George Rebane
People instinctively try to draw some compensating outcomes out of the Tucson massacre. What they take away and how their ongoing lives are informed by the senseless carnage there illuminates who they are.
The reaction of the broad left to this tragedy has been instant and, in my view, maniacal. I see no counterpart from the broad right. When this is pointed out here and elsewhere as further evidence of the obvious gulf between the ideologies, our middle of the road centrists immediately counsel tolerance and understanding. This as if the mere recognition of the real world is somehow offensive to them. In perusing the media, including the blogosphere, I have found no occasion of the centrists attempting to pour some of their calmative oil on the agitated left. It makes me again question whether there is any real difference between the self-declared centrists and the students of Marx to Alinsky.
The left’s response, from Congress to the progressives, is to immediately renew and again reveal their distrust of the law abiding individual with new proposals to proscribe liberty and expand the state’s monopoly of power.
My takeaway is that I am more confident than ever in the credo that I have carefully built over the decades. Those on the left and center consider anyone who believes as do I in fiscal responsibility, constitutionality, free market capitalism, individual liberty and responsibility, and small government to be an (adjectives deleted) right winger. If that is the only label that allows them to distinguish us from them, then the aftermath of Tucson again makes me proud to proclaim – well, so be it.
In sum, I have yet to find any of my principles weakened by what has happened, nor did I expect that kind of discovery. But I have found that these principles are more dear than ever, and that invitations to come together in some sort of undefined and compromised halfway point appeals to me even less. Why would I want to embrace any of the collective tenets that have always denigrated the individual, see the state as man’s highest achievement, and continue to counsel violent overthrow instead of peaceful and productive transformation? That said, I will never shut my mind to new arguments that seek to paint ‘the middle’ as a happier land. But beyond that muddled middle, to me the left remains as a living lie to all that separates us from the herds of animals.


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