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Sunday's New York Times best-seller list has been announced,
and perched on it proudly are two leftist screeds. Michael Moore's
Stupid White Men, which continues to hold down number one,
is joined at number eleven by David Brock's Blinded By the Right.
Brock's book is so vile that even liberal reviewers seem embarrassed
by it. But there it is on the list. Not that the conservative presence
has dwindled. Overall, the list is still filled with overtly conservative
books, and patriotic books about 9/11. Bias is at number
two, followed closely at three by the new and climbing conservative
entry, Shakedown: Exposing the Real Jesse Jackson. Shakedown
confirms the success of Regnery, the publisher responsible for so
many of the conservative books flooding the list of late. At number
four, Love, Greg & Lauren is an interesting new entry.
It's a book about the struggle of a couple, the wife of which received
burns over most of her body in the attack on the World Trade Center.
And Steve Emerson's American Jihad, an exposé of Islamic
terrorist organizations in America by an author deemed politically
incorrect until 9/11, is at fourteen on the list. Finally, the new
entry at fifteen, the bottom of the list, is Frank Bruni's book
on George Bush.
So the list
has not lost its conservative cast, but the Left is back
and it's mad. It's evident that the war has not killed the culture
war. The Left, I think, is stunned by what's happened to it, and
is looking to soothe its feelings by chowing down on some political
comfort food some fun "hate the Right" books focusing
on domestic issues. On both sides, the strategy of choice is attack.
It's also notable that the list has so many political books in the
first place. The war itself seems to be politicizing the country.
Just after
9/11, there was some talk that the real war would put an end to
the culture war. It isn't turning out that way. The best-seller
list shows that, at least on the domestic side, the culture war
is alive and well. And we've seen the same thing in Congress
take the Pickering nomination, for example.
Although the
country is, for the most part, united on the need to fight the war,
the meaning of the war itself is still up for grabs. The domestic
culture war, instead of being shoved aside by the necessity of defeating
terrorism, is actually being fought out through our efforts
to shape and support that global battle. Everyone knows about the
disagreements between emboldened conservatives and the increasingly
divided and defensive antiwar Left. But the more interesting cultural
controversy may be the fight amongst the war's supporters to spin
the war itself. Liberals would like to turn the war into a crusade
against social conservatism abroad and at home. Conservatives
draw from the war a reaffirmation of traditional American values,
and a lesson in the dangers of multiculturalism. In time, I expect,
we'll see a best-seller list filled with books that try to make
sense of the war from competing cultural perspectives.
So while the
nation is united behind the war, and conservatives are in many ways
surging, don't look for the culture war to be ending any time soon.
Just wait till the first Supreme Court vacancy hits the fan.
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