The facts destroy their mythology, that's why.
Sean McElwee at Salon:
American’s right wing, you
see, is terrified of history because it is always sentimentalizing it.
Many of its arguments rely on a feeling of nostalgia for “good old
days,” that appeals almost exclusively to aging whites. That
means that a more accurate history, one that considers groups that are
traditionally marginalized — women, people of color, Native Americans,
immigrants and the poor — don’t necessarily sit that well. Their
stories, the stories of the downtrodden, crush the false narrative that
many conservatives like to imagine — that of a idyllic past marred by
the New Deal, women’s liberation and civil rights.
In Denver, a school board recently tried to limit the historical curriculum
to only events that would,
“promote citizenship, patriotism, essentials and benefits of the
free-market system, respect for authority and respect for individual
rights.” Needless to say, much of American history — the Great
Depression, the Trail of Tears and the internment of Japanese-Americans —
would, under those parameters, need to obfuscated. The Republican
National Committee, meanwhile, has issued a statement calling the new
Advanced Placement U.S. History standards ”radically
revisionist.” But conservatives may want to take the plank out of their
own eye before examining the speck in their neighbors. Here are the
most important distortions of history the right has promoted recently.
SNIP
There was a time when conservatism was a philosophy concerned primarily
with wrestling with and understanding tradition and the limits of human
reason and ability. However, these days conservatism is reactionary — it
has been imbued with racism, conspiratorial thinking and a
hyper-individualistic capitalism. Instead of questioning the limits of
reason, it has jettisoned it. In its place remains free market dogma, bad Biblical interpretation and
a sentimentalized past. In place of reason and argument, most
conservatives rely on fantasy and reminiscence. Allowing conservatives
to redefine the past will be incredibly harmful.
No comments:
Post a Comment