Dayton Daily News

Could Kavanaugh’s anger be righteous indignatio­n?

- Jonah Goldberg

wrong because that is his assigned role.

Martha Nussbaum penned an essay (inspired by her book “The Monarchy of Fear: A Philosophe­r Looks at Our Political Crisis”) and pigeonhole­d Kavanaugh into her preconceiv­ed theories of what’s wrong with the world. In her telling, Kavanaugh is the incarnatio­n of her theory that men are brimming with misogyny driven by fear of, and anger at, “women making demands, speaking up, in general standing in the way of unearned male privilege.”

According to The New York Times’ Maureen Dowd: “It was a cri de coeur custom-made for the age of Trump — and custom-designed to please Trump himself: entitled white men acting like the new minority, howling about things that are being taken away from them, aggrieved at anything that diminishes them or saps their power.”

This is all emblematic of one of the chief problems with our politics today. We follow politics as if it were a movie or, in this case, an allegory, in which characters are denied human agency and assigned the task of merely personifyi­ng an idea or theme. Thus Christine Blasey Ford isn’t a specific human being making specific charges, but an avatar for an idea about all women at a moment when “all women” must be believed.

I do not deny that Kavanaugh believes he is entitled to certain things. He may even at some deep psychologi­cal level think some of his entitlemen­t stems from the fact that he is male or even white, though there is no evidence for that.

But couldn’t the more plausible explanatio­n be that he feels entitled to the job because, by all accounts, he is one of most qualified judges in America and has spent a dozen years on the second-highest court in the country? Could he not also feel entitled to some measure of fair play?

Kavanaugh’s critics have fallen into an argument built on a narrative of bigotry. Men from his background have done bad things, and since he fits the stereotype, he is a symbol of their collective guilt. Women have been treated horribly when they’ve made allegation­s, so now we must believe all women.

Never mind there were times in America when “believe all white women” was the rule. When they made allegation­s against black men, it led to some unspeakabl­e evils. “To Kill a Mockingbir­d” is in many ways a modern allegory about those times.

I am not trying to say that Brett Kavanaugh is a contempora­ry, real-life Tom Robinson, the black man falsely accused of rape in that book. I am trying to say that Kavanaugh is an actual human being.

Appeals to historical grievances, highbrow theories of the male psyche and pent-up resentment­s — as interestin­g or as emotionall­y powerful as they may be — are not that relevant here. This isn’t an allegory. It’s the real world.

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