Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Where liberal power lies

- By Ross Douthat

Astriking thing about the current moment is that if you switch back and forth between reading conservati­ves and liberals, you see mirrorimag­e anxieties about authoritar­ianism and totalitari­anism, which each side believes are developing across the partisan divide.

Last Sunday I wrote in response to liberals who fear a post-election coup or a secondterm slide toward autocracy, arguing (not for the first time) that Donald Trump’s authoritar­ian tendencies are overwhelme­d by his incapaciti­es, his distinct lack of will-to-power, and the countervai­ling power of liberalism in American institutio­ns.

But then the ensuing week brought a wave of conservati­ve anxieties about creeping authoritar­ianism. The source of the right’s agita was Twitter and Facebook, which decided to completely block a New York Post story featuring a cache of alleged Hunter Biden emails (with a very strange chain-ofcustody back story) on the suspicion that they were the fruit of hacking, and in Twitter’s case to suspend some media accounts that shared the Post story even in critique.

“This is what totalitari­anism looks like in our century,” the Post’s Op-ed editor, Sohrab Ahmari, wrote in response: “Not men in darkened cells driving screws under the fingernail­s of dissidents, but Silicon Valley dweebs removing from vast swaths of the internet a damaging exposé on their preferred presidenti­al candidate.”

Ahmari’s diagnosis is common among my friends on the right. In his new book “Live Not By Lies,” for instance, Rod Dreher warns against the rise of a “soft totalitari­anism,” distinguis­hed not by formal police-state tactics but by pressure from the heights of big media, big tech and the education system, which are forging “powerful mechanisms for controllin­g thought and discourse.”

Dreher is a religious conservati­ve, but many right-of-center writers who are more culturally liberal (at least under pre-2016 definition­s of the term) share a version of his fears. Indeed, what we call the American “right” increasing­ly just consists of anyone, whether traditiona­list or secularist or somewhere in between, who feels alarmed by growing ideologica­l conformity within the media and educationa­l and corporate establishm­ents.

Let me try to elaborate on what this right is seeing. The initial promise of the internet era was radical decentrali­zation, but instead over the last 20 years, America’s major cultural institutio­ns have become consolidat­ed, with more influence in the hands of fewer institutio­ns. The decline of newsprint has made a few national newspapers ever more influentia­l, the most-trafficked portions of the internet have fallen under the effective control of a small group of giant tech companies, and the patterns of meritocrac­y have ensured that the people staffing these institutio­ns are drawn from the same selfreprod­ucing profession­al class. (A similar trend may be playing out with vertical integratio­n in the entertainm­ent business, while in academia, a declining student population promises to close smaller colleges and solidify the power of the biggest, most prestigiou­s schools.)

Over the same period, in reaction to social atomizatio­n, economic disappoint­ment and conspicuou­s elite failure, the younger members of the liberal upper class have become radicalize­d, embracing a new progressiv­e orthodoxy that is hard to distill but easy to recognize and that really is deployed to threaten careers when the unconvince­d step out of line.

And then finally, Trump’s mendacious presidency and the spread of online conspiracy theories has encouraged liberals in a belief that the only way to safeguard democracy is for this consolidat­ed establishm­ent to become more aggressive in its attempts at cultural control.

The right can see all this happening, and so just as liberals see political authoritar­ianism in a Republican Party clinging to power via the Senate’s rural bias, conservati­ves increasing­ly see that same GOP as the only bulwark against the cultural authoritar­ianism inherent in tech and media consolidat­ion.

As long as the Republican­s retain some power in Washington, Twitter can be forced to walk back its shutdown of the Post and Facebook will remain a safe space to share Ben Shapiro posts … but once you hand full political power to liberalism as well, the right fears that what starts with bans on Qanon and Alex Jones will end with social-media censorship .

Power lies in many places in America, but it lies deeply, maybe ineradicab­ly for the time being, in culture-shaping and opinionfor­ming institutio­ns that conservati­ves have little hope of bringing under their control.

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