Dayton Daily News

American ideals are being trampled in Kavanaugh saga

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Even if it could be proven that Christine Blasey Ford deliberate­ly slandered Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh — and I am not saying that’s the case — that act of willful character assassinat­ion wouldn’t be the worst thing about this horrid chapter in American life.

Donald Trump has received an enormous amount of criticism for the damage he’s done to constituti­onal and democratic norms. I have been among those critics at times. But few of his transgress­ions can hold a candle to the mob assault on many of those norms in recent days.

Over and over, elected officials and leading commentato­rs alike have insisted Ford’s allegation that Kavanaugh attempted to drunkenly rape her must be true because other men have done such things. “But really,” said Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), “guess who is perpetuati­ng all of these kinds of actions? It’s the men in this country. And I just want to say to the men in this country: Just shut up and step up, do the right thing for a change.”

Substitute “blacks” for “men” and this demagoguer­y is instantly recognizab­le as bigotry.

One of the greatest revolution­ary ideas in all of human history is the classicall­y liberal notion that there is no such thing as group rights. For thousands of years, aristocrat­s had more rights than peasants. When America was founded, whites had more rights than blacks, men had more rights than women, and rich white men had more rights than everybody else. This wasn’t always true on paper, but it was overwhelmi­ngly true in the real world.

America has worked to live up to our ideals of individual rights, and we’ve made enormous progress. These last few days have not only proved how much more work is left to be done, but how easily we can go in the wrong direction when partisan fury drives our politics.

Just as there are no collective rights, there is also no such thing as collective guilt. It is of course true that most rapes are committed by men, but that doesn’t mean most men are rapists. Nor does it mean that because some other men committed rape, a man who didn’t is guilty or loses the presumptio­n of innocence. If you cannot understand this bedrock democratic norm, I invite you to review terrorism debates over the last two decades. Just because all jihadi terrorists are Muslims, not all Muslims are jihadi terrorists.

The same basic insight applies to every subcategor­y of men — white men, black men, privileged men, conservati­ve men, etc. And yet Hirono is not alone in giving voice to this glib and wholesale slander. It’s everywhere.

Over and over, opponents of Kavanaugh are arguing that Ford is credible because of the actions of other men. That argument is fine as far as it goes, but it does not go very far. Credible means “believable.” It does not mean “true.”And while as a man, I do take offense at the presumptio­n of guilt, my true objection has nothing to do with “male pride.” The real problem is these arguments set a torch to many of the best ideals of this country.

Individual­s have a right to confront their accuser. They have a right to defend themselves. Accusers have a right to be heard. They do not have a right to be believed absent evidence or to make anonymous charges and then refuse to support them.

 ??  ?? Jonah GoldbergHe writes for the National Review.
Jonah GoldbergHe writes for the National Review.

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