in office than for the amusing things he said about his opponents.

*  *  *

I don’t want to be accused of reflexive cynicism, though I am in fact guilty of it, or of a callow above-it-all mentality. (A more accurate designation for a long-time unregistered voter and all-around scofflaw like me would be “below-it-all.”) Some of the legislation appearing in Florida, Virginia, and other states meant to restrict the worst excesses of the new race and sex mania is probably for the good. (Some of it, however, might be as ill-considered as it is difficult to implement.) What I am trying to caution against is being an easy mark. Don’t let these people trade on righteous indignation or justifiable horror.

Validating your feelings is what you ask of a therapist or a kindergarten teacher. If this is all Republican voters actually want, they should schedule a telehealth appointment with someone more qualified than Dr. DeSantis. Otherwise, they should consider the distinct possibility that once again they are being had.



Source:  https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/genuine-culture-war-accept-no-substitutes/