Thursday May 23rd, 2013    Home  |   Topics  |   Most Popular  |   Media Bookings  |   About Us  |   Contact Us  |   Book Store  |   Support
Search & Archives
 
View All Authors
View All Topics
RSS 2.0 Feed
Atom 0.3 Feed
Font Size
[+] Increase
[−] Decrease
Reset
Receive PM in
daily digest form

subscribe
unsubscribe


Must-Read Columnists
Mitch Albom
Michael Barone
Dave Barry
Tony Blankley
Mona Charen
Linda Chavez
Greg Crosby
John Fund
Frank J. Gaffney
Jonah Goldberg
Jonathan Gurwitz
Victor Davis Hanson
Nat Hentoff
Jeff Jacoby
Paul Johnson
Ch. Krauthammer
David Limbaugh
Michelle Malkin
Bill O'Reilly
Clarence Page
Dennis Prager
Wesley Pruden
Jonathan Rauch
Cokie & Steve Roberts
Debra J. Saunders
Thomas Sowell
Mark Steyn
John Stossel
Cal Thomas
Bob Tyrrell
Diana West
George Will
Walter Williams
Mort Zuckerman
Cartoonists
Chuck Asay
Chip Bok
Dry Bones
Gary Brookins
Prickly City
John Cole
Cox & Forkum
J. D. Crowe
John Deering
Mallard Fillmore
Jake Fuller
Ed Gamble
Bob Gorrell
Joe Heller
Steve Kelley
Jeff Koterba
Doug Marlette
Michael Ramirez
Jeff Stahler
Wayne Stayskal
Gary Varvel
Monthly Archives
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006


Will America make it?
By William Katz (bio)

  • Tell a Friend
  • Printer Friendly
  • Font [+]
  • Font [–]

We are a nation in trouble. And we are making that trouble worse for ourselves.

On November 5th an Army doctor with the rank of major walked into a health center at Ford Hood, Texas, murdered 13 soldiers and civilians, and wounded two dozen more. He was a Muslim with a history of contact with extremist groups. He favored jihad and had said so. He carried business cards describing himself as a “soldier of Allah.” As he murdered unarmed comrades, he shouted “Alahu Akbar.”

And yet, incredibly, a poll by Fox News showed that more Americans thought this was just a “killing spree” than an act of terror. Further, the Army chief of staff, General George Casey, expressed his pain at the thought that this incident might hurt “diversity” in the Army.

Bill Bennett, in response, wrote this:

“There is a rot that spreads outside of Washington into the larger culture. It begins with a confusion of terms, and by not calling things by their proper names, it begins with a disassembling of the moral categories. We don’t hear about terrorism or radical Islam so we are surprised to find it in our midst, and when we do, we don’t even recognize it. We have Army generals who elevate diversity over life, we have a president who speaks not of radical Islam or terrorism — though life is what we are fighting for and radical Islam and terrorism is what we are fighting against. ”

Toward the end of World War II, General Eisenhower ordered American troops marched through newly liberated death camps. He reasoned that they might not have fully understood what they were fighting for, but that the camps would show them what, to use Bill Bennett’s language, they were fighting against. We have no such stirring example today. Instead, more than nine years after the 9-11 attacks, the word terrorism has been dropped from the federal vocabulary, replaced by “man-made disasters.” It took our government days to issue even a simple denunciation of the Iranian regime’s crackdown on dissenters. And the oppression of women in Muslim countries – symbolized by the 50 lashes given to a 15-year-old Sudanese girl for wearing a knee-length skirt – is met with indifference or even admonitions that we must not judge “other cultures.”

We will allow the perpetrators of 9-11 to shop their ideological wares in a show trial in lower Manhattan, in the shadow of what was once the World Trade Center. The same Justice Department that arranged this upcoming spectacle is also pursuing, relentlessly, CIA agents who served their country in the early days of the war on terror, but whose methods do not satisfy the new crowd in town. We learned just weeks ago that Navy Seals who captured one of the most wanted terrorists in Iraq will face courts-martial because the individual wound up with a split lip.

This is nothing less than an erosion of our national will. America has allowed the “will to win” to degenerate into the notion that we are, at minimum, equally responsible for the violence committed against us. It is an erosion that could prove fatal if our enemies choose to take advantage of it, as they already have. Our sense of national purpose, of who we are and what we believe, has been diminished, especially in our radicalized universities. Ronald Reagan used to remind us that “freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.” Americans tend to laugh at observations like that. We’ll always have our Constitution, won’t we? Think about it. Are you sure?

The erosion of our national will can be seen in a single statement, taught repeatedly on college campuses and in the pages of the mainstream media: “We must understand other cultures.” You have heard it again and again. But what is missing from this declaration? What is missing is any respect for our culture, our traditions. What about an alternative: “We must understand other cultures, and they must understand us.” That should be obvious, but that wording will never be accepted among the legions of the politically correct who dominate our universities; our media; increasingly, our government; and even, as we have seen with General Casey, our military.

We should have seen the current crisis in national will coming. After 9-11, when most Americans rallied to the nation’s cause, many so-called “intellectuals” were demeaning that cause. One college president called 9-11 a self-inflicted wound. Another said it was the result of our not knowing enough about the world. A third, in a particularly outrageous comment, praised her students for not being judgmental about the attacks. How could any civilized person not be judgmental about the slaughter of 3,000 innocent people? Those college presidents reflected the ideology that has grown up in our universities since the upheavals of the 1960s, and this ideology is now being employed to teach those who will teach our youngest children. American parents are virtually unaware of this.

Time is the enemy of morale. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in December, 1941, President Roosevelt, a reliable observer of human reactions, feared that time would erode American resolve, and lessen support for the war effort. He therefore encouraged Hollywood to write a song to keep morale high. The result was “Remember Pearl Harbor,” one of the most popular songs of the war. Now, our modern Pearl Harbor, 9-11, is fading into memory, and, if any songs are being written, they are so-called “anti-war” songs.

To show just how our sense of national resolve has slipped over the decades, please recall these words, words with which we grew up: “Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty.”

Isn’t it remarkable to realize that John F. Kennedy, who spoke those words, would probably have a hard time being nominated for president by his party today, as his views on national defense are outside that party’s mainstream. In fact, Kennedy’s views were best expressed in our time by George W. Bush, who was ridiculed and scorned by much of America’s elite for even holding them.

What can be done? National resolve must be built, and sustained, by three things – education, leadership, and belief. The educational system of the United States, especially higher education, is now controlled from the political left, which started to dominate the academy following the social convulsions of the 1960s. There have been some press reports that a new generation of scholars, now coming in, is less ideological than the generation it is replacing, but it will take years for this new group to build influence. We do not have those years to waste in the international struggles we’re now waging.

Leadership is a function of the American people. We get the leaders we vote for. But even after a leader is elected, he can change course, just as President Bush changed course in Iraq when he ordered the now-famous surge. President Obama has gone around the world apologizing for what he sees as American mistakes, and offering to engage our enemies if they “unclench” their fists. Thus far the results are disappointing, and even some foreign journalists, especially in Britain, are starting to accuse him of weakness. No fists have been unclenched.

Can the president change course? To do so would require him to alter his entire attitude. He would have to inspire the American people by advertising the remarkable amount of good in this country. And he would have to demonstrate that he understands, and is willing to fight for, American principles. He would have to say these things to foreign audiences. He would have to start using words like “victory,” a word missing from his foreign policy, even from the speech on Afghanistan that he delivered recently at West Point. But the president’s goals so far have been to merge our interests with those of other nations, and those goals seem heartfelt. Thus far we have seen no sign that he is willing to change to a more traditional approach, with its appeal to American resolve and a desire to defeat foes.

That leaves belief. Do we know what we believe in? Melik Kaylan, a columnist for The Wall Street Journal and Forbes, recently made a suggestion that deserves our attention. Writing in Forbes, he said:

“During the Thanksgiving season, we should sit down and consider exactly what we stand for. It should include ideas that would help us win this new Cold War before we can win any other with bullets. It is not enough to say that we offer immigrant minorities the freedom to be themselves. What do we offer that will persuade them to be more like us? What is left of us and our traditions that other cultures can emulate? Or that our own immigrants can adapt to once they have the freedom to do so?

Unless we rebuild the national resolve of the United States, we could become a nation that speaks more of its history than its future. Or we could become a nation with declining influence in the world as our confidence declines and our economy shrinks.

Will America make it?

We asked that question at the start of World War II. Conditions seemed hopeless, but our resolve was strong.

That resolve is now in question, which is why we cannot say definitively if America will make it.

URGENT AGENDA (WWW.URGENTAGENDA.COM)

Digg this

Have PoliticalMavens.com delivered to your inbox in a daily digest by clicking here

Posted by William Katz on December 10th, 2009
Permanent link: Will America make it?
PM Fellows
Dan Ackman
Arnold Ahlert
Robert Alt
Sheryl J. Anderson
Jeff Andrus
Bob Asahina
Thomas Fox Averill
Gerard Baker
Jeff Ballabon
Anne Bayefsky
Arnold Beichman
Ralph Kinney Bennett
Claire Berlinski
Brendan Bernhard
William Beutler
Chip Bok
Jerry Bowyer
Joe Bob Briggs
Peter Brookes
Frank Buckley
Dennis Byrne
Colleen Carroll Campbell
Amb. Richard Carlson
Charles Robert Carner
Ron Cass
Jim Ceaser
Lauren Chapin
Lionel Chetwynd
Ron Christie
Andrew Colarik
Phil Cooke
Seth Cropsey
Greg Crosby
Stanley Crouch
Monica Crowley
Gordon Cucullu
Keith Curtis
Lee Casey & David B. Rivkin, Jr.
Mark Davis
Sam Dealey
Brad Dickson
Alan W. Dowd
Political Mavens Editor
Paul Eidelberg
Steven Emerson
Tucker Eskew
Amitai Etzioni
Karen Feld
Robert Ferrigno
Danny Fontana
Peter Fox
Cory Franklin
Ilana Freedman
Will Friedwald
Doug Gamble
Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
Jeff Gedmin
Robert A. George
Dan Gerstein
George Gilder
Benjamin Ginsberg
Malibu Rules Girl
Mark Goffman
John Steele Gordon
Julia Gorin
Lloyd M. Green
Paul Greenberg
Cynthia Grenier
Jennifer Grossman
Judy Gruen
Allen C. Guelzo
Michel Gurfinkiel
Jonathan Gurwitz
Dennis Hale
Karen Hall
Eldon L. Ham
Earl Hamner
Matthew P. Harrington
Aaron Keith Harris
Betsy Hart
Sam Haskell, III
Jacob Heilbrunn
Mark Hemingway
David Henderson
Scott Hennen
Amb. G. Philip Hughes
John Hughes
Patrick Hurley
Blake Hurst
Susan Isaacs
Donovan Jacobs
Dallas Jenkins
Marianne Jennings
Bridget Johnson
Melodie Johnson Howe
Brian C. Jones
Mark Joseph
Mark Judge
Stefan Kanfer
S. T. Karnick
Jeff Katz
William Katz
Jonathan Kay
Terry Kelhawk
Jack Kelly
Paul Kengor
Larry Kenny
Andrew Klavan
Judith A. Klinghoffer
Elizabeth Koch
Eugene Kontorovich
Dave Kopel
Elie D. Krakowski
Michael Krauss
Josh Larsen
Leslie S. Lebl
Norman Lebrecht
Michael LeGault
Eli Lehrer
Allan Leicht
Michael Levine
Nathan Lewin
Phil Liberatore
Amy Linker
Herbert London
Mike Long
Laura Lorson
Douglas MacKinnon
Harvey Mansfield
Stephen Mansfield
Rich Markey
Josh Marquis
Dana Marshall
Craig Mazin
David McFadzean
John Meroney
Herbert E. Meyer
Richard Miniter
Howard Mortman
Gerald Nachman
Noam Neusner
Anna Nimouse
Cyrus Nowrasteh
sambo
Mackubin Owens
Kathleen Parker
Marilyn Penn
David D. Perlmutter
Phil Perrier
Peary Perry
Eric Peters
Paul Petersen
Walid Phares
Lisa Pinto
Everett Piper
John J. Pitney,Jr.
Steve Pomerantz
Steve Pressfield
Arch Puddington
Jeremy Rabkin
Rachel Raskin-Zrihen
David Reinhard
Lisa Reitman-Dobi
Richard Riordan
Heather Robinson
Dave Rosner
Evan Sayet
Felice Schachter
Abby Wisse Schachter
Richard Schifter
William Schmidt
Sam Schulman
Sherwood and Lloyd Schwartz
Peter Schweizer
Todd Seavey
Jeremy Shane
Neal M. Sher
Dave Shiflett
Marvin Silbermintz
Max Singer
Curt Smith
Scott Stantis
Steve Stark
Harry Stein
Neil Steinberg
The Stiletto
Glenn Sulmasy
Joel Surnow
Seth Swirsky
Steven L. Taylor
Keith Thibodeaux
Bruce Thornton
Kelly Jane Torrance
Prof. Bob Turner
Cynthia Vance
Laura Vanderkam
Chris Warren
Ben Wattenberg
Ken Weinstein
Barry Weiss
Gary Weiss
Claudia Wells
Diana West
Christine B. Whelan
John O Whitaker Jr
Kaitlyn Wilkins
William Wintersole
Kate Wright
Meyrav Wurmser
Toby Young
Bryce Zabel
Robert Zelnick
John Ziegler
Spread Political Mavens
yahoo
myaol
mymsn
rojo
google
sub-bloglines
sub-feedster
newsgator
newsburst
pluck
delicious
furlit
searchfox
jrants
 
Home  |  Advertise  |  Privacy Policy  |  Subscribe

Copyright (c) 2006 POLITICAL MAVENS. All Rights Reserved.