The Playgrounds of War
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
America is becoming a more tolerant nation, we
are told. Each new thing that we learn to tolerate
makes us more progressive. But tolerance is a
relative thing. For every new thing we learn to
tolerate, there is a thing that we must stop
tolerating.
Tolerance does not usher in some tolerant anarchy
in which we learn to tolerate all things. Rather
tolerance is a finite substance. It can only be
allocated to so many places. While a society
changes, human beings do not fundamentally change.
They remain creatures of habit, bound to the poles
of things that they like and dislike, the people
that they look up to and look down on.
The balance of tolerance and intolerance always
remains the same no matter how progressive a society
becomes. A tolerant society allocates its
intolerance differently. There is no such thing as a
universally tolerant society. Only a society that
tolerates different things. A tolerant society does
not cease being bigoted. It is bigoted in different
ways.
America today tolerates different things. It
tolerates little boys dressing up as little girls at
school, but not little boys pointing pencils and
making machine gun noises on the playground.
The little boy whose mother dressed him up in
girlish clothes once used to be a figure of contempt
while the little boy pretending to be a marine was
the future of the nation. Now the boy in the dress
is the future of the nation having joined an
identity group and entirely new gender by virtue of
his mother's Münchausen-syndrome-by-proxy and the
aspiring little marine is suspected of one day
trading in his sharpened pencil for one of those
weapons of war as soon as the next gun show comes to
town.
The Duke of Wellington once said that the Battle of
Waterloo was won on the playing-fields of Eton. What
battles will the boys playing on the playgrounds
where dodgeball is banned and finger guns are a
crime win and what sort of nation will they be
fighting to protect?
The average school shooter is closer to the boy in
the dress than the aspiring marine, but the paranoia
over school shootings isn't really about profiles,
it's about personalities. It's easier to dump the
blame for all those school shootings onto
masculinity's already reviled shoulders than to
examine the premises. And mental shortcuts that
speed along highways of prejudice to bring us to the
town of preconceived notions are the essence of
intolerance.
The trouble with tolerance is that there is always
someone deciding what to tolerate. It is a natural
process for individuals, but a dangerous one for
governments and institutions.
In one of George Washington's most famous letters,
he wrote to the Hebrew Congregation at Newport that,
"All possess alike liberty of conscience and
immunities of citizenship. It is now no more that
toleration is spoken of, as if it was by the
indulgence of one class of people, that another
enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural
rights."
The letter is widely quoted, including on a site
that bills itself as "Tolerance.org", mainly for its
more famous quote of, "the Government of the United
States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to
persecution no assistance". But the tolerant quoters
miss the point.
George Washington was not advocating transforming
the United States government into an arbiter of
tolerance in order to fight against bigotry; he was
decrying the very notion that the government should
act to impose the condescension of tolerance on some
perceived inferior classes.
Tolerance is arrogant. A free society does not
tolerate people, it allows them to live their own
values. And a tolerant society is not free. It is a
dictatorship of virtue that is intolerant toward
established values in order to better tolerate
formerly intolerable values. A free society does not
tell people of any religion or no religion what to
believe. A tolerant society forces them all to pay
for abortions because its dictators of virtue have
decided that the time has come to teach this lesson
in tolerance.
An open society finds wisdom in its own
uncertainty. A tolerant society, like a teenager, is
certain that it already knows all the answers and
lacks only the means of imposing them on others. It
confuses its destruction of the past with progress
and its sense of insecurity with righteousness.
To the tolerant, intolerance is the most powerful
act possible. They solve problems by refusing to
tolerate their root causes. School shootings are
carried out with guns and so the administrative
denizens of the gun-free zones run campaigns of
intolerance toward the physical existence of guns,
the owners of guns, the manufacturers of guns, the
civil rights groups that defend gun ownership and
eventually toward John Puckle, Samuel Colt, John
Moses Browning and the 82nd element in the periodic
table.
None of this accomplishes a single practical thing,
but it is an assertion of values, not of functions.
The paranoid mindset that cracks down on little boys
who chew pop tarts into deadly shapes, little boys
who point pencils and fingers at each other, is not
out to stop school shootings, but is struggling to
assert the intolerance of its tolerant value system
over the intangible root of violence.
It's not about preventing school shootings, but
about asserting a value system in which there is no
place for the aspiring marine, unless he's handing
out food to starving children in Africa in a relief
operation, serving as a model of gay marriage to
rural America or engaging in some other approved,
but non-violent activity.
To understand the NRA's argument about the moral
value of a gun deriving from the moral value of the
wielder would require a worldview that is more
willing to accept a continuum of shades, rather than
criminalizing pencils and pop tarts for guilt by
geometric association. A free society could do that,
but a tolerant society, in which everything must be
assigned an unchanging value to determine whether it
will be tolerated and enforced or not tolerated and
outlawed, cannot.
A tolerant society is as rigidly moralistic as the
most stereotypical band of puritans. It is never at
ease unless it has assigned an absolute moral value
to every object in its world, no matter how petty,
until it represents either good or evil. If good, it
must be mandated. If evil, it must be regulated. And
everything that is not good, must by exclusion be
evil. Everything that does not lead to greater
tolerance must be intolerable.
The FDA is proposing to regulate caffeine. The EPA
is regulating carbon emission and encouraging states
to tax the rain. Schools are suspending students for
the abstract depiction of guns on such a symbolic
level that Picasso would have trouble recognizing
them. There is something medieval about such a
compulsive need to impose a complete moral order on
every aspect of one's environment.
These policies take place in the real world and in
response to assertions of real threats, but they are
largely assertions of values. The debates over them
tap into a clash of worldviews. That is as true of
Newtown as it is of Boston. The same tolerant
liberalism that can see deadly menace in a pencil or
a pop tart, is blind to the lethal threat of a
Chechen Islamist. If a gun is innately evil, then a
member of a minority group, especially a persecuted
one, is innately good. The group certainly remains
above reproach.
The arrogance of tolerance does not allow for
ambiguity. There is no room for guns in schools or
profiling of terrorists. Instead all guns are bad
and all Muslims are good. In the real world, it may
take bad guns to stop good Muslims, but the system
just doubles down on encouraging students to recite
the Islamic declaration of faith while suspending
them for chewing their pop tarts the wrong way.
Liberal values are at odds with reality and they are
not about to let reality win. In their more tolerant
nation, there is more room than ever for little boys
who dream of one day setting off pressure cooker
bombs at public events in the name of their
religion, but very little room for little boys
dreaming of being the ones to stop them.
As a society we have come to celebrate the
helplessness of victimhood and the empowerment of
"speaking out" as the single most meaningful act to
be found in a society that has become all talk. The
new heroism is the assertion of some marginal
identity, rather than the defense of a society in
which all identities can exist. That is the
difference between freedom and tolerance.
The little boy in a dress has put on the uniform of
tolerance while the little boy making rat tat noises
with a pencil is showing strong signs of playing for
the wrong team. The wrong team is the one that
solves problems by shooting people, rather than
lawyering them to death or writing denunciations of
them to the tolerance department of diversity and
othering.
The complainer is the hero and the doer is the
villain. Reporters and lawyers are the heroes
because they are the arbiters of tolerance. Soldiers
and police officers are the gun-happy villains
because they respond to realities, rather than
identities. They unthinkingly shoot without
understanding the subtext. A free society is
practical. It acts in its own defense. A tolerant
society acts to assert its values. The former fights
terrorists and murderers, while the latter lets them
go to show off its tolerant values.
A free society teaches little boys that the highest
value is to die in defense of others. A tolerant
society teaches them that it is better to die as
recognized victims than to become the aggressor and
lose the moral high ground.
This is the clash of values that holds true on the
playground and on the battlefield of war. On the
playground, little boys are suspended for waving
around pencils and on the battlefield, soldiers are
ordered not to defend themselves so that their
country can win the hearts and minds of the locals
in the endless Afghan Valentine's Day of COIN that
has stacked up a horrifying toll of bodies.
In their cities, men and women are told to be
tolerant, to extend every courtesy and to suspect
nothing of the friendly Islamists in their
neighborhoods. It is better to be blown up as a
tolerant society, they are told, than to point the
pop tart of intolerance on the great playground of
the nanny state.