Boston Herald

‘Cosmopolit­an’ joins list of trigger words

- By RICH LOWRY

Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley used a perfectly good word in its appropriat­e context, and stands accused of dog-whistle bigotry.

At the National Conservati­sm conference in Washington, D.C., last week, Hawley gave a keynote address that attacked the coastal elite for being out of touch and out of sympathy with the heartland. He called it “the cosmopolit­an elite,” described its beliefs as the “cosmopolit­an consensus,” and accused it of building a “cosmopolit­an economy.”

Even though there’s not a remotely plausible argument that Hawley was in any way targeting Jews, his use of the C-word alone was enough for critics to say he was making an anti-Semitic appeal.

“If you’re Jewish and the use of ‘cosmopolit­an’ doesn’t scare you, read some history,” warned New York Times op-ed writer Paul Krugman. A columnist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch opined, darkly, that Hawley “chose the word purposeful­ly” (he had, just not in a sinister way). James Fallows of The Atlantic agreed that Hawley knew “*exactly* the implicatio­ns of ‘cosmopolit­an.’ ”

There’s no doubt that the word has been abused for hideous ends. In 1946, Joseph Stalin gave a speech heralding the repression of Jews in the arts and literature that lamented, “The positive Soviet hero is derided and inferior before all things foreign and cosmopolit­anism that we all fought against from the time of Lenin, characteri­stic of the political leftovers, is many times applauded.”

Yet, the connection between Hawley, the overachiev­ing 39year-old former Supreme Court law clerk and attorney general of the state of Missouri, and the cruel, power-hungry Marxist-Leninist dictator who is one of history’s great monsters … is not obvious.

The word has also been used to target Jews by other anti-Semitic lowlifes and haters, although it’s a smear to mention Hawley, who gladly and forthright­ly denounces anti-Semitism, in the same breath as these cretins.

Why resort to the word at all? The axis of the culture war in this country has shifted to national identity, immigratio­n policy and citizenshi­p, and requires a new vocabulary. The welcome effort to rehabilita­te the word “nationalis­m,” one goal of the National Conservati­sm Conference, is part of this re-orientatio­n. But there also has to be a term for what the nationalis­ts oppose, since Big Government and social liberalism aren’t apt.

Cosmopolit­anism is the natural choice. Per the Stanford Encycloped­ia of Philosophy, the word “has been used to describe a wide variety of important views in moral and socio-political philosophy. The nebulous core shared by all cosmopolit­an views is the idea that all human beings, regardless of their political affiliatio­n, are (or can and should be) citizens in a single community.”

If the word is inherently a hateful term of opprobrium, it’s strange that it is embraced by people who hold the worldview it describes.

Hawley’s speech isn’t immune from criticism. It’s overly reductive to suggest all — or even most — of our problems stem from the disconnect between the coasts and the middle of the country. And filling out a plausible policy agenda to give expression to Hawley’s worldview is very much a work in progress. But his speech should be considered a conversati­on starter. By focusing on one allegedly forbidden word, his critics hope, as always, to be conversati­on stoppers.

Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

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