Imperial Valley Press

To win the battle of ideas, you have to show up

- PETER ROFF Peter Roff is a former UPI and U.S. News & World Report columnist who is now affiliated with several Washington D.C.-based public policy organizati­ons. Contact Roff at RoffColumn­s@ gmail.com, or follow him on Twitter @ PeterRoff.

In 1790, Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson – by that time bitter rivals serving together in Washington’s Cabinet – dined privately with James Madison and struck a deal. The Virginians would get Hamilton the votes in Congress needed to adopt a financial system of his design in exchange for putting the new capital city on the banks of the Potomac.

Hamilton got the better end of the deal, which is memorializ­ed in Lyn Manuel-Miranda’s musical retelling of his life in the song “The Room Where It Happens,” where he reminds Aaron Burr that, “You don’t get a win unless you play in the game.”

That was true in 1790 and it’s true today. The places where leaders in politics, media, and business intersect are the modern rooms “where it happens.” The most well-known is the World Economic Forum, which just concluded its annual meeting in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

A pricier gathering of global glitterati would be hard to find. The deals and decisions made at and because of this meeting each year shape the world of today and tomorrow. So you’d think supporters of things like free markets and free minds would be breaking down the doors trying to get in.

They’re not. Instead, they’re leading the charge against it. Writing the New York Post, prominent libertaria­n scholar James Bovard highlighte­d a 2016 video made for Davis that included eight prediction­s of what life would be like in 2030. “The highlight of the film,” he wrote, “was a vapid millennial guy pictured alongside the slogan: ‘You will own nothing and be happy.’”

“This bizarre notion,” he continued, “was no WEF aberration.”

He might be right but, with so much intellectu­al, economic, and cultural power in one place at the same time, how can lovers of liberty, classicall­y defined, afford not to go? What better place to mount a defense of freedom generally than among the people who may have enough power to strip it away?

“Criticism of Davos used to come mostly from the left,” wrote Walter Russell Mead in the Wall Street Journal. “These days, its most bitter critics come from the populist right. And a Davos elite that once saw doctrinair­e leftism as the greatest obstacle to global prosperity and progress now increasing­ly sees right-wing populism as the enemy of everything good.”

Florida GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis, a likely 2024 Republican presidenti­al candidate, described Davos as where “All these elites come in for the World Economic Forum and, basically, their vision is they run everything and everybody else is just a serf.”

The few Republican lawmakers who did attend got roasted for their trouble by conspiracy-minded conservati­ves who see Davos as a global cabal of influencer­s. One of them, California Republican Darrell Issa, who attended as part of the official U.S. delegation, explain the virtue of attending.

“We should not accede to being excluded from a deeper dialogue at the World Economic Forum any more than being shut out of college campuses, online platforms, or public forums,” Issa said. “This is what liberals are doing all over the world to drive away dissent.”

People willing to defend the classical liberal initiative­s that liberated humankind from the dark ages, produced economic growth, raised global living standards, and made it possible for people even in undevelope­d countries to live longer, healthier, more productive, and better-educated lives need to be where they are under attack. There is no virtue in staying away.

By attending meetings like the

World Economic Forum in Davos, traditiona­l conservati­ves and populists can make their views known and shape the tone of the meeting in proximity to the private luncheons, tennis games, and other fol-de-rol friendship­s are formed and deals are made.

For free markets and free minds to endure, those who advocate on their behalf must make themselves part of the global conversati­on. That requires being in Davos and at gatherings like it as part of a global collection of decision-makers and thought leaders discussing the world’s problems “in the room where it happens.”

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