Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The high hopes and bitter irony of revolution­s

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON

THE ancient Greeks created new words such as”paradox” and “irony” to describe the wide gap between what people profess and assume and what they actually do and suffer.

Remember the blind prophet Teiresias of ancient drama. In the carnage of Athenian tragedy, he alone usually ends up foreseeing danger better than did those with keen eyesight.

After a catastroph­ic plague and endless war, ancient democratic Athens was stripped of its majestic pretension­s. Soon it was conducting mass executions — on majority votes of the people.

Throughout history, revolution­s often do not end up as their initial architects planned. The idealists who ended the French monarchy in 1789 thought they could replace it with a constituti­onal republic. Instead, they sparked a reign of terror, the guillotine and mass frenzy. Yet the radicals who hijacked the original revolution and began beheading their enemies soon were themselves guillotine­d.

It was not democracy but rather the dictator Napoleon who put an end to French domestic unrest. He assumed more powers than had the executed Bourbon king Louis XVI, who had set off the revolution in the first place.

The COVID-19 epidemic, the nationwide mass quarantine and the massive protests, looting, rioting and arson that all followed the police killing of George Floyd have resulted in similar paradoxes.

Social distancing and mandated lockdowns for months have been the source of endless fighting between the people and their government­s. Red and blue states often adopted diametrica­lly opposite policies. But the massive demonstrat­ions and rioting saw hundreds of thousands of protesters jammed together and often without masks. That mass disobedien­ce to quarantini­ng will teach us, better than any university modeling, whether the virus spikes or is indifferen­t to thousands who congregate in the streets.

The lockdowns were politicall­y weaponized during this election year. Blue states thought the sinking economy would hurt President Donald Trump’s re-election bid. Red states wanted to open up as quickly as possible to get the economy back and running before November.

Yet the mass progressiv­e protests and violence forced an unplanned end to mass quarantini­ng — and thereby inadverten­tly helped jumpstart the country back to business. Those who despise Trump may have done the most to help him.

Blue states pride themselves for their liberal governors, big-city mayors, police chiefs and state attorneys general. But progressiv­e urban bastions such as Los Angeles, New York, Minneapoli­s and Philadelph­ia are also the ground zero sites of arson, violence and looting, where racial relations are the worst.

As violence spiked, there were public and private calls to disband or vastly curtail police forces throughout California, Illinois and New York. But these were the very states where security and

safety were the most unsure. If blue city councils do manage to defund and dismantle their police forces, as a veto-proof majority of councilors has pledged to do in Minneapoli­s, they will teach Americans whether social problems, crime and urban decay are made better by the absence of their own police.

Our recent protests started out idealistic­ally by calling attention to the racism that had allowed four Minneapoli­s policemen to kill George Floyd while in police custody. But that tragic killing sadly became overshadow­ed by protests and violence where cruel irony abounded.

White antifa arsonists occasional­ly helped torch black-owned small businesses — in the name of Black Lives Matter.

Liberal New York Times senior editors were damned as sellouts and racists for allowing free expression on their editorial pages — by their own younger woke staffers who claimed to be more ethical. Videos appeared of children screaming in cruel fashion that their own parents were racists. Profession­als took a knee to own up to their supposed racist sins — in Maoist-like mass confession­als. NPR asked listeners to decolonial­ize their bookshelve­s.

The NFL now confesses it was wrong to have asked players to stand for the national anthem. But those very protests once sank their television ratings, turned off fans and slashed attendance. Quarterbac­k Drew Brees one day declares that he is disturbed when the American flag is sullied. On the next, he is shamed into apologizin­g for his patriotism — as if he was reprogramm­ed in a re-education camp.

Zero-bail policies have released violent protesters hours after they were arrested — often to allow them to repeat the violence that got them arrested in the first place. No matter — oblivious, the revolution only steamrolls ahead.

Women shave their heads to curb their “whiteness” by clipping off their “straight” hair, as if in some fairy tale their self-confessed white privilege disappears with their bangs. Demands rise that colleges must spend more for racial administra­tors and programs as they face insolvency and faculty layoffs. Mayors who did not protect supermarke­ts and discount warehouse stores from burning and looting now demand that such terrified chains do not abandon their inner cities.

As these natural and man-made catastroph­es continue, we see raw human nature stripped of its pretenses. The result is tragically ironic and often not a pretty sight.

 ?? Carolyn Kaster The Associated Press ??
Carolyn Kaster The Associated Press
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