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LETTERS: Russia, Impeachment, Gingrich
Living with the Sick Bear
SIR,Nicholas
Eberstadts "Russia: Too Sick to Matter?" (June/July 1999) is an astute and
provocative assessment of Russias future as a power. Eberstadts analysis
suggests to me strategic implications for the United States and nations on Russias
borders. Men for its armed forces will be fewer. Unless the social system underlying the
forces is thoroughly reformed ceasing the extreme brutality of recruitment
desertions and missing draft calls will increase, while strength and morale will fall. As
a result the only reliable units may be the nuclear missile forces and
nuclear-suitcase-bomb-carrying Spetsnaz special forces. This suggests missile
defenses and increased counter-intelligence and anti-terrorist measures. So far we have
barely begun building such defenses.
FRANKLIN BROOKE NIHART
McLean, Va.
Impeachment Radicalism
SIR,Prof.
John McGinniss talents have been profoundly misdirected ("Impeachable
Defenses," June/July 1999). I agree with many of the comments he makes in passing,
but I do not for a minute believe that there was any moral justification for the assault
on the president. I voted for him twice, but with regret, as did many others. I view
Whitewater and all that followed from that sordid triviality as the petty bitchiness of
people who lost an election and would not accept the result.
I suppose the president lied, but about matters on which he
should never, ever have been questioned. The Jones case was itself a scam funded by
malicious persons for no purpose other than to put the president under oath to discuss
matters personally embarrassing to him. The deposition had no bearing on the disposition
of the case, and therefore there was no materiality to anything the president said.
Lacking materiality, there could be no perjury. There being no possible perjury, the grand
jury was a fraud. It should have indicted, if anyone, the independent counsel. Originalism
in the form in which it is advocated by McGinnis is a snare and delusion, but moreover has
nothing to do with the impeachment proceedings. If George Washington had concealed his
relationship with a strumpet, no one would have thought that a ground for putting him
under oath or removing him from office.
I do not favor the constitutional right to an abortion or
other causes that McGinnis identifies with the opposition to impeachment. As a lawyer, I
am a textualist. And I am appalled by the sexual antics of the president, and by other
things that he has done and said. But he was elected by the people because he seemed the
best choice offered to them. Those who would remove him from office on account of his
private behavior or what he has had to say about that subject would attack the basic
premise of democratic government, and for no reason better than that they find the present
occupant of the office personally distasteful to themselves. That is as close to treason
as Mr. Clinton is to perjury.
PAUL D. CARRINGTON
Duke University School of Law
Durham, N.C.
THE AUTHOR RESPONDS,
Professor Carrington chooses to relitigate impeachment rather than respond to the
reflections on the legal academy and political structure that were the subject of my
article. But I should correct one error of fact. The District of Columbia Circuit on May
26, 1998 held that President Clintons false statements about his relationship with
Ms. Lewinsky were material to the Jones case. And I am surprised that a law professor
would declare that independent counsel or indeed any citizen should be indicted without
telling us the grounds on which such a charge should lie.
Race and Polemics
SIR,Michael
S. Greve, in his review of William Bowen and Derek Boks The Shape of the River
(April/May 1999), writes, "They want permission to discriminate and yet
harangue everyone else for latent racism." This is a case of polemical excess, which
often mars the debate on both sides. The authors of this book do not attack opponents of
racial preference for "latent racism," and they "harangue" no one.
This passage seriously misrepresents the tone and argument of the book. The authors fully
respect the good faith of their opponents. I wish Michael S. Greve had done the same.
NATHAN GLAZER
Cambridge, Mass.
Behind the Gingrich Base
SIR,I
read with interest Tod Lindbergs article on Newt Gingrich ("Gingrich Lost and
Found," April/May 1999). Lindberg discussed Gingrich as a conservative ideologue, but
Gingrich the representative politician has received insufficient attention. Gingrich
represented the Sixth District of Georgia (the city of Marietta and Cobb County northwest
of Atlanta). It is a suburban nouveau riche New South community dominated by a
business-oriented conservatism that in many ways borders on libertarianism. Most people
are familiar with the areas claims to notoriety: the controversy regarding the
"family values" resolution condemning the "homosexual lifestyle" and
the resulting boycott of Cobb County during the 1996 Olympic games, and the Gingrich
ethics scandal and his subsequent exoneration.
The region also has less publicized distinctions. Cobb
County was home to Lester Maddox, segregationist governor of Georgia during the 1960s, who
according to legend used to chase African-Americans out of his diner with a
baseball bat before being elected governor of the state. J.B. Stoner, a white supremacist,
who organized bombings of Alabama churches, was also a citizen of Marietta. Marietta, it
might be noted, is one of the few Southern cities with both Union and Confederate Civil
War cemeteries. Cobb County also borders Forsyth County, a center of Klan activity in the
mid-1980s. The area today has undergone rapid commercial and residential development and
is a thriving business community considerably riven by tensions between natives on the one
hand and Northern and Midwestern transplants on the other. Cobb County has become more
diverse in recent years, with more African-Americans and an influx of Latinos
though this seems to be primarily related to business factors.
The above is intended to convey the coexistence of vicious
prejudice and suburban affluence as the context for the representative aspect of
Gingrichs politics. Gingrichs "revolutionary" approach to
ideological conservatism needs to be understood with strong reference to the nature of his
actual constituency (Southern business conservatives strongly influenced by a nativist
strain of libertarianism) and the virulent racism of its recent past.
I am not suggesting a moral equivalence between Gingrich on
one hand and the Maddoxes and Stoners on the other, but those who wish their consciences
to be clear should know what they might be embracing when they make Gingrich their hero.
It is not for me to say to what extent Gingrich was influenced by the more repugnant
aspects of his constituency. But informed and intelligent citizens should have an
understanding of some of the forces that enabled Gingrich to attain the speakership and
may again motivate him, no matter how heroic a figure he is, to many in the Republican
Party.
GUY ARCHEA
Topeka, Kansas
THE AUTHOR RESPONDS,
If Guy Archea is, as he says, "not suggesting a moral equivalence" between Newt
Gingrich and Lester Maddoxs ilk, one wonders what his letter would say if he were.
Disclaimers notwithstanding, his letter seems rather clearly an effort to link modern
ideological Republicanism with white Southern racism. This is a depressingly familiar line
of ad hominem attack on Republicans. To the extent it may be substantive, I would ask, in
what sense is it reasonable to take the most extreme view held by anyone in any
congressional district and impute it to the representative for that district? Politicians
can only fairly be judged by the positions they take, not the positions of those who vote
for them. If Guy Archea has anything to offer indicating that Gingrich has appealed to
racist sentiment in Cobb County, he doesnt produce it here.
The Military Essence of NATO
SIR,Bruce
Jackson is correct when he says it would be a mistake for the U.S. to disengage from the
nato alliance ("The Conservative Case for nato," April/May 1999). Such a move
would remove an anchor of stability from Europe, thus imperiling American interests there
and beyond.
History proves the Atlantic Alliances success in
meeting its original mission: containing Soviet expansion. In doing so, natos
importance grew to outstrip its original narrow purpose. Today its objective is no less
than to secure and expand upon the political and security gains made worldwide in the Cold
Wars wake surely something upon which both liberals and conservatives can
agree.
Yet, success here is far from assured. In natos
political victories, what is too often obscured is the military essence of the alliance.
Here, at the alliances core, there are steep challenges.
Chief among them is the increasing chasm in the quality of
military technology wielded by the U.S. and the rest of the 18 alliance partners. Already
military operations undertaken by nato, such as in Kosovo, have revealed the need to
create two tiers of military operations because of the vast U.S. lead in military
technology.
At his farewell press conference May 4, the outgoing
chairman of natos military committee, German Gen. Klaus Naumann, spoke to this
point.
He said the U.S. and Europe should harmonize their
collective research and development budgets. And Europe must invest in standoff weapons,
strategic airlift and combat search and rescue forces, he added.
"These are all things which can be easily done,"
he said, "and for that you dont need another voluminous conceptual paper [or] a
European summit, you need something like the will to decide."
Whatever the achievements of nato as a political body, its
ability to meet with continued success will rest on its credibility as a military
alliance. And if its forces cant talk, share data, and fight together as a unified
instrument for collective defense, then the alliances political strength will
wither.
Mr. Jackson rightly paraphrases Margaret Thatcher:
"Now is not the time to go wobbly on nato." To ensure that doesnt happen,
now is the time to strengthen the military sinews, which provide the alliance with its
means to continue achieving political successes.
ERNEST BLAZAR
Lexington Institute
Arlington, Va.
Incomplete Conservatism
SIR,In
your "Conservatism at Centurys End" (April/May 1999) you write,
"modern ideological conservatism constitutes a completed body of thought."
I wonder. There seem to be unresolved issues still.
Take, for example, drugs. I support current policies on
drugs in America (to keep them largely illegal). I think modern ideological conservatism
comes out on this side, too. However, I can see how other conservatives may (and do)
disagree. Some say liberty implies no drug laws. Others say the costs outweigh the
benefits of the war on drugs.
So this policy constitutes a split-hair end of conservative
thought. It comes out on both sides.
Also, conservatives are becoming more culturally
conservative and with this comes a shift in priorities. It may mean conservatives back
government involvement in societal crisis issues (on the side of conservatives). This will
discomfit economic conservatives and libertarians who came to the movement because it
scrupulously separated the government from the economy and society. This area seems to be
incomplete.
STEVEN W. WARDELL
Cambridge, Mass.
Speaking Up at Boalt Hall
SIR,Your
intent in offering the three Boalt Hall essays ("Diversity on Trial," June/July
1999) is unclear. Surely, there is room for profound philosophical thought on our current
distraction with "diversity." Yet budding young law students seem unattuned to
such discourse, largely because their elders have let them down.
The foreclosure of free, intelligent expression at our
universities is a disgrace. But equally disturbing is the apparent mindset of even these
"conservative" students, as they focus on lofty banners like
"diversity" instead of the old, proven standards of truth and excellence. As one
writer (Joshua Rider) intimates, the mission of law school should be to teach the law, not
to engage in race-and-sex posturing. That the latter is so dominant can be traced to the
misfeasance of undergraduate schools and our post-1960s cancer of "social
causes," a procrustean civil rights mentality smothering our historical
constitutionalism.
Instead of concentrating on learning the law of ages, we
now rear young people to be their own lawmakers, worrying about "resegregation,"
"historical inattention to the voices of women and minorities," or "color
blindness," none of which 1990s code words lend to higher learning, nor to an
understanding of our vast culture.
American culture rightly understood doesnt
"glorify the dissenting individual" unless in the crucible of life he is proven
to be right. Glorifying Martin Luther King Jr. as a pillar of Prop. 209 helps no one when
one realizes that he actually endorsed affirmative action, nor does it render him
timeless. By the same token, Lincolns thought on "equality" has been
distorted beyond truth. Far from serving as the seeds of sound learning, such inaccuracies
only confuse the dialogue. Instead of looking to J.S. Mill, King, Thoreau, or Lincoln, we
should look at least to James F. Stephen, Tocqueville, the Founders and beyond for a truer
wisdom and vision of self-government. Instead of becoming bogged down in pointless,
tiresome "diversity" talk, whether of "race" or sex," we should
return to common sense, the common law, honesty, and our own Western heritage - the
endless conversation that would teach young students what is really important.
Professors Robert Weissberg and Paul Hollander have pointed
out the academic hypocrisy of "tolerating the deviant while condemning Western
Civilization." (Society, November/ December 1998; March/April 1999) Though
discrimination is the hallmark of authentic tolerance, our infatuation with
"equality" has obviously "abducted the concept of tolerance" to
subvert the natural intelligence of young law students. As a result, we now wallow in
confused, even fatuous talk of "non-discrimination," even as we face new
challenges daily requiring the utmost in discrimination and wise judgment. Instead of
being able to rely on a free, civilized people to manage their affairs, we resort to
socialistic government. "Hate" crimes are merely Damoclean swords to be wielded
by Clintonese functionaries on whomever they choose to condemn.
Our response to such nonsense should be, "Put a sock
in it!" Repeal the "non-discrimination." Return to ancient folkways,
brotherly love, the Ten Commandments, and Western Civilization. Of course, then professors
would have to return to teaching them.
W. EDWARD CHYNOWETH
Sanger, Calif.
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