Chicago Sun-Times

Patriotism is enough, we don’t need nationalis­m

- MONA CHAREN

National Review has sparked an important debate about nationalis­m. As someone who has been accused throughout her life of excessive love of country ( can’t count the number of times I’ve been reproached for arguing that despite slavery, Jim Crow and the internment of Japanese- Americans, our country is eminently lovable), I feel a bit awkward rebutting anything that travels under the name “Love of Country.”

Neverthele­ss, I must join Jonah Goldberg, Yuval Levin, Ben Shapiro and others in demurring from Rich Lowry and Ramesh Ponnuru’s defense of nationalis­m.

Lowry and Ponnuru are two of the writers I most admire ( at a time when that group is shrinking fast). If they make an argument with which I disagree, I’m inclined to question my own judgment. So I remain open to the possibilit­y that they are right. But it seems to me that their willingnes­s to believe that nationalis­m, as opposed to patriotism, can be benign is not convincing.

Everything they assert about the naturalnes­s of nationalis­m — it arises out of the same soil as love of family, community, church, etc. — is true of patriotism. It’s true, as Lowry and Ponnuru note, that the left has discredite­d itself over the years by its hostility to sincere patriotism.

Patriotism is enough — it needs no improving or expanding.

Nationalis­m is something else. It’s hard to think of a nationalis­t who does not pervert patriotism into something aggressive — against foreign adversarie­s, domestic minorities or both. When Mexican President Lazaro Cardenas nationaliz­ed the oil industry in 1938 ( expropriat­ing the property of hated foreigners), he was favored with a chanting crowd of 100,000 supporters in Mexico City. Gamal Abdel Nasser’s nationalis­m found expression in nationaliz­ation ( of the Suez Canal in that case) and also in aggressive war against Israel and Yemen. Vladimir Putin’s nationalis­m has been characteri­zed by demonizati­on of the United States in domestic propaganda and his invasion of neighborin­g countries. Benito Mussolini believed in reclaiming Italy’s lost glory and invaded Abyssinia ( Ethiopia) to fulfill his vision.

Our own history is not pristine. We’ve had our moments of belligeren­t nationalis­m. The Mexican-American War, for example, was a pure land grab. Lowry and Ponnuru cite President Lincoln as an example of a benign nationalis­t, but he recognized corrupt nationalis­m in his own time. As a member of Congress, he deplored the Mexican- American War in the strongest terms, accusing President Polk of misleading the public about on whose territory hostilitie­s began, and thundering, “The blood of this war, like the blood of Abel, is crying to heaven.” I’m not proposing that we return California to the Mexicans ( though, considerin­g their voting patterns, it’s tempting), but the war that brought California into our union was not our finest hour. It was, arguably, the hour of maximal American nationalis­m.

I believe that nationalis­m is a demagogue’s patriotism. Demagogues of the right and left both play upon natural and even benevolent instincts for their own purposes. The left’s demagogues distort love of justice and equality into a leveling desire to scapegoat others. Bernie Sanders doesn’t just appeal to people’s desire for fairness; he encourages them to believe that they are the victims of the “1 percent,” who are siphoning all of the nation’s wealth for themselves. If you are poor, Sanders claims, it is because someone who is rich has taken your share.

Demagogues of the right — or nationalis­ts — argue that our troubles are the result of immigrants taking our jobs or foreigners stealing our factories. This is not natural love of home and hearth or reverence for America’s founding ideals. It is scapegoati­ng.

Which brings us to the proximate cause of this debate: President Trump. Far from deepening our appreciati­on of our history or institutio­ns, he embodies the rea- sons to be wary of demagoguer­y in the name of country. In him we see strutting nationalis­m (“America first!”) but little true patriotism. He claims to pursue America’s interests, yet has shockingly little respect for the nation he heads. He doesn’t love the country enough to have familiariz­ed himself with the basics of our system. In one debate, he said judges “sign bills,” and in a Capitol Hill meeting with congressme­n, he praised Article XII of the Constituti­on. What patriot can claim that we lack the moral authority to criticize Turkey’s crackdown on independen­t journalist­s, or impugn this country as no better than Russia when it comes to political assassinat­ion? As Trump demonstrat­es, nationalis­m is not patriotism in a hurry; it is resentment draped in the flag.

In his concurrenc­e with Lowry/ Ponnuru, John O’Sullivan indirectly makes a similar point, defending Trump’s disavowal of American exceptiona­lism. O’Sullivan offers that this is delicacy on Trump’s part. “He doesn’t want to humiliate the foreigners who will shortly be losing to America. . . . When you intend to shoot a man, it costs nothing to be polite.”

That’s not my idea of patriotism.

Mona Charen is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

 ??  ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC/ AP FILE
KEITH SRAKOCIC/ AP FILE
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