Moving Beyond the Culture War
By Mike D'Virgilio
One of the unique things about The Culture Alliance is our repudiation of the concept of a
culture war. Instead we believe in directly promoting what we call a
liberty culture,
and in such a culture there is no need for bellicosity or virtual
bloodshed. We believe that in a culture with truly free expression of
ideas, those values that comport most closely with
“nature and nature’s God” will win out every time.
Unfortunately,
we live in a time when most Americans have lived their entire lives
immersed in a culture that is positively hostile to these values.
Public and higher education, every venue of entertainment, media, and
the arts, and the ubiquitous legal environment all conspire to
undermine the values that created the greatness that is America. To
this point the predominant attitude toward culture on the right has
been open hostility, given voice and popularized in a speech by
Pat Buchanan at the 1992 Republican convention in Houston.
This
mentality is perfectly understandable given the beating traditional
values take daily in all of American culture. The problem is that “war”
in this realm is counterproductive. Those American who self-identify as
being on the right side of the political/cultural spectrum assume they
are in the minority. When their friends, who are mostly apolitical and
not culturally engaged, are not distressed by the barrage of negativity
coming from the left-dominated culture, they assume all is lost.
This
feeling of isolation brings frustration and the attendant hostility
many feel is justified by the circumstances. Yet we know that the vast
majority of Americans, or people of any society, will never be
politically and culturally engaged. It’s just the way it is. We’ve all
heard of the 80/20 rule; 80 percent of the people do 20 percent of the
work; 20 percent of the people do 80 percent of the work. It’s human
nature. The political/cultural corollary of this is probably not much
different, but let’s be generous. Maybe 20 percent on the right are
engaged, and 20 percent on the left. If my math doesn’t fail me, that
means 60 percent of Americans are up for grabs.
What do I mean
by this? It goes back to cultural influence; something the right has
effectively abdicated over the last fifty years while putting its focus
on politics and intellectual pursuits. In those areas the right has
done a tremendous job of building something from nothing or at least
very little. Yet in a culture dominated by the left, the 60 percent of
unengaged Americans will never be sufficiently influenced by the
intellectual and political right to move society in that direction.
They won’t hear enough from them.
To this point the right and
left have indeed been at war, but the former has been using popguns
while the latter has been using tanks. The real problem, however, is
not that the other side’s guns are bigger. The problem is that the war
metaphor assumes the right wants the same or similar mechanisms that
the left now has in place, only with different results. In war, after
all, the victor takes the spoils and calls the shots. The winners take
over and control the society. The left does indeed seek to do that, and
it has effectively achieved it. Witness the consequences in a
wonderfully sad article by
Dennis Prager recently about the death of freedom in America.
Too
many on the right have bought into the premise, consciously or not,
that they can and should “control” culture. They assume that once we
“take over,” we’ll have the right kind of culture, all sweetness and
light. Of course, most halfway intelligent people know they can’t
control something so amorphous and complex as an entire culture, but
the temptation is to think it can be done, especially given the left’s
ability to dominate things during the right’s period of abdication from
cultural pursuits. Outside of the use of force, control is an illusion.
Even then, thought cannot be completely controlled. The only societies
that approximate such control are totalitarian, and the left in America
is dangerously close to that mindset. The process they employ is
political correctness, and although it doesn’t use the power of the
state in quite the same way as traditional totalitarian societies, it
nonetheless uses the force of law in a way that is almost as
suffocating.
What is the answer? In a word: liberty. Consider,
for example, academia. Higher education today is as insular and hostile
to those on the right as it is possible to be. They believe the right
is hardhearted and evil, and thus our ideas and presence are not
welcome. The environment is monolithically leftward, and through the
various levers of influence available to professors and administrators,
those on the right, or even in the middle, are all but shut out.
If
conservatives, libertarians, and classical liberals were in the same
position as the left today, would it be right to shut the left out in
the same way? Some, maybe many, on the right might think so. They would
be wrong. We aren’t afraid of the left’s ideas, as they are afraid of
ours. We don’t believe they are evil, just mistaken and wrong. So
unlike the left we have no need to shut them out. In an academy
committed to the pursuit of excellence and intellectual diversity, not
ideological conformity, competition would reveal the ideas of true
value and permanence.
The premise behind The Culture Project is
that the traditional values that made America great are not the
province of a small percentage of people on the right, while the vast
majority of Americans are innately hostile to those values. In fact the
very opposite is true. The reason the left uses the cudgel of political
correctness and legal jujitsu is exactly because their ideas have so
little merit and cannot stand the light of day or real competition.
Think about it. They have the entire persuasive power of every lever of
cultural influence, and have for decades, and the party of the left
cannot even get 50 percent of the vote in presidential elections! A
certain presidential candidate will not allow himself to be called a
liberal because he is afraid of the negative connotations of the word.
No such trepidation exists on the right.
It wasn’t litigation
and the chill of political correctness that made this nation the
freest, most prosperous in the history of the world. It wasn’t a
massive government that intervened in every area of life to keep us
“safe” or to make life fair and equal. Instead it was the radical
assertion that we are endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable
rights, and that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness. Our rights came not from the state or from 51 percent of our
countrymen, but from nature and nature’s God. This freedom with which
we were endowed presupposed a self-governing people immersed in the
morals and manners of the Judeo-Christian traditions. Ours will never
be a perfect culture, nor will it always be pretty, but it will be the
best we can hope for this side of eternity.
Therefore, what is
really needed is not a culture war but a cultural liberation. The left
is in effect holding America hostage. The only way we will liberate our
culture and rebuild the foundation of American exceptionalism is by
infusing American culture with multitudes of talented,
foundational-thinking artists, academics, lawyers and legal scholars,
filmmakers, novelists, musicians, fifth grade school teachers, high
school principals, and hardworking journalists. The list could go on
and on. Unfortunately for the frustrated, impatient many on the right,
there is no quick fix. Emancipation is not an election away. But
millions of Americans are currently doing great work within our
cultural influence professions, and we need many millions more.
Imagine
the same zeal, energy, and creativity that the right has given to
political and intellectual pursuits these last fifty years focused as
well on culture for the next fifty. The impact would be electrifying.
The Culture Alliance exists to help make that happen—and thereby
bequeath to our children and our children’s children a freer, saner,
and uplifting American culture.