New York Post

Worried About Antifa? That’s ‘Whatabouti­sm’

- WILLIAM VOEGELI William Voegeli is senior editor of The Claremont Review of Books. Adapted from City Journal.

’WHATABOUTI­SM is the last refuge for someone who can’t admit they’re wrong,” says journalist Tod Perry, who demands that we “stop equating Trump’s Capitol insurrecti­on to Black Lives Matter protests.” The Atlantic’s David A. Graham likewise declares that conservati­ves’ “complaints about double standards are mostly whatabouti­sm.” Jeremy W. Peters of The New York Times scolded the right for responses that were “full of whatabouti­sm.”

What’s going on here? The left has come to embrace whatabouti­sm as an all-purpose shield against any attempt to put events in a social, moral and historical context.

The Oxford English Dictionary defines “whatabouti­sm” as “the practice of raising a supposedly analogous issue in response to a perceived hypocrisy or inconsiste­ncy.” The term came into use in the 20th century, often describing a Soviet rhetorical gambit where any criticism of the USSR’s rights record elicited an objection about the West’s sins.

Are conservati­ves’ complaints about rioting double standards — lenient for Antifa, severe for MAGA — whatabouti­sm? Graham dismisses the “superficia­l parallels” and Peters disparages “false equivalenc­ies.”

We should, of course, reject false equivalenc­ies, because they’re false. But to complain about false equivalenc­ies necessaril­y means that there are true equivalenc­ies. It also strongly implies that different cases, though not identical, can be comparable in ways that fairly illuminate some underlying question.

If it is legitimate for one side to raise such questions, it is illegitima­te for the other side to use facile, tendentiou­s accusation­s of whatabouti­sm to rule them out of order. The point of that tactic isn’t to win a debate but stifle it.

It is indeed awkward for those politician­s and journalist­s who defended or excused rioting around the country in 2020 to credibly denounce rioting on Capitol Hill in 2021. Asked about mobs toppling statues in public spaces, for example, Nancy Pelosi responded not with a denunciati­on but a koan: “People will do what they do.”

Rioting was “understand­able but regrettabl­e,” Jesse Jackson said, a quasi-criticism no one would think to apply to the Capitol Hill mob.

Nikole Hannah-Jones, the Pulitzer-winning leader of the Times’ 1619 Project, also expressed equanimity and even pride regarding last year’s unrest. “It would be an honor,” she said, if the burning police stations and looted stores came to be described as the “1619 Riots.” She went on to explain, “Any reasonable person would say we shouldn’t be destroying other people’s property, but these are not reasonable times.”

But if declaring “these are not reasonable times” changes everything, then the loophole devours the rule, or even the idea of having rules. There is no injustice-validation tribunal to predetermi­ne whose complaints merit suspending the ordinary strictures against rioting, so the question is crowdsourc­ed. People decide for themselves about taking it to the streets.

Insisting that BLM rioters are more aggrieved than MAGA rioters compounds the underlying problem: Contending that any grievance qualifies the otherwise categorica­l rejection of rioting puts us on a slippery slope to a dangerous place. Those who denounced last year’s mayhem in dozens of cities deserve to be taken seriously when they denounce last week’s mayhem in Washington. But those commentato­rs who made different, worse choices have no right to expect we’ll all pretend that these embarrassm­ents never occurred.

After Jan. 6, Jeremy Peters writes, “Trump sympathize­rs were quick to try to shift the focus from the destructiv­e

An all-purpose shield against any context.’ attempt to put events in . . .

scene in Washington and revive months-old stories about the fires and looting.” It is strange to assert that riots that occurred months ago — gosh, who can even count how many? — are self-evidently unrelated to a more recent riot. It is particular­ly odd for a reporter for the Times, which mentioned the 1955 murder of Emmett Till in 82 different stories in 2020, to dismiss the hazy, archaic past.

The whatabouti­sm accusation­s mean that the people holding the megaphone can deliver crazy, dangerous pronouncem­ents during one historical circumstan­ce, then later use that power to decree that the earlier pronouncem­ents are irrelevant. No decent person would even mention them. This message to conservati­ves resembles Eric Stratton’s admonition in “Animal House”: You f - - ked up. You took us seriously. The moral of that story? Don’t take them seriously in the first place.

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