Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Josh Hawley, who saluted and then fled the Jan. 6 mob, holds forth on manhood and courage, lol

- ROBIN ABCARIAN @robinkabca­rian

Let’s dispense

with the obvious.

When most people think of

Sen. Josh Hawley

(R-Mo.) — if they think of him at all

— they probably conjure images of two moments, both of which occurred on one of the worst days in American history.

That was, of course, Jan. 6, 2021, when the U.S. Capitol was stormed by a mob of election deniers seeking to halt the certificat­ion of Joe Biden as the 46th president of the United States. Many of those insurrecti­onists are now facing prison terms for sedition and other crimes.

In the first memorable image, a fist-pumping Hawley walks past the insurrecti­onists on his way to vote against certifying the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. You guys are awesome, his body language says. I am with you all the way.

The second image is a clip of Hawley fleeing that very same mob after it breached the Capitol. In that one, he is also pumping his arms, but that’s because he’s running away at a fast clip. When it was shown during one of the House Jan. 6 Committee’s hearings, spectators burst out laughing.

Now, I’m not suggesting Hawley was wrong to run, but in doing so, he revealed himself as a coward, a hypocrite and a phony. Not to mention shameless.

On Tuesday, Hawley’s book “Manhood: The Masculine Virtues America Needs” was released by the conservati­ve publishing house Regnery, coinciding with his 2024 reelection campaign. On Wednesday, Hawley tweeted that his book had “triggered” the left, so “get your copy now.”

Hawley posing as an expert on courage is as credible as Donald Trump posing as an expert on marital fidelity.

Among the many regrettabl­e things in Hawley’s book is his un-ironic use of the metaphor of running when describing how to behave like a man:

“Running towards the monsters of your life requires courage.”

“Run toward the darkness that threatens your family.”

“If your life is relentless­ly about you, you will never run towards danger.”

“Manhood,” which reads like a Sunday sermon, is an extended rant about how American men need to rediscover their manliness by modeling themselves on biblical figures such as Adam and Abraham. Since we are, in Hawley’s view, witnessing “the collapse of American manhood,” blame must be assigned. A culprit must be found.

Aaaaand, no surprise here, it’s the “woke left!” that’s turning men to mush. Not to mention “the liberal elite,” “the educated elite,” “the cultural elite” and all of the other godless folks who control American business, academia, the media and Hollywood.

“To a remarkable, historical­ly unusual extent,” Hawley writes, “America’s cultural institutio­ns are now dominated by a small, homogenous class of individual­s who graduated from the same coterie of elite schools and share the same Epicurean, mostly atheistic world view they learned there.”

I guess intellectu­al dishonesty is to be expected from a man who poses as a blue-collar hero but doesn’t bother to mention in biographic­al passages that his father was a banker, or that he attended a private prep school, Stanford University and Yale Law; clerked for Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.; taught constituti­onal law; worked as a state attorney general; and has basically been cushioned in privilege his entire life. (“In college,” he writes, “I took up rowing.” Quelle surprise!)

I can’t really account for Hawley’s bizarre and frequent use of the word “Epicurean” as a synonym for liberals or progressiv­es, except that he may think it makes him sound like an intellectu­al. (Epicurus, by the way, was a Greek philosophe­r who taught that the point of life was to attain pleasure. He is associated with hedonism, the opposite of stoicism, which emphasizes virtue as its own reward.)

In any case, writes Hawley, who was raised Methodist and now attends an evangelica­l Presbyteri­an church, America is a Christian nation, founded on biblical principles that have somehow gotten lost as American men, told their masculinit­y is toxic, have turned into simpering mama’s boys who exercise no agency and have no ambition.

Well, he doesn’t use those exact words, but that’s pretty much what he means when he writes, “Much of today’s left seems to welcome men who are passive and tame, who will do as they are told and sit in their cubicles, eyes affixed to their screen.” (Where, he presumes, they are watching pornograph­y instead of getting married, working and raising their children.)

This is a shockingly weak analysis of America’s long-standing social problems.

In Hawley’s America, there is no systemic racism or sexism, no mass incarcerat­ion, no educationa­l inequity and no income inequality that might account for some of the seemingly intractabl­e problems that beset us.

In Hawley’s America, every social problem is due to the dearth of manly men. Having been brainwashe­d by liberals — excuse me, Epicureans — men instead seek pleasure and avoid responsibi­lity.

I’m sorry, but there is not a man in America who needs a lecture from Josh Hawley.

Especially not about courage.

In a new book, the senator from Missouri, stuck in a 1950s version of American culture, blames the ‘woke left’ for emasculati­ng men

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? THE MISSOURI senator’s behavior on Jan. 6, 2021, was explored during the hearings of the House Select Committee to Investigat­e the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times THE MISSOURI senator’s behavior on Jan. 6, 2021, was explored during the hearings of the House Select Committee to Investigat­e the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol.
 ?? ??

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