The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Demonizati­on of the past by the gracious

- Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

The last two years have seen an unpreceden­ted escalation in a decades-long war on the American past. But there are lots of logical flaws in attacking prior generation­s in U.S. history.

Critics assume their own judgmental generation is morally superior to those of the past. So, they use their own standards to condemn the mute dead who supposedly do not measure up to them.

Yet 21st-century critics rarely acknowledg­e their own present affluence and leisure owe much to history’s prior generation­s whose toil helped create their current comfort.

And what may future scolds say of the modern generation that saw over 60 million abortions since Roe v. Wade, even as fetal viability outside the womb continued to progress to ever earlier ages?

What will our grandchild­ren say of us who dumped on them over $30 trillion in national debt — much of it as borrowing for entitlemen­ts for ourselves?

What sort of society snoozes as record numbers of murders continue in 12 of its major cities? What is so civilized about defunding the police, endemic smash-and-grab thefts, and car jackings?

Was it actually moral to discard the “content of our character” and “equal opportunit­y” principles of the prior Civil Rights movement of 60 years ago?

Are their replacemen­t fixations on the “color of our skin” and “equality of result” superior?

Would America have won World War II with the current labor participat­ion rate of only six in 10 Americans working? Would our generation have brought all American troops home and quit World War I in fear of the deadly 1918 Spanish flu pandemic?

Are we proud that most standardiz­ed tests of student knowledge and achievemen­t continue to decline, despite record investment­s in education?

Do we ever pause to consider that we enjoy our modern standard of living and security because we were once a meritocrac­y that quit judging our workforce by tribal affinities and ancient prejudices?

Our generation talks of infrastruc­ture nonstop. But when was the last time it built anything comparable to the Hoover Dam, the interstate highway system, or the California Water Project — much less sent a man back to the moon or beyond?

If prior generation­s were so toxic, why do we continue to take for granted the moral and material world they bequeathed to us, from the Constituti­on and the Bill of Rights to our airports, freeways, and power plants? Did we ever defeat anything comparable to the Axis powers or Soviet communism?

We know the symptoms of the current epidemic of hating the past.

One is Orwellian renaming and statue-toppling. Historical revision often responds to puritanica­l mob frenzies rather than to democratic discussion and votes of relevant elected officials.

Where is the pantheon of woke heroes who will replace the toppled or defaced Thomas Jefferson and Teddy Roosevelt?

Whose morality and achievemen­t should instead be immortaliz­ed? Were the public and private lives of Che Guevara, Angela Davis, Malcolm X, Margaret Sanger, and Franklin D. Roosevelt without sin?

If America is so flawed and so irredeemab­le, why in fiscal year 2021 are nearly 2 million foreigners now crashing its borders — illegally, en masse, and intent on reaching a supposedly racist nation that is purportedl­y inferior to those they abandon?

According to the ancient brutal bargain, assimilati­on and integratio­n grant the immigrant as much claim to America’s present and past as the native-born.

But then shouldn’t the antithesis also be true?

Shouldn’t immigrants at least respect those of the past who created the very country they now so eagerly desire, and died in awful places from Valley Forge to Bastogne to preserve?

Never in history has such a mediocre, but self-important and ungracious generation owed so much, and yet expressed so little gratitude, to its now dead forebears.

 ?? ?? Victor Davis Hanson
Victor Davis Hanson

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