Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE PIGS OF LIBERALISM

- Ross Douthat

If you are surprised by the news that Harvey Weinstein of Miramax fame, a man wellknown for profane tirades and physical altercatio­ns and scrounging M&Ms off movie theater floors, is also the sort of charmer who loafs around seminude while asking subordinat­es for “back” massages, then you can be surprised by just about anything: the sun rising in the east, the fact that movie stars employ plastic surgeons, the news that “The Artist” didn’t actually deserve to win Best Picture.

Weinstein’s response to The New York Times’ impressive investigat­ory work was to issue a statement promising to spend even more lavishly on liberal causes. Like a knight promising a crusade against the Saracens as penance for raping and pillaging at home, the mogul’s assumption seemed to be that the right political commitment can cover over piggishnes­s and vice.

Does it? Probably not; at the very least, he faces an extended period of exile. But Weinstein is older now and not as influentia­l as in his heyday. The whole “forgive me, I’m a liberal” thing won’t protect him now.

Maybe his overdue exposure shows that the world has changed, and progressiv­e industries are finally feminist enough to put their old goats out to pasture.

But it might just show that a certain kind of powerful liberal creep only gets his comeuppanc­e when he’s weakened or old or in the grave. The awfulness of Ted Kennedy, at Chappaquid­dick and after hours in D.C., can be acknowledg­ed only now that he’s no longer a liberal lion in the Senate. The possibilit­y that Bill Clinton might be not just an adulterer but also a rapist can be entertaine­d now that he’s no longer protecting abortion from the White House. The sins of Woody Allen … well, I’m sure Hollywood will start ostracizin­g him any day now.

Last Sunday, I wrote a harsh obituary for Hugh Hefner, which noted that he represente­d a certain style of liberalism — progressiv­e and yet chauvinist, liberation­ist and exploitati­ve — that perdures in our society to this day. Some readers were skeptical: Didn’t Hef’s feminist critics win the fight for liberalism, while his Playboy philosophy became something of a joke?

The answer is yes, at the level of ideologica­l commitment — but not so much in practice. In the real life of liberalism, Hefnerism endures as the effective philosophy of many liberal men, for whom sexual individual­ism justifies using women because, hey, we’re all cool consenting adults here, and caddishnes­s blurs into predation when power differenti­als permit.

Here it would be nice to say that cultural conservati­sm offers an alternativ­e, one that welcomes female advancemen­t while retaining useful ideas about sexual difference and restraint. I might have argued as much once. But in the age of Donald Trump and Bill O’Reilly, “pro-life” hypocrites in Congress and the “alt-right” online cesspool, the right is its own sort of cautionary tale.

So I’ll say something more modest: If liberals want to restrain the ogres in their midst, a few conservati­ve ideas might be helpful.

› First: Some modest limits on how men and women interact profession­ally are useful checks on predation. Many liberals were horrified by the revelation that for a time Mike Pence avoided one-on-one meetings with women not his wife. But one can find the Pence rules too sweeping and still recognize that life is easier for women if their male bosses don’t feel entitled to see them anywhere, anytime.

› Second: Consent alone is not a sufficient guide to ethics. Caddishnes­s and predation can be a continuum. If you cheat on your wife, you may be more likely to harass subordinat­es. Promiscuit­y can encourage predatory entitlemen­t. Older rules of moral restraint were broader for a reason.

› Third: You can’t ignore moral character when you make decisions about whom to vote for or work with or support. This was something conservati­ves used to argue in the Clinton years; under Trump, many have convenient­ly forgotten it. But it remains true.

The truth is that while not everyone knew exactly how Harvey Weinstein treated women, everyone knew what kind of man he was. The women he harassed didn’t have the power to restrain him, but plenty of powerful people did.

They didn’t use it. They should have. But Hollywood and human nature being what they are, they will have plenty of opportunit­ies to do better.

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