Why Liberalism Disappoints – The Atlantic
In the summer of 1917, Walter Lippmann strutted into Washington as it prepared for war. Both he and his young country were ready to prove their worth as superpowers. He was 27 and newly married, recruited to whisper into the ear of Newton Baker, the secretary of war. Lippmanns reputation already prefigured the heights to which it would ultimately ascend. None other than Teddy Roosevelt had anointed him the most brilliant young man of his age.
Following the timeless capital tradition of communal living, the Lippmanns moved into a group house just off Dupont Circle. Their residencewhich they shared with a coterie of other fast-talking, quick-thinking, precociously influential 20-somethingsinstantly became the stuff of legend, the wonkish frat house of American liberalism. Denizens included Felix Frankfurter, the Harvard Law professor who went on to make his mark with forceful crusades on behalf of unpopular causes, and then with Supreme Court opinions and a wide array of well-placed protgs.
Dinner conversations at the rowhouse extended late into the night. Older minds gravitated to these meals, eager to watch a new vision of government being hammered out. Among the eminent guests who welcomed a respite from stuffy, self-important Washington were Herbert Hoover, Louis Brandeis, and Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. It was Holmes, a regular and enthusiastic presence at the table, who gave the place a namethe House of Truth.
The legal historian Brad Snyder has reconstructed the glories of this group house in a bulging, careful study of its inhabitants. Though The House of Truth drowns in detail, Snyders account usefully maps a hinge moment in American political history. Progressivism, that amorphous explosion of reformism in the early years of the century, had come and gone. Thinkers like Lippmann and Frankfurter increasingly referred to themselves as liberals, by which they didnt mean advocates of laissez-faire governance. Their use of the label connoted something closer to its present-day meaning, and their faith in governments capacity to improve the world was boosted by the war. Liberals believed that Americas entry into the global conflagration would transform their country. The experience, they hoped, would rouse a new spirit of solidarity. It would corrode the ingrained Jeffersonian hostility to the state, and would permit America to exert a beneficent influence beyond its borders.
These messianic hopes were quickly shredded by brutal realities: the savage nature of martial nationalism, the suppression of dissenting opinions, the way their hero Woodrow Wilson permitted the imposition of vindictive terms on vanquished Germany. The pessimism acquired during those harsh years became foundational to liberalism, too, endowing it with a newfound passion for civil liberties and the rights of minorities. Liberalisms enthusiasm for the state was painfully tempered.
One of the essential qualities of liberalism is that it always disappoints. To its champions, this is among its greatest virtues. It embraces a realistic sense of human limits and an unillusioned view of political constraints. It shies away from utopian schemes and imprudent idealism. To its critics, this modesty and meliorism represent cowardice. Every generation of leftists angrily vents about liberalisms slim ambitions and its paucity of pugilism. Bernie Sanders and his followers join a long line of predecessors in wanting liberalism to be something that it most distinctly is not: radical.
Liberalisms enemies on the right cultivate precisely this confusion. They have always tried to smudge liberalisms identity, to insinuate that it exists on the same continuum as communism and other terrifying ideologies. And, in truth, liberalism wasnt always entirely clear about the gap that separated it from the left. Before the disappointments of World War I, many of the earliest liberals styled themselves as radicals. They shared the primary concerns of the activist left (womens suffrage, the labor movement) and championed the same assault on the repressive mores of Victorian culture. For a brief, Edenic moment, liberals and radicals carried an almost identical sense of possibility about the world.
In Young Radicals, Jeremy McCarter (with whom I briefly worked at the New Republic, the magazine Lippmann helped establish in 1914) has written an extremely readable, theatrically narrated group biography of the men and women swept up in the optimistic prewar spirit. Its a romantic account of a romantic period. Among McCarters subjects is a young Lippmann, back before his Washington group-house days. Fresh from Harvard, he went to work for the socialist mayor of Schenectady, New York, and mingled with poets and revolutionaries in Greenwich Village. He became a favorite of the heiress Mabel Dodge, who presided over bohemias preeminent salon in her lowerFifth Avenue apartment.
Young Radicals isnt intended as an intellectual historyits a study of the politically engaged life. McCarter sets out to answer the urgent questions that preoccupy critics of liberal expediency: Where do idealists come by their galvanizing visions of a better world? Why do they give up health, safety, comfort, status to see those visions made real? In the process, his book helps chart the emergence of a sharp divide between staunch radicals and ambitious liberals, as Walter Lippmann and his old comrades go their separate ways. Over the course of McCarters narrative, Lippmann assumes his role as the archetypal liberal thinkeror, from the perspective of his leftist former friends, the epitome of the self-satisfied establishment.
The hero of McCarters cast of radicals (which also includes Alice Paul, John Reed, and Max Eastman) is the most formidable of Lippmanns critics, and in almost every way his antithesis. While Lippmann exuded the suavity of his Upper East Side breeding, Randolph Bourne was rough-hewn, emotive, and winningly vulnerable. He described himself as a puny, timid, lazy, hypochondriacal wretch. An obstetricians forceps deformed his face at birth; a childhood bout with tuberculosis twisted his spine and wrecked his gait. When Ellery Sedgwick, the editor of The Atlantic, invited Bourne to lunch at the Century Club, he canceled upon Bournes arrival, terrified at the prospect of being seen with him. (That didnt stop Sedgwick from assigning Bourne pieces.) A self-styled outsider, Bourne wrote beautifully about the comforts of friendship and the value of marginalized opinion.
Overcoming abandonment by his alcoholic father, Bourne studied at Columbia with John Dewey and imbibed his mentors ecstatic faith in democracy. His most lasting essay, Trans-national America, was published in this magazine in 1916. It poetically celebrated what we now call identity politics. Bourne shunned the idea of the melting pot. Instead, he imagined a cosmopolitan nation in which new arrivals would resist assimilation and inhabit their ancestral traditions. America is coming to be, not a nationality but a trans-nationality, a weaving back and forth, with the other lands, of many threads of all sizes and color. Freed of the pressure to fit into a monolithic American mold, immigrants would help create a new national culture. Bourne dreamed that it would be more creative, more tightly bound by mutual understanding. A beloved community was the phrase he borrowed (from the philosopher Josiah Royce) to describe his vision.
Bourne and Lippmann, nearly exact contemporaries, were never close friends. But Lippmann encouraged Bourne to write for the New Republic. And Bourne looked at Lippmanns intellectual ease and sweep with admiration bordering on envy, even if his own thinking propelled him in quite a different direction. He called Lippmanns Drift and Mastery, his 1914 case for imposing scientific order on society, a book one would have given ones soul to have written.
Try 2 FREE issues of The Atlantic
War brought an end to Bournes idolization. Although he never publicly attacked Lippmann by name, he hurled spears at him, excoriating liberal intellectuals for dragging America into the conflict. It was a war made deliberately by intellectuals, Bourne fumed, arguing that they championed the war only so they could exploit the mobilization efforts in order to build the national government of their dreams. (War is the health of the state, Bourne aphoristically argued in a manuscript found after his death.) In the proximity of power, the intellectuals felt the thrill of being on the craft, in the stream, even though they didnt fully believe in the wars underlying justifications.
When Bourne denounced Lippmann and his ilk, he leveled a charge that has dogged liberal elites ever since. He skewered them as disingenuous and greedy for power. They supported immoral policies for their own purposeswhich they considered loftywhen they should have known better. Decades later, the broadsides against the liberal hawks who lent their imprimatur to the Iraq War echoed this sentiment. And Bournes indictment anticipated the accusation of callous cynicism directed at Bill Clintons criminal-justice policy, seen as a ploy to win back white working-class voters. Barack Obamas response to the financial crisis, which let bankers slip away unpunished for their misdeeds, roused similar ire.
Over his career, Lippmann provided plenty of examples that validated the core of Bournes critique. As Snyder tells the story, Felix Frankfurter turned on his roommate from the House of Truth for similar reasons. Frankfurter worked tirelessly to save the anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti from the accusations that sent them to death row. He eloquently transformed their fate into the quintessential liberal crusade of the 20sand was apoplectic that when he tried to enlist Lippmann in his effort, he struggled to rouse him from his icy evenhandedness.
Yet however valid Bournes reasons for scything Lippmann and the liberal intellectuals were, there was also something juvenile about his attack. Indeed, Bourne himself might have described his defiance that way. His earliest essays advocated youthful rebellionand denounced the oppressive hold that the middle-aged exerted over society. Youth is the incarnation of reason pitted against the rigidity of tradition, he wrote. His beef with his seniors had some of the glibness of a teenage tantrum, and so did his attack on the liberal intellectuals. He simply couldnt countenance the notion that Lippmann might want to lead American policy in a more humane, internationalist direction out of motives that were public-minded as well as vainglorious. Its true that Lippmann took smug satisfaction in his audiences with the president and in the attentions of Wilsons most trusted adviser, Colonel Edward House. Yet he didnt hesitate to brutallyand influentiallyturn against Wilson for botching the aftermath of the war.
Bourne will always make a readier hero than Lippmann. In the last days of 1918, as the war drew to a close, he died of the Spanish flua tragic end that had nothing to do with the intellectual exile he endured during the war, but that added to his aura of martyrdom. Bourne spent the last year of his life pushed out of magazines that had once welcomed him, with hardly any outlets for his thunderous denunciations. His death froze him in the fresh-faced state of youthful rebelliousness that he celebrated.
The radicals of the prewar years are good grist for inspiring yarns. But to what end? Many of the protests of these years were aesthetic gestures, statements of nonconformity rather than expressions of a political program. John Reed, Lippmanns Harvard classmate and another of McCarters protagonists, was a burly adventurer who went off to chronicle the Russian Revolution. The thrilling firsthand account he produced, Ten Days That Shook the World, was romantic and admiring. Lenin, who blurbed the book, rewarded Reed for his powerful propaganda by burying him in the wall of the Kremlin. Though you would hardly guess it from McCarters tender treatment, Reeds career is a cautionary tale of the reasons to fear idealism and high-profile protest merely for the sake of rebellion.
What makes Lippmann unappealing is his detachment, the cool logic that prevented him from shaking his fist at the status quo with Reed-esque fury. (Lippmann mocked Reed in a witty hatchet job in the New Republic, Legendary John Reed.) At the same time, that detachment produced enduring results. His hastily written books might not always thrill like a Bourne essay, but to watch him wrestle with the deepest questions about mass psychology, the behavior of corporations, and the value of tradition is to discover punditry as a philosophical discipline capable of lasting value.
Take the essays that Lippmann published in The Atlantic just after the war, collected in the slim book Liberty and the News. Lippmann wrote anxiously about the rise of what we have come to call fake news. He drew attention to the way the media spread rumors and deliberate lies, and he sounded the alarm about a public ill-equipped to sort through conflicting facts. He was concerned about filter bubbles and the power of gatekeepers. He tried to rally journalists to rise to the challenge, exhorting them toward greater professionalism and a higher sense of purpose. Preserving liberty, he argued, required redefining the concept. Liberty is the name we give to measures by which we protect and increase the veracity of the information upon which we act.
In the midst of our current convulsions, Lippmann has returned as an object of disdain. Not Lippmann the man, of course, but the technocratic spirit he once championed and embodied. To counter the rising authoritarian tide, the temptation is to run far away from that spirit. Indeed, protest and anger are essential bulwarks of democracy. And theres no doubting the moral blind spots of the reigning elite. But a truly radical solution to our crisis is actually the old liberal one, to reestablish the legitimacy of disinterested experts, to restore the institutions that provide a basis for common conversation. The path to Bournes beloved community now runs through Lippmann.
Read the original post:
Why Liberalism Disappoints - The Atlantic
- Theres A New Law Firm In Washington. It Wants To Take All The Cases Liberals Hate - dailycaller.com - May 19th, 2025 [May 19th, 2025]
- The Liberals aren't tabling a budget. How does that affect the economy and your wallet? - CBC - May 19th, 2025 [May 19th, 2025]
- Liberals will table a budget this fall, Prime Minister Mark Carney says - CBC - May 19th, 2025 [May 19th, 2025]
- Ted OBrien says Liberals need to reflect modern Australia with more women in party - The Guardian - May 19th, 2025 [May 19th, 2025]
- Sussan Ley needs bold thinking to modernise the Liberals. She should look to David Camerons Tories | Tom McIlroy - The Guardian - May 19th, 2025 [May 19th, 2025]
- Political parties can recover after a devastating election loss. But the Liberals will need to think differently - The Conversation - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- Donald Trump Jr. Helped Fund a MAGA Marketplace. Liberals Are Using It as a Tooland a Warning - Vanity Fair - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- University Admissions and Liberals Should Focus on Class, Not Race - Bloomberg.com - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- After the Australian election, what the crisis of the Liberals reveals - World Socialist Web Site - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- Liberals pick up another seat by a single vote after results of judicial recount in Montreal-area riding - The Globe and Mail - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- The Liberals have a long road to relevance and Sussan Leys slim victory means she begins on shaky foundations - The Guardian - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- The Liberals are about to select Peter Duttons replacement. Heres who is in the running - The Guardian - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- View from The Hill: Ley says Liberals must meet the people where they are, but how can a divided party do that? - The Conversation - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- David Souter, former GOP Supreme Court justice who often sided with liberals, dies - Yahoo News - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- Poilievre asks Liberals to steal his ideas on carbon tax, housing and more - MSN - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- Conservative fundraising email suggests Liberals trying to 'tip the scales' in recounts - CBC - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- Four charts that show why Liberals are struggling to win elections - AFR - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- The Impossible Plight of the Pro-Tariff Liberals - The Atlantic - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- SANDOVAL: Liberals Ruin Iconic Site With Yet Another Massive Eyesore - dailycaller.com - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Joe Rogan mocks Canada for re-electing Liberals, claims Pierre Poilievre turned down podcast offer - Yahoo News Canada - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- The final Canada election result has a twist in the tail, Liberals on the receiving end - The Economic Times - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Liberals on brink of near-total wipe-out in Australia's suburbs - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Gender quotas are the only way for the Liberals to go: Simon Birmingham - The Conversation - May 8th, 2025 [May 8th, 2025]
- Gina Rinehart urges Liberals to stick with Trump-like policies in the wake of election loss - The Guardian - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Analysis | Trump is making foreign liberals, free trade and immigrants great again - The Washington Post - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- When Liberals Were on "The Wrong Side of History" - Catholic Answers - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Second-term Albanese will face policy pressure, devastated Liberals have only bad options - The Conversation - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- CNNs Donie OSullivan pushes back on annoying liberals who criticize humanizing Trump supporters - New York Post - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- The Liberals women problem may seem intractable, but heres what they could learn from the Teals - The Conversation - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- What the Liberals election win could mean for Canadas economy - The Real Economy Blog - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Mark Carneys Liberals win Canadian election upended by Trump, Conservative challenger loses his seat - PBS - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Canada's Liberals win minority government; Carney says old relationship with US 'is over' - Reuters - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Why Carney's Liberals won election - and the Conservatives lost - BBC - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Trump wanted to break us, says Carney as Liberals triumph in Canadian election - The Guardian - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Mark Carneys Liberals Win Canadas Election. Here Are 4 Takeaways. - The New York Times - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Sweeping policy reset needed to reconnect with voters, senior Liberals say as others call for lurch further right - The Guardian - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Canadas Liberals fall short of a majority in Parliament, and Conservative leader loses his own seat - WOWT - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Conservatives less trusting of science compared to liberals in the United States - PsyPost - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Trump Inserts Himself Into Canadas Election and Liberals Cant Stop Saying Merci - Rolling Stone - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Afternoon Update: Liberals start soul-searching; husbands denial in mushroom trial; and a 478-hour slow TV stream ends - The Guardian - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Game change Canadian election: Mark Carney leads Liberals to their fourth consecutive win - The Conversation - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- The game change Canadian election: Mark Carney leads Liberals to their fourth consecutive win - The Conversation - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- The Liberals need a few floor-crossers to form a majority. That might not be so easy - CBC - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Trump campaign chief claims he visited Australia to advise Liberals at start of election campaign - The Guardian - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- How the Liberals came up short in Ontario and lost their majority bid - CBC - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- The Liberals Who Cant Stop Winning - The Atlantic - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Morning Mail: Israels intensified plan to seize Gaza, the voters that swung to Labor, Liberals in crisis - The Guardian - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Mark Carneys Liberals win Canadas crucial election and set to form minority government - The Independent - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- Conservatives signal they are willing to back Carney's Liberals on some legislation - CBC - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- The Conservatives and Liberals refuse to stand on guard - The Globe and Mail - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Candidates make final pitch in Canada election with Liberals holding lead - Yahoo - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Polls tighten as Canadians head to the polls. Will Liberals pull off the ultimate comeback? - GZERO Media - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- When equal does not mean the same: Liberals still do not understand their women problem - The Conversation - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Federal Election Poll: Liberals poised to win slim majority or minority government - Vancouver Sun - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Stories That Show How Modern Liberals Have Lost Their Way - The New York Times - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Yes, Kashmir Faces Settler-Colonialism But Not The Kind That Left-Liberals Want You To Believe - Swarajyamag - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Liberals on course to take majority of N.S. seats, polls and experts agree - CBC - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Red ripple in blue Calgary? Liberals eye record gains in Conservative stronghold - CBC - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- POLLS: Liberals hold a steady lead, and other poll insights - SooToday.com - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Liberals vs. Conservatives: comparing proposed immigration policies ahead of the 2025 election - CIC News - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Candidates make final pitch in Canada election with Liberals holding lead By Reuters - Investing.com - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Mandryk: Liberals will need more than a few NDP votes to win in Saskatchewan - Regina Leader Post - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Mark Carneys Liberals will stand up for British Columbia against President Trump - Liberal Party of Canada - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- 'Slugging it out': Liberals up by four points ahead of election, poll finds - National Post - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Carney tells Assembly of First Nations Liberals are committed to implementing UNDRIP - CBC - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- The phantom menaces of the Liberals and Conservatives - The Globe and Mail - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- Mark Carneys Liberals will protect B.C. workers and build Canada Strong - Liberal Party of Canada - April 27th, 2025 [April 27th, 2025]
- First YouGov MRP of 2025 Canadian federal election shows Liberals on track to win a modest majority - YouGov /Research - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Liberals Vs Conservatives: Where Things Stand In Canada Polls 2025 - NDTV - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- As Canadas Elections Loom, Liberals, Not Trump, Are the Real Danger to the Dominions Sovereignty - The New York Sun - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Election Writ 4/22: Liberals still favoured after flurry of new polling - The Writ - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Meet the Conservative populist looking to unseat Canadas Liberals - The Washington Post - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Liberals and Conservatives fighting for support from centrist voters, poll shows - National Post - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Letters, April 23: Liberals should thank Trump if they win - Edmonton Sun - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- The fascist moment is here: Have mainstream liberals heard the alarm go off? - Salon.com - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Mark Carneys Liberals Stand Up to President Trump for Qubec Identity and Economy - Liberal Party of Canada - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Liberals promise $130B in new spending and no timeline to balance the budget - Yahoo News Canada - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Bill Maher taunts liberals with 1-word description of himself after Trump dinner - SILive.com - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- What went wrong with the Liberals verification system and what does it mean for the future? - The Globe and Mail - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]
- Liberals try and recapture Toronto-St. Pauls after byelection loss - CityNews Toronto - April 23rd, 2025 [April 23rd, 2025]