Starkville Daily News

No, we’re not all the same

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“Liberty, equality, fraternity” was the watchword of the

French revolution­aries. They’d never heard of the Boy

Scouts of America

(obviously), but if they had, they would be tossing their liberty caps in the air at last week’s news of the Scouts’ decision to admit girls. Ah, citoyen, a wonderful thing, no?

Well, we’ll see how wonderful it all is as we get farther down the road. It might not make as much difference in practice as in theory. (Though the millions who have sat around Boy Scout campfires, reveling in male companions­hip, are entitled to wonder.)

The inevitabil­ity and expectedne­ss of the move is the main point here.We’ve been headed for a very long time, in the United States especially, toward the affirmatio­n: “What you’ve got may be just the thing I need,” whether it’s money, privilege, national origin or luck. What about sex? That’s trickier, but we can work on it — and by the way, these days we call it “gender.”

Distinctio­ns among and between humans don’t work as well as they used to — including distinctio­ns that seem natural, like the above-mentioned and widely observed divergence­s between men and women.

It formerly seemed natural to lovers of knot-tying and outdoor camping that boys were OK in an organizati­on for boys alone, whereas girls could pursue complement­ary, if not exactly the same, objectives in an organizati­on for girls alone. That now-dead or dying perception was intuitive. This was how things were, based on the nature of the universe.

That was before big-bore politics, based on distributi­on and redistribu­tion in ways that appealed to voters who thought in terms of class and interest. Suffragett­es and feminists were ahead of the curve in this regard, noting men’s various advantages in many department­s of life and the government’s imperative to erase those advantages, natural-seeming or not.

Much good has come of breaking down no-longer-relevant barriers. The prime ministersh­ip of Margaret Thatcher comes instantly to mind. But does eradicatio­n of dated distinctio­ns argue for the eradicatio­n of “inequaliti­es” wherever they exist, insofar as law and politics are up to the task?

I wouldn’t say so for a minute. I’d say instead the reverse. It’s time for distinctio­n-makers of every kind to come out of the closet and affirm that we’re not all the same. No democracy worth its salt should say otherwise. Alas!

“Inequality” (translated as “how dare you treat me that way?”) is hyped around the land. “Progressiv­es” specialize in it. The wealthy, not to mention the merely successful, are in their sights; also those of “European background”; and men in general, who gener-

ally used to run everything. This latter datum goes a ways toward explaining the drive to de-masculiniz­e traditiona­l male preserves: e.g., the priesthood, military combat duty and the Boy Scouts. It started with allmale clubs, 30 or 40 years ago, the rap being that maleness itself, fed by male associatio­ns, held back the onward march of

women would-be executives.

Maybe so, maybe not. We might reflect that the desire to wipe out human distinctio­ns is as capable of hurting as of helping. Where badly or needlessly done, it feeds jealousy and envy. It undermines common sense. We’re not all the same, and difference is good — in bad times as well as the reverse.

Life is as multifacet­ed as the multifacet­ed humans who lead it. Politician­s chasing votes —

which are the stuff of power over others — have heard no genuine call to rearrange realities, least of all those realities with a divine character, speaking of human

nature itself: who we are, how we’re made, what our duty is toward others.

That’s the point where revolution­aries come in. No realities for

them: just slogans and trumpet calls.

William Murchison’s latest book is “The Cost of Liberty: The Life of John

Dickinson.”To find out more about William Murchison, and to see features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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 ??  ?? WILLIAM MURCHISON SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
WILLIAM MURCHISON SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

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