Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Read it. Carefully. Every single word.

Because Jonah Goldberg's column is that good.

The heart of the column:

...the culture war can best be understood as a conflict between two different kinds of patriotism. On the one hand, there are people who believe being an American is all about dissent and change, that the American idea is inseparable from "progress." America is certainly an idea, but it is not merely an idea. It is also a nation with a culture as real as France's or Mexico's. That's where the other patriots come in; they think patriotism is about preserving Americanness.

Yet the strangest and most ironic aspect of our national culture is that we have an aversion to talking about a national culture. Samuel Huntington, one of the country's premier social scientists, has become something of a pariah for constantly reminding people (in books such as "The Clash of Civilizations" and "Who Are We?") that the United States is a nation, not just a government and a bunch of interest groups.

Many liberals hear talk of national culture and shout, "Nativist!" first and ask questions later, if at all. They believe it is a sign of their patriotism that they hold fast to the idea that we are a "nation of immigrants" -- forgetting that we are also a nation of immigrants who became Americans.

2 comments:

SheaHeyKid said...

The concept espoused by the lefties that we don't have a central fabric of ideas holding us together is absurd. Don't these libs - with their supposed intellect - recognize that a nation bound solely on the metric that all its people are immigrants wouldn't last a day? Clearly there must be some stronger commonalities in order to keep a people together long enough to forge a new nation, fight to obtain their independence, and become the world's sole superpower in just a few centuries.

SheaHeyKid said...

But who knows, maybe I'm just rambling here.

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Always sniffing for the truth

Always sniffing for the truth

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