mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-25 23:39:30 -05:00
102 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
102 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
||
|
Shadow Government - By John Jackson (c) 1990-1994
|
||
|
|
||
|
Partisan sex
|
||
|
by John A. Jackson
|
||
|
|
||
|
When I was a child, I heard hints that a certain sexual activity caused
|
||
|
blindness.
|
||
|
Now, in the light of Paula Jones's lawsuit against President Clinton, I
|
||
|
understand that the rumor was correct, but the activity wrong. It's other
|
||
|
people's sexual acts that make us go blind.
|
||
|
Indeed, the ugliest thing about the controversy over Jones's suit is not the
|
||
|
pathetic assault allegedly performed by the President, but the disgusting
|
||
|
hypocrisy and self-interestedness shown by both his critics andhis defenders.
|
||
|
On Clinton's side, feminists who lionized Anita Hill when she took on
|
||
|
Clarence Thomas have fallen all over themselves to label Jones a "kook" and a
|
||
|
"slut" and a mercenary out for a quick profit.
|
||
|
Even Hill herself has gone on TV to deny there is any comparison between
|
||
|
herself and Jones, as if the comparison did not occur at once and to everyone.
|
||
|
Among Clinton's critics, however, a legion of male politicians who had never
|
||
|
shown the slightest interest in stopping the abuse of women in this society
|
||
|
have equally been quick to jump to Jones's defense. In Jones, they are saying,
|
||
|
Bill Clinton has victimized every woman--and he must pay.
|
||
|
Missing in all this fervor has been the slightest trace of intellectual
|
||
|
independence. In every instance of which I am aware, from Rush Limbaugh and Pat
|
||
|
Buchanan on the right to Susan Estrich or Eleanor Clift on the left, the past
|
||
|
political allegiance of the commentator predetermined what he or she has to
|
||
|
say.
|
||
|
People who see Clinton as advancing themselves or their pet policies
|
||
|
universally acquit him of this offense, as if no liberal could molest a woman,
|
||
|
while those who oppose Clinton for partisan reasons incline with few exceptions
|
||
|
to convict.
|
||
|
(Fans of the imperial presidency, who are usually Republicans, havetaken to
|
||
|
asserting that a common worm like Jones lacks the status to sue an exalted
|
||
|
being like the President, while John McLaughlin, himself the target of sexual
|
||
|
harassment suits, has bemoaned the accusation's damage to the office and
|
||
|
predicted Clinton's exoneration.)
|
||
|
For myself, I found both Hill and Jones eminently worth hearing. Jones has a
|
||
|
serious case. The conduct she is alleging was offensive enough to be criminal,
|
||
|
and she asserts she has
|
||
|
corroboration.
|
||
|
I would like to see Jones's charges tested in court and in public,
|
||
|
preferably without the already initiated assassination of her character by
|
||
|
Clinton's hired guns.
|
||
|
I would not like to see the suit dismissed on some flimsy technicality or
|
||
|
because of judicial cowardice. The public interest demands that the case be
|
||
|
heard.
|
||
|
But that solution does not meet all the requirements of the case.
|
||
|
The nation must have a president who is not generally believed to be a sex
|
||
|
fiend and an assaulter of unwilling women.
|
||
|
But it needs even more the unbought and unbiased reflections of its
|
||
|
political intellects, and those it clearly does not now have.
|
||
|
Clinton may and probably should resign, so that the government will still
|
||
|
have an effective head while he spends his time and energy--and otherpeople's
|
||
|
money--defending the remnants of his sorry private character.
|
||
|
But what can be done about the molders of opinion, the members of what I
|
||
|
will call the commentariat? They will not resign. They are permanent. And, as
|
||
|
the Jones case shows, they are endlessly
|
||
|
corrupt. No honest person need consult most of them, and the nation cannot rely
|
||
|
upon their honesty, their disinterest or their intelligence.
|
||
|
The problem is not new, of course. Power always attracts its sycophants.
|
||
|
Even shadow governments have shadow patronage to bestow. Even the GOP has its
|
||
|
think tanks and its foundation
|
||
|
grants.
|
||
|
But a prescription is available.
|
||
|
Back in 1945, in his essay, "Notes on Nationalism," George Orwell observed
|
||
|
that "if one looks back over the past quarter of a century, one finds that
|
||
|
there was hardly a single year when atrocity stories were not being reported
|
||
|
from some quarter of the world; and yet...whether such deeds were
|
||
|
reprehensible, or even whether they happened, was always decided (by the
|
||
|
"intelligentsia") according to political predilection."
|
||
|
Orwell concluded: "It can be argued that no unbiased outlook is possible,
|
||
|
that all creeds and causes involve the same lies, follies and barbarities; and
|
||
|
this is often advanced as a reason for keeping out ofpolitics altogether.
|
||
|
"I do not accept this argument, if only because in the modern world no one
|
||
|
describable as an intellectual can keep out of politics in the sense of not
|
||
|
caring about them....
|
||
|
"Whether it is possible to get rid of (partisan loves and hatreds), I do not
|
||
|
know, but I do believe that it is possible to struggle against them, and that
|
||
|
this is essentially a moral effort." (Emphases in the original.)
|
||
|
A moral effort? Are we capable of it? Oh, Orwell, you grim man. And the real
|
||
|
sin, as he sees it: "indifference to objective truth."
|
||
|
What I will be looking for as the Jones case unfolds is some sign that
|
||
|
somewhere such an effort is being made. And those who make that moral effort to
|
||
|
see beyond their own political benefit,
|
||
|
whether they are right or left in orientation, I will look to as honest men and
|
||
|
women for advice about other things.
|
||
|
I recommend that you do that, too. You and history are the audience.
|
||
|
And commentators you find venal or corrupt in this instance? Well, write
|
||
|
them off ruthlessly.
|
||
|
Because the Jones case, along with the Whitewater scandal, subsumes so much
|
||
|
that is known or suspected to be defective in the character of the president,
|
||
|
it will stand for today's opinion makers as a kind of latter-day Watergate: a
|
||
|
litmus of their and the nation's integrity. We who write about politics may
|
||
|
imagine that in writing about these things we are subjecting the president to
|
||
|
our judgment. But in setting forth our views we are inviting judgment, not only
|
||
|
upon him, but upon ourselves as well.
|
||
|
Whatever the public's questions about Clinton's character, there should be
|
||
|
little doubt about what they think of us commentators.
|
||
|
And what the commentary so far shows is that their disdain for us is well
|
||
|
deserved.
|