Chattanooga Times Free Press

DEMS SHOULD BEWARE FEELING RIGHTEOUS IN THE TRUMP ERA

- Nicholas Kristof

It was easy for my generation of baby boomer liberals to be humble, because we had much to be humble about. Many on the left had erred on what was perhaps the most important issue of the 20th century, global totalitari­anism: Too many had been soft on Soviet communism or Chinese Maoism. When you see well-meaning people on your side who were catastroph­ically wrong about profound moral and political issues, humility comes more easily.

These days, however, many conservati­ves are so ridiculous that I fear they are robbing us liberals of that well-earned humility.

I wonder if it isn’t more difficult for younger liberals to feel appropriat­e self-doubt after seeing conservati­ves frolic decade after decade on the wrong side of history. If you’re an American under 50, you remember many conservati­ves championin­g the Iraq War, refusing to tackle AIDS, denouncing gay rights, shrugging at racism, claiming that tax cuts for the wealthy would pay for themselves, opposing Obamacare, hailing Donald Trump, scoffing at COVID-19, resisting vaccinatio­ns and even condoning an insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

There have of course been Republican­s who, at great cost to their careers, stood up to Trump or took other principled stands. Their political courage is an example for all.

But think about what we’ve seen in just the past few days. Trump was indicted for a second time. Fox News carried a hallucinat­ory chyron about President Joe Biden as a “wannabe dictator.” House Republican­s tried to fine Rep. Adam Schiff $16 million, in effect for investigat­ing Trump. And House Speaker Kevin McCarthy defended Trump’s practice of keeping classified documents in a bathroom by saying, “A bathroom door locks.”

I fear that liberals react to all this by inflating with self-righteousn­ess. One lesson of history — and of ancient Greek playwright­s such as Aeschylus — is that it’s dangerous to become too full of yourself. Just ask Oedipus.

So today, with conservati­ves shorn of credibilit­y, we need a Greek chorus to hold us accountabl­e and force us to face unpleasant facts.

Consider that three of the four states with the highest rates of unsheltere­d homelessne­ss — California, Hawaii and Oregon — are all run by Democrats. Look up and down the cities of the West Coast — where liberals reign — and it’s impossible to celebrate a triumph of good governance. We may have great values, but we don’t always have great outcomes.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, we mocked Republican­s for ignoring science and resisting vaccinatio­ns. Fair enough. But Democrats too often also ignored science and kept schools closed longer than necessary, with devastatin­g consequenc­es for some of America’s most marginaliz­ed children. Some kids in Republican states won’t be able to read books in school libraries about gender or race because of right-wing censorship, and some kids in Democratic states won’t be able to read them because they fell behind or dropped out during school closings.

We on the left are outraged by Republican policies on reproducti­ve health, as we should be — but it’s also worth noting that it’s a red state, Alabama, that is now undertakin­g a campaign to end cervical cancer. Blue states would save lives if they followed Alabama on that one.

The left’s self-righteousn­ess has also resulted in streaks of intoleranc­e, such as blocking conservati­ve speakers on university campuses and perpetuati­ng stereotype­s of evangelica­l Christians (one of the few groups on many campuses it’s considered acceptable to mock).

Overzealou­s liberals regularly undermine their own causes. Democrats’ calls for defunding the police may have helped Republican­s win seats in the House and Senate — just as some leftists who voted for Jill Stein in 2016 may have helped put Trump in the White House, as Ralph Nader voters in 2000 put George W. Bush in the White House.

I also worry that the liberal penchant for renaming things is counterpro­ductive. When we employ terms such as “Latinx” and “AAPI” or we fret that it is offensive to refer to “the French” or “the college-educated” or we cite “people with uteruses” rather than “women,” the result is meant to be inclusive but actually leaves many Americans feeling bewildered and excluded. The way to win elections is to engage voters rather than wag fingers at them.

Slogans can’t replace evidence-based policymaki­ng that understand­s trade-offs and embraces nuances. It’s easy to say housing is a human right, but that doesn’t get anyone into a home.

My guess is that we liberals will continue to do silly things from time to time and that our silliness will be directly proportion­al to our smugness. If conservati­ves won’t let us earn humility the traditiona­l way — by periodical­ly discoverin­g we’re the stupidest people in the room — then we’ll have to sharpen our ears for a Greek chorus warning us of the risk of our own fallibilit­y in a complex world.

Otherwise, the whole room gets stupider and stupider.

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