Call me profoundly misguided if you want. Call me immoral if you must. But could you please stop calling me arrogant and elitist?(Via Kevin Drum.)
I mean, look at it this way. (If you don't mind, that is.) It's true that people on my side of the divide want to live in a society where women are free to choose and where gay relationships have civil equality with straight ones. And you want to live in a society where the opposite is true. These are some of those conflicting values everyone is talking about. But at least my values — as deplorable as I'm sure they are — don't involve any direct imposition on you. We don't want to force you to have an abortion or to marry someone of the same sex, whereas you do want to close out those possibilities for us. Which is more arrogant?
We on my side of the great divide don't, for the most part, believe that our values are direct orders from God. We don't claim that they are immutable and beyond argument. We are, if anything, crippled by reason and open-mindedness, by a desire to persuade rather than insist. Which philosophy is more elitist? Which is more contemptuous of people who disagree?
the thoughts of one Robert Stribley, who plans to contribute his dispatches with characteristic infrequency
Sunday, November 07, 2004
Three Fingers Pointing Backatcha
Michael Kinsley chimes in post-election with an excellent column, which benefits from no further comment from me:
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