The Jerusalem Post

Truth goons

Climate control and the closing of the American mind

- • BY VIVIAN BERCOVICI (Reuters)

In late April, Bret Stephens, a former editor of this paper, Pulitzer prize winner for commentary and 20-year alumnus of The Wall Street Journal, wrote his debut column in his new editorial home, The New York Times. A frisson ensued. Stephens – and his comments on climate change, which are both quite measured and thoughtful – were lacerated by the truth goons. You know, the self-anointed gatekeeper­s of THE TRUTH. The ones who so overcome with a progressiv­e impulse that they cannot abide the utterance of any other viewpoint. The ones who fail to see the hypocrisy and dangerousn­ess of their intellectu­al tyranny.

So. What did Stephens do to poke the progressiv­e bear?

He wrote about climate change, espousing the view that public discussion on this topic tends to sclerotic hysteria. Stephens recommende­d a calmer, less absolutist tone of debate, allowing for an opportunit­y to have a more reasoned discussion of the various aspects of this complex and contentiou­s issue. Extremism, he suggested, does not encourage the honest and robust discussion such an important topic merits.

This was all too much for those who posture as the saviors of the planet. They brayed about his inaccurate didactic metaphors and downright shoddy deployment of scientific data.

In a New York nanosecond, Stephens was tarred, feathered, impaled, and, for good measure, drawn and quartered, having been convicted as a climate change denying Neandertha­l. His presence in the pages of the Times was denounced as an assault on all that is decent and pure. Multiple platform rants ensued – demanding he be fired and, in the meantime, that all Times subscriber­s cancel. A pox on free speech, whatever that is. This latest collective panic attack eventually ran out of oxygen. But that does not in any way diminish its importance.

Stephens wrote another column. And another. The Times’s editorial leadership stood by their man, admirably explaining the merits of supporting an honorable marketplac­e of ideas.

Most disturbing about this episode is that it is symptomati­c of a deeply troubling pattern. We, in the progressiv­e West, seem to have embraced a culture of thuggish intellectu­al tyranny, consider it enlightenm­ent. Civil discourse has given way to the inflammato­ry howls of smug certitude.

So-called “white privilege” is the essence of all that is bad, with Jews at the apex of this oppressive pyramid.

As a society, Western countries have been adrift, allowing this slow erosion of standards and principle to reach crisis levels. When someone of Stephens’s intellect and integrity, who is among the finest polemicist­s writing in the English language, is baselessly demonized as an evil ideologue determined to hasten the demise of the planet and all life on it, well, then, we have a problem.

Allan Bloom warned 30 years ago in his prescient book The Closing of the American Mind that higher education in the US was disconnect­ing from reality and bulwarking in arrogance.

In July 2016, the distinguis­hed businessma­n, philanthro­pist, MIT graduate and intellectu­al Charles Koch elegantly summarized and updated the doom effect articulate­d by Bloom:

“Education in America, and particular­ly higher education, has become increasing­ly hostile to the free exchange of ideas. On many campuses, a climate of intellectu­al conformity has replaced open debate and inquiry, stifling discussion... Dissenters are demonized, ostracized or otherwise treated with scorn and derision. This disrupts the process of discovery and challenge that is at the root of human progress.”

Today, we live with the outcome of that unchecked trend, which has spread beyond elitist campuses to much of the media and public policy community. “Progressiv­e liberals” are prone to shutting down the discussion of ideas with which they disagree. They intimidate and shame with false smears and epithets. Put simply, the new progressiv­es caricature anyone who disagrees with their jingoistic platitudes as oppressive ideologues and racists. It’s a package thing.

Even before he had walked through the door and penned his maiden column in the Times, Stephens was challenged, on Twitter, by one of his new “colleagues,” for supposedly espousing racist views in a past column. Completely unfounded, this gratuitous attack demonstrat­ed that the accuser – a senior Times scribe – was unprofessi­onal, unmannered and either disingenuo­us or simply did not understand the column he purported to impugn.

Extremism sells. Simplifica­tion sells. Nasty sells and captures 15 seconds of online glory. The intellectu­al universe of 140-character thought spasms prevails.

@newnasties. U behave more like fascists in #1938 or #1984 than enlightene­d Libs u claim 2 b. just sayin ....

The author, former Canadian ambassador to Israel, is a senior fellow at the Jewish People and Policy Institute. She resides in Tel Aviv.

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 ??  ?? IS IT GETTING warmer? Snow covers Broggerdal­en Mountain near Ny-Alesund, Norway, in 2015. The author discusses the case of columnist Bret Stephens, who was attacked for taking issue with climate change.
IS IT GETTING warmer? Snow covers Broggerdal­en Mountain near Ny-Alesund, Norway, in 2015. The author discusses the case of columnist Bret Stephens, who was attacked for taking issue with climate change.

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