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Authors: David Mamet

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22
“Our thinking and our behavior are always in anticipation of a response. It [
sic
] is therefore fear-based.” (Deepak Chopra) Is it too much to suggest that this quote contains the most basic prescription of Liberalism, “Stop thinking”?
23
In a conversation with a Liberal Friend, The International Committee on Climate Control had been found to be cooking the books on Global Warming, and its much vaunted “hockey stick” graph showing a marked abrupt increase in the world's temperature incident with the consumption of fossil fuels was revealed as a sham. The Liberal said, yes, perhaps this was true, but would we want to scrap our efforts to control a situation as Serious as Global Warming simply because the phenomenon was proved to be an invention? His argument recalled to me Al Sharpton's championship of Tawana Brawley, whose false accusations and perjury led to the persecution of innocent police officers and the disruption of their lives. When she recanted, and admitted perjury, Reverend Sharpton suggested that though perhaps the testimony was not all it could be
in this case
, nevertheless, he still supported her because of the systematic history, in similar cases, of
supportable
claims of abuse. He was, that is, not interested in the Truth.
24
“Of the thirteen populations of polar bears in Canada, eleven are stable or increasing in number. They are not going extinct, or even appear to be affected at present. It is noteworthy that the neighbouring population of southern Hudson Bay does not appear to have declined, and another southern population (Davis Strait) may actually be over-abundant.” (Dr. Mitchell Taylor, Polar Bear Biologist, Dept. of the Environment, Government of Nanavut, Igloolik, Nunavut, Canada.)
25
It is to a dramatist, which is to say, to an unfrocked psychoanalyst, stunning that that which has sustained the Left in my generation, its avatar, its prime issue, has been abortion. For, whether or not it is regarded as a woman's right, an unfortunate necessity, or murder, which is to say, irrespective of differing and legitimate political views, to enshrine it as the
most
important test of the Liberal, is, mythologically, an assertion to the ultimate right of a postreligious Paganism.
26
“Aristotle established a general principle of scientific enquiry: ‘First we must seek the fact, then seek to explain.' The scientific method is now popularly conceptualised that the science on global warming is settled as a process where authorities balance volumes of opinions. That's it. A phenomenon is now scientifically proven because various authorities and some scientists say so. Evidence now no longer matters.” (Ian Plimer,
Heaven and Earth
)
27
And funded by the Marshall Plan, which is to say, by a surplus of American industrial wealth.
28
“The causes are the increased polarization of the society that's been going on for the past twenty-five years . . . larger and larger segments of the population have no form of organization, and no constructive way of reacting, so they pursue the available options, which are often violent.” (Noam Chomsky,
Secrets, Lies, and Democracy
, 1994)
29
The poor man is poor because of “structural oppression”; the rich man rich because of “greed.”
30
“But there must be Laws,” the Liberal says. Who would deny it? But the alternative to Statism is not the Left's scareword of
anarchy
but Democracy.
31
As per Friedrich Hayek,
The Road to Serfdom
, 1944.
32
Most Victorian novels featured the stock character of the profligate son. He was a gambler, and, having run through his inheritance, was constantly appealing to his father to pay his ever renewed gambling debts.
The father inevitably paid, “for the honor of the family.” And he paid wringing his hands and cursing his fate. And the son thanked the father, wept, swore to reform, and continued gambling.
Why not, as there was, to him, no cost?
He had been taught, by his father, that there was no penalty for losing.
What worse lesson for a gambler?
For, if losing is cost free, why bother either to (a) learn to gamble or (b) quit?
The serious gambler learns young, and painfully, that he must control his impulses, that he must not pursue fantasy, neither wish for the cards to turn, but learn the odds and husband his resources for those times when the cards or dice
do
favor him.
There is a technical term for the gambler who can neither learn nor quit: he is called a sucker.
Our politicians, left and right, are, to belabor the metaphor, the wastrel son: they are free to spend, to chase fantasies, and to squander resources,
for the resources are not theirs, and there is no penalty for their misuse or loss.
The wastrel son gambles, at no cost, for the thrill it provides; the wastrel politician does so in pursuit of fantasy (good works), or money. The money may be in direct support for his campaigns, or in free redecorating of his summer home; or it may be issued in the form of plaques recognizing his good works, which plaques, on his retirement from office, may be traded in for money.
33
In the late sixties I was driving a cab, and stopped for a cup of coffee at Mike's Rainbow Café, the cabdriver's all-night joint. I began talking to a fellow driver, a man around eighty, who, he told me, had in his youth driven for Robert Todd Lincoln.
34
Which is the essence of “Affirmative Action,” however else it may be described.
35
E.g., the U.S. Constitution.
36
Is this fanciful? Consider the case of Creekstone Farms of Kansas. During the Mad Cow scare of 2003, this beef producer developed and sold to the Japanese its own beef, raised, tested, and guaranteed to be absolutely free of the disease. The United States Government ruled that it was not free to do so. Why? Whom could this ruling possibly benefit, save those meat producers who did
not
choose so to raise their beef; and why in the world would legislators take up their ridiculously transparent and immoral cause if they were not suborned?
37
Compare Keeper of the Royal Bedchamber with the Hollywood studio title Director of Development. For the lay reader: No movie has
ever
been made from “development.”
38
As the Wrights did in their bicycle shop.
39
What, detractors might ask, does this prove? Does it mitigate against the “Crimes” and “Colonialism” of Israel, as popularized by the United Nations? I deny these crimes exist, and that Israel is an oppressive or colonialist power (to those interested I suggest the following books:
The World Turned Upside Down,
Melanie Phillips;
What Went Wrong?
, Bernard Lewis; and
Myths and Facts:A Guide to the Arab-Israeli Conflict,
Mitchell Geoffrey Bard.)
But, let us assume you feel that Israel is neither a laudable precious democracy, nor an ordinary Western country neither good nor bad, but is guilty of all the horrors alleged of it—I assert that you would still fight with every force and argument at your command to get on the Israeli plane, you and every hard Leftist and every head-shaking misinformed One-Worlder and anti-Semite up to and including Jimmy Carter and Noam Chomsky, would, if the issue were his
life,
suspend his most cherished convictions of Israeli perfidy, and plead for the protection of that state he would then not only acknowledge but
assert
to be his ally, and further assert, as such, that their intercession in his fate was simple human decency toward their own kind—a member of a Western democracy.
There is
nothing
any reader of this book would not say or do to get himself and his family on the Israeli plane. Thus, delight in reviling the Jewish state reveals a certain inconsistency.
40
What is the Liberal's dilemma? That he is forced to
choose
—to weigh rationally two positions, and base his choice upon an honest assessment of his own probable actions under similar circumstances. He is asked, finally, to be
moral
—the cost, however, of such action, is too high. It is his exclusion from the Group.
41
The Liberal West “enjoys” the Plight of the Palestinians much as it enjoys the purchase of “fair trade” coffee—it is a stimulant additive—self-righteousness being superadded to the morning's newspaper and caffeine.
42
And the video that shows the now smiling child rise and remove his bandage when the still-photographers leave.
43
The Left's hatred of the Right is based, as is most hatred, upon fear. The Left
truly
does not understand what the Right means—the principles of Conservatism are not merely foreign, and not even, primarily, objectionable, to the Left. They are incomprehensible, and so inspire the fear of the unknown. This fear is expressed as hatred of evil. What is the Conservative position the Left is absolutely incapable of understanding? That we have a
choice
.
44
“One aspect of social organization is to be found in economic activity, and this, along with the other manifestations of a group activity is to be found in a P.O.W. camp. . . . [T]hrough his economic activity, the exchange of goods and services, [the prisoner's] standard of material comfort is considerably enhanced . . . he is not merely ‘playing at shops.' [This is] a living example of a simple economy [and] its simplicity renders the demonstration of certain economic hypotheses both amusing and instructive. . . . But the essential interest lies in the universality and the spontaneity of this economic life; it came into existence not by conscious imitation but as a response to the immediate needs and circumstances.” (R. A. Radford, “The Economic Organization of a P.O.W. Camp,”
Economica
vol. 12, 1945.) As does and as must
any
free economic organization.
45
“Perhaps the first thing a visitor to Cuba notices is the enormous energy level. It is still common, as it has been throughout the ten years of Revolution, for people to go without sleep—talking and working several nights a week . . . it seems sometimes as if the whole country is high on some beneficient kind of speed. And has been for ten years.”
“Cuban culture lacks any equivalent of the Protestant ethic to draw on;
people must be inculcated
about matters we take for granted.” (Emphasis added.)
“Our charge (AMERICAN RADICALS) is seen as not one of forming but of
dismantling
(emphasis in original) a consciousness . . . hence the anti-intellectualism of the brightest kids: their distrust of books, school.”
“The sense of community perceived in Cuba was not only nurtured by the political ideology of the system, but had its subterranean reservoirs and supports in the stereotype of the joyful, affirming attitude, attributed to the musically gifted song-and-dance loving natives, their natural and politically engendered vitality” From: Susan Sontag: “Some Thoughts on the Right Way (for Us) to Love the Cuban Revolution,”
Ramparts
, April 1969.
There we have from a supposedly intelligent and observant human being, not only a recitation, but an unconscious
confession
of her immersion in a fantasy: The workers, though naturally happy, have not seen the potential increase in their joy brought about by continuous work without sleep; they must be
inculcated
in the new, political reality. American children, likewise, must discard books and schools and intuit their responsibility to dismantle their culture, reverting, thus, to the bliss of the song-loving natives off our coast.
46
“Never let a good crisis go to waste.”—Rahm Emanuel
47
For a perfect dramatic representation of this crisis see Alec Guinness in
The Bridge on the River Kwai
. He has spent the whole film building a bridge for his enemies, the Japanese. It is only at the film's end, as he is trying to stop its destruction by his own army that he realizes his crime and says, “What have I done?”
48
The Nazi swastika was a cross. The USSR's hammer and sickle, just somewhat less identifiably, was one also.
49
Any theory put into practice may have its failure ascribed to underfunding, insufficient time for results, or the unfortunate, still insurmountable burdens placed upon it by a previous administration—this being the totality of the Obama administration's explanation of its dismal performance.
50
Compare Marcus Garvey's “Up, you Mighty Race, you Race of Kings. You can accomplish what you will.” (recorded 1921)
51
That the President only wants to cut taxes to those enterprises he deems politically productive is, of course, understandable. This is called “Politics.” It does not, however, synchronize his matter-of-fact admission that tax cuts create jobs with his, then, irrational insistence on helping the economy through raising taxes.
52
That the West is exploitative, destructive, racist, and finally, unworthy.
53
May they grow rich through misleading or defrauding the stockholders? Of course—if the first, let them be voted out, if the second, prosecuted.
54
In my family, as in yours, someone regularly says, “Hey, you know what would be a good idea . . . ?” And then proceeds to outline some scheme for making money by providing a product or service the need for which has just occurred to him. He and the family fantasize about and discuss and elaborate this scheme. Inherent in this fantasy is the unstated but ever-present truth that, given sufficient capital and expertise or the access to the same, the scheme
might
actually be put into operation (as, indeed, constantly, throughout our history, such schemes have), bettering the lives of the masses and bringing wealth to their creators. Do you believe such conversations take place in Syria? In France?
BOOK: The Secret Knowledge
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