At long last, the right has joined the culture war
By Ben Domenech and Emily Jashinsky
NOVEMBER 5, 2021
We’re spiking the football because it’s long past time for the political establishment to pay attention. Culture is a kitchen table issue, just as much as health care bills and taxes, despite years of smug assurances otherwise from consultants and pundits. We were right and they were wrong. They are not good at this, and their incompetence is hurting the cause of conservatism and, more importantly, the country.
In the wake of Glenn Youngkin’s blue-state culture war upset, CNN panelists pondered their echo chamber. Sen. Joe Manchin tried to pump the brakes on President Joe Biden’s massive social spending plan. James Carville unloaded. Others doubled down on the false and toxic narrative that dissenters from the left’s cultural dogma are motivated by bigotry.
While radical illiberalism crept from academia to the so-called real world, the establishment assured us it was a non-issue. Republicans boasted of their brilliant strategy to moderate on social issues, a theory that earned them Twitter follows from Very Serious People and airtime on cable news.
It was all wrong. All of it. The culture war is not only a moral battleground for conservatives, it’s a politically advantageous one. It animates voters. People care, not because they’re racist or unsophisticated, but because an unhealthy culture affects their everyday lives just as immediately as a higher tax bill. It’s not a distraction from “the issues,” it underlies all of them.
The culture war is here and has always been here because it’s the pivot point that determines what the nation has been and will become. The other side has understood it from day one, and has been cleaning up on it in a leftist blitzkrieg that has gone on for generations.
The years since have seen an explosion of controversy over political correctness, with battles over safe spaces, speech codes, and the assertion of privilege spreading from academia into the broader culture.
“[S]ince 2012, the nation has changed,” Ben wrote in early 2016. “[Mitt] Romney ran the last campaign of the pre-gay marriage era. The years since have seen an explosion of controversy over political correctness, with battles over safe spaces, speech codes, and the assertion of privilege spreading from academia into the broader culture. The flashpoint in this new phase of the culture war is the issue of speech: what our culture and politics will allow you to say, and where you are allowed to say it.”
“Congratulations to the American left,” he concluded. “You asked to win the culture wars — and evangelicals are giving you Donald J. Trump.”
At the Texas Tribune Festival in 2018, Ben was the only voice on a skeptical panel insisting, “We have a radicalized culture war that is here now, it’s here tomorrow, it’s here forever as far as the eye can see, and it’s not going away,” echoing sentiments he expressed long before Trump entered politics.
In 2019, before George Floyd’s killing, Ben warned that “the left may be turning into the culture war white walkers.”
That same year, we both wrote that Big Tech censorship was a “kitchen table issue,” in the face of staunch disagreement from thinkers on the establishment right who dismissed concerned voters as a “rounding error.” Why? Because censorship, as Ben wrote long before, had become a key element of the left’s culture war. Here’s an excerpt from The Transom at the time:
If you want to know why, just consider this: Internet activists hear about people like Steven Crowder. What you don’t hear about is the local realtor who put a Trump sign in their lawn, and because of that, the neighborhood listserv and Nextdoor app filled up with people campaigning to nuke their Google mentions, respond to their Facebook page with constant harassment, and deface their ads in the neighborhood, calling them a white supremacist. That is not a major story. It is not even a minor story. But it is the sort of story that radicalizes a church, a community, a group of likeminded people … and then you start looking for politicians who take this issue on.
On the same subject, Emily explained in 2019 why it was significant that Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., was “waging war on both the regulatory and cultural fronts” when it came to Big Tech. When Hawley and a handful of other GOP candidates ran on culture war issues in 2018, she reported on the wisdom of their strategy, writing, “As populist sentiments against coastal elites run high among conservatives — bolstered by Trump’s strategic media baiting — [they] are casting themselves as the authentic representatives of their states, and their opponents as the pawns of wealthy outsiders.”
Earlier this year, Emily argued, “The political discourse is not a zero-sum game limited by time and space,” noting, “economic distress and the immediate destruction of free expression are not mutually exclusive.” Here’s an excerpt from that essay, which explained why normal people are animated by cancel culture.
What’s the point of freaking out over Dr. Seuss? Isn’t it just a culture war fomented by Beltway MAGA cynics and their Fox-guzzling fans? After all, most of his beloved books are still for sale. This is actually an instructive example, although I hardly expect the left to give their angle any pause.
To the vast bipartisan coalition of normal people annoyed by “cancel culture,” news of backlash against Dr. Seuss means norms have quickly shifted even more out of alignment with their fundamental values. It also makes people feel as though they’ve been implicated in gross moral wrongdoing. It creates anxiety that these rapid and unpredictable shifts will soon catch up with them or their loved ones, and that reading a simple children’s book could land them in hot water with enforcers of these new norms in their communities.
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