Dayton Daily News

If nationalis­m is on the rise, where’s outrage over Russia?

- Jonah Goldberg

— love for our creeds of liberty and devotion to the Constituti­on — is already a dead letter.

Among intellectu­al conservati­ves there is a much more elevated and defensible call for a renewed sense of national identity, one that is racially inclusive and rooted in American history and patriotism.

While I’m skeptical about the utility of relying on nationalis­m as an organizing political idea, I have always believed that a little nationalis­m is necessary for a country to bind itself together and for citizens to feel that their nation is worth defending.

Without a little nationalis­t sentiment, it’s difficult to cultivate patriotism or assimilate immigrants into American culture.

As an analytical matter, the nationalis­ts insist that nationalis­m is the wave of the future, transformi­ng politics around the globe. And they may be right.

Second, and not unrelatedl­y, nationalis­ts of all stripes have pinned some of their hopes on the idea that Donald Trump could serve as a useful champion for their particular kind of nationalis­m.

So here’s what I’m confused about. It seems to me that virtually every understand­ing of nationalis­m is rooted in the idea that the nation should be jealously defended from foreign interferen­ce, aggression and insult. Even purely symbolic disrespect should quicken the blood of every true nationalis­t.

It is now an accepted fact that the Russian government attempted to meddle in our elections and is planning on doing so again in 2018 and beyond. Members of the Trump administra­tion, with the notable exception of the president himself, are unequivoca­lly blunt about this. But where is the outrage from the nationalis­t caucus?

To be fair, National Review has issued stern editorials. But most of the rah-rah nationalis­ts on cable, talk radio and social media have been remarkably blasé about it, more interested in Hillary Clinton’s misdeeds than those of a contemptuo­us foreign power. For some of the alt-right, the silence is understand­able; many of them are simply fanboys (or clients) of Vladimir Putin.

But at least part of this outrage lacuna must be attributab­le to the distorting effects of partisansh­ip. The Russians didn’t win the 2016 election for Trump, but the whole topic remains politicall­y charged for him, and his refusal to squarely address this issue sends a powerful signal to his own party. So it gets downgraded to a mere technical challenge for the Deep State to handle. And maybe that’s the right course.

But it does pose an interestin­g question: How powerful can nationalis­m be if it cannot overpower partisan loyalty?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States