identity politics and culture wars
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Although I was on the progressive Left like everybody else when I was
in college, there were some things on the Left which turned me off,
even then: For one thing, in the aftermath of the Counterculture,
"progressive" at times turned into sinister, drug-crazed, Charles
Manson-like beliefs and behaviors. Also, the Left became so powerful on
University campuses that it stifled dissent and often became a mirror
image of the traditional, bigoted Right. One of the things which bothered me about campus politics was the emergence of the "New Left.":The New Left was a term coined during the sixties. In contrast to the Old Left, it focused more on Identity Politics than purely on bread-and-butter issues.
It added to the Old Left’s Socialist goals a whole new agenda, focusing
on race, gender and sexual preference. It is on that front that the
nastiest battles were fought. I was astounded to find that in some
deranged minds, I was guilty just for being a white, heterosexual male.
I
never really shed my moderately social-democratic views. For example, I
deplored the decline of trade unions in America. I was one of the
founders of the California University Professors Union. But identity
politics were something else. People - including me and members of my
family - were sometimes attacked and ridiculed not because of anything
we had done, but because we belonged to the wrong demographic category.
Old-fashioned white-male-sexist-heterosexual bigotry was being
reciprocated in the opposite direction. Affirmative action, sexual
harassment charges, grievances and law suits were flying all over the
place. Things were very uncomfortable.
Of course, the only sane
and intelligent political position is a progressive one. Social Justice
is the most important goal. Still, I am convinced that a mature and
progressive perspective requires one to distinguish between essential goals and more frivolous
goals. President Obama’s genius is that he is able to make that
distinction - as was President Clinton, who ran under the slogan, "it’s
the economy, stupid." Indeed.
In an odd twist, it is now the Right which focuses on "Culture Wars."
School prayer, gay marriage, the right to teach creationism side by
side with evolution, abortion, crosses, creches and other religious
symbolism in public locations, the right to bear arms, etc.
There
is a similarity between the Right’s emphasis on Cultural Politics and
The Left’s Identity Politics. They both move politics away from
bread-and-butter issues.
Obviously, the Right couldn’t come out
overtly in favor of economic inequality and the accumulation of wealth
in fewer a fewer pockets. It has done that in a veiled way, and with
some success, by trying to indoctrinate the populace into believing
that labels such as "socialism" and "redistribution" are evil. In
America, being called a socialist is now the kiss of death. Still, the
Right’s economic agenda is hard to sell, since it basically says that
"inequality is good."
So what does the Right do? It draws the
gullible public’s attention to "cultural" issues. Hence, the "culture
wars" fought by the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck. Issues such
as gay marriage and school prayer are excellent smoke screens. You get
the people to huff and puff about such issues, so they won’t pay
attention to their growing poverty, while Goldman Sachs continues to
hand out hundreds of millions of dollars in bonuses.
But my
point is that the Left’s Identity politics function somewhat the same
way: They divert the population’s attention from the essential economic
issue - growing inequality. Instead, subgroups are all up in arms over
their ethnic and sexual identities. Should Columbus Day be a national
holiday, or should we have Leif Erickson day instead? Is this important?
So
you see, Identity politics turn me off for the same reason that the
Culture wars turn me off. Maybe I am forever an "Old Leftist," and I
will never feel comfortable with Identity politics. Gays? Lesbians?
Transgendereds? African-Americans? Hispanics? Kablinesians (Tiger
Woods)? Women? Men? The young? The old? Absolutely: ALL must be
included, all must enjoy fully equal rights.
But most of what we are after can be subsumed
under economic equality. In the end, it all boils down to a reasonable
level of economic equality for all. For the rest, let there be
diversity, live-and-let-live. It is not necessary for every group to
march and to demonstrate in a quest to be loved by all others.
I
am a grubby Hungarian Jew. I know that most people don’t love me, and
that most people couldn’t care less about Hungarian Jews or Hungarian
identity. But you know what? As long as I and my children are not
arrested, or denied a job or a school or service in a restaurant
because we are of Hungarian Jewish descent, I don’t really give a damn
what other people think about our demographic origins. I don’t care,
because we lead comfortable and happy lives. And that is the only
essential goal progressive politics must pursue for all
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Comments
I just read Advoco's hub which I think is up or down your street Tom. Have a read..
Great Hub! Thanks for all the common sense while exposing the big picture. People get so bogged down in one or two issues that they don't notice their own growing poverty or the state of the country as a whole.
I'm considered a Hungarian 'bitch' and sometimes my conservatism leads me into trouble. I believe both political parties should be done away with, and that life is not complete unless you have been to both sides, far left as well as far right. Good Hub!
Thanks for your supportive comments. I, too, go to both sides, depending on the issue, and on my mood. By both sides, I dont just mean politically. I also mean whether or not the sky is falling. Sometimes, it feels like it is (especially when I go through the morning newspaper), but sometimes things dont feel so bad. Is the glass half full or half empty? Both. It's like the song "What a Wonderful World." Naively rose-tinted, or a fine song? Both...
Great Hub - and I totally agree with you. The great danger facing the world right now is economic inequality and the lack of equitable access to resources. And when these are linked to religious bigotry then all hell breaks loose!
You might like fellow-Hubber Paraglider's hub here - http://hubpages.com/hub/bloodless-revolution
Love and peace
Tony
Thanks for your comment.
I like your profile, the quotes from Camus, Rodgers, Einstein and others. Excellent.
Very interesting hub - you put your thoughts across so well. Keep them coming!















Sue Adams says:
4 weeks ago
How right you are Tom. It's time politicians and the labelling media came down to earth and re-shuffled their priorities towards core issues.