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townhall.com Printer-friendly version September 1, 2004
Last Sunday, I picked up a copy of Boston Magazine while sitting in the green
room at the Fox News studios in Watertown, Mass. Leafing through the
publication, I came across an article titled "Confessions of an Ivy League
Callgirl," written by Jeannette Angell, a university lecturer with a master's
degree from Yale. The fact that she was a Yalie caught my eye -- as a Harvard
Law student, I've already adopted our communal animosities -- and so I read the
piece. Apparently, Angell began trading sex for cash after receiving her
doctorate in social anthropology. But what was shocking was not Angell's
experiences but her insistence that she not be condemned for her actions.
"Please don't be so quick to call us hookers, to judge us," she wrote. "We could
be your mother, your sister, your girlfriend, your daughter. Even your college
professor. No, I take that back. It's not a matter of saying that we could be.
We are." The logic goes something like this: If you have a relative who engages
in a sinful act, the act cannot be condemned. After all, blood is thicker than
morality, right? Loyalty to the tribe comes before loyalty to moral values. It's a successful tactic often employed by proponents of liberal social
policy. Just this week, Michael Moore wrote in USA Today that most Republicans
are actually social liberals. As proof, he cited a supposed interview with a
"proud Republican." "Would you discriminate against someone because he or she is
gay?" Moore asked the man. "Um, no," the man answered. Moore comments: "The
pause -- I get that a lot when I ask this question -- is usually because the
average goodhearted person instantly thinks about a gay family member or
friend." Unfortunately, Moore's explanation of moral hesitancy rings true.
Social liberals expect to emerge victorious from the culture wars because of
conflicting allegiances among social conservatives: allegiances to friends and
family, and allegiances to traditional morality. In order to assuage the moral qualms of conflicted social
conservatives, social liberals have created a whole new system of morality.
Social liberals redefine right and wrong: It is right to value your friends and
family, and wrong to condemn them for moral failings. According to the social
left, in any pitched battle between traditional morality and friendship, those
who side with traditional morality are morally wrong. And so tolerance has become the new morality. Those who condemn
homosexuality are morally wrong. Those who condemn prostitution are morally
wrong. Those who condemn abortion are morally wrong. Tolerance is moral -- and
traditional morality is simply intolerant. Moore rips the traditional morality
crowd as a bunch of conspiratorial bigots: "Your people are up before dawn
figuring out which minority group shouldn't be allowed to marry today." Socially liberal Republican Sen. Arlen Specter labels traditional
morality immoral: "When you talk about gay rights, it's a civil rights issue,
and you ought not to count votes on it. In the long sweep of history, those who
favor gay rights are on the right side of the issue. It's a matter of moral
principle." The new religion of tolerance provides a slippery slope into moral
oblivion. All activity must be tolerated, since sympathy for friends and family
trumps traditional morality. With tolerance for sin comes acceptance of sin, and
with acceptance, promotion. With Roe vs. Wade, Americans grudgingly tolerated
abortion. With tolerance came acceptance: Those who received abortions were no
longer seen as immoral. Instead, they were the moral equals of ordinary mothers.
Finally, abortion was promoted as a valuable alternative to pregnancy completion
-- and those who condemned abortion were slandered as sinners. When Republicans passed the partial-birth abortion ban last year, Sen.
Barbara Boxer of California complained that such policy was immoral: "What I
think is immoral is to take your views ... or my views ... and force them on the
people of this country," she stated. "It is disrespectful, it isn't right, and
it isn't what America is about." The same progression holds true for gay marriage: tolerance, acceptance
and promotion. The first step is always tolerance, and tolerance must be
attained by appealing to sympathy. The easiest way to gain sympathy for social
liberalism is to point out close friends or relatives participating in sin, and
then dare us to condemn their actions. So can we condemn Jeannette Angell as a whore? Can we condemn
homosexuality or abortion as sinful? Of course we can. Morality cannot survive
in a NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) context. If morality extends only to those far
removed from our personal lives, it has no meaning. To preserve traditional
values, justice must take precedence over sympathy.
©2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc. Contact Ben Shapiro | Read Shapiro's biography townhall.com
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