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          <title>Reason Magazine - Staff</title>
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<title>National Velcro</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/29729.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0684825031/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;The Next American Nation&lt;/a&gt;, by Michael Lind, New York: The Free Press, 415
pages, $22.95&lt;p&gt;
Michael Lind is a young man full of learning, information, humor--and
himself. Formerly an editor at the neoconservative &lt;em&gt;National Interest&lt;/em&gt;,
later with &lt;em&gt;Harper's&lt;/em&gt; and &lt;em&gt;The New Republic&lt;/em&gt;, he attracted attention
earlier this year for articles in the &lt;em&gt;New York Review of Books&lt;/em&gt; attacking
Pat Robertson. Now he comes forward with &lt;em&gt;The Next American Nation&lt;/em&gt;, very
much a young man's book, full of brilliant analysis and surprisingly effective
bombast--and, alas, some crackpot solutions. I think Lind is on the right track
in searching for a usable, tolerant American nationalism that can help knit
together our Tocquevillian post-Cold War America. But his solutions leave me
with the feeling that the search must go on.&lt;p&gt;
One problem has its roots in Lind's periodization. Like political scientist
Stephen Skowronek in &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0674689364/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;The Politics Presidents Make&lt;/a&gt; and constitutional
scholar Bruce Ackerman in &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0674948416/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;We the People&lt;/a&gt;, Lind divides American history
into periods. Like them, he locates one break at the Civil War and
Reconstruction; unlike them, he locates the next not at the New Deal but in the
civil rights revolution of the 1960s. This is essential to his characterization
of America's three &quot;Republics&quot;: The first was Anglo-American and Protestant,
the second was Euro-American (i.e. with lots of immigrants) and
Judeo-Christian, and the third is Multicultural. He is appropriately scornful
of the affirmative action thinking which depicts America as a nation of five
separate races (&quot;Asian and Pacific Islander&quot; is one) and notes that the Third
Republic is &quot;associated with declining living standards, polarized politics,
and foreign policy failures.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
That's more than a little overwrought: It's not as clear as Lind thinks that
living standards are declining; party politics are always to some extent
polarized; and amid foreign policy failures we did manage to win the Cold
War.&lt;p&gt;
My greater problem with Lind's formulation, however, is that he makes
multiculturalism too central to American life. Affirmative action bureaucrats
may classify by race, college and corporation bureaucrats may classify by race,
and college and corporate vice presidents may join affirmative action
bureaucrats in congratulating themselves on achieving the right numbers--Lind
admirably describes these scams.&lt;p&gt;
But do most Americans really swallow the multicultural line? We do live in a
segmented society, but in segments largely determined by personal choice,
maintained by voluntary action, and penetrable by just about anyone who wants
in. (Lind has made his living in neoconservative, leftish, and neoliberal
segments already.) Lind argues sensibly that affirmative action should mostly
be junked; ingeniously, he suggests the Census Bureau should stop counting by
race. But my impression is that the whole rotten structure of racial quotas is
going to tumble down rapidly, given the speed with which the California Civil
Rights Initiative has injected the issue into the political process.
Affirmative action will die because it never had a strong place in Americans'
hearts.&lt;p&gt;
If Lind is an acute analyst of affirmative action, I am afraid he has got it
all wrong when he denounces the Third Republic's &quot;overclass.&quot; His idea is that
in this period of American history all power has gone uniquely to the top 20
percent of Americans: professionals and managers who manipulate the economy and
both political parties to monopolize the benefits of economic growth for
themselves. But there has always been a top 20 percent in American history. And
the overclass today as before has proven exceedingly permeable.&lt;p&gt;
Lind cheap shots the argument by noting that George Bush was chauffeured to
kindergarten in a limousine. But Bill Clinton, Bob Dole, Newt Gingrich, Ross
Perot, and Colin Powell surely weren't--and the list goes on and on. Sure, a
lot of people on the &lt;em&gt;Forbes&lt;/em&gt; 400 inherited much of their wealth. But a
lot of others on the list started off with nothing. Sometimes clever young men
who break into the overclass feel guilty and therefore impelled to argue that
no one deserves to be there.&lt;p&gt;
Lind's preoccupation with the overclass leads to the biggest defect of &lt;em&gt;The
Next American Nation&lt;/em&gt;--its prescription of big government programs as the
cure for the ills that ail us. To provide high-wage jobs for low-skill American
workers, he wants zero net immigration and a &quot;social tariff&quot; penalizing
companies that invest abroad; to teach people skills, he wants &quot;single-payer
education&quot; from kindergarten to college; he wants tariff walls and national
health insurance.&lt;p&gt;
This is classic European welfare state circa 1960, complete with protectionism,
and it has obvious problems, as a glance at Europe today suggests. It doesn't
create many jobs (and even without immigration, America has a growing
population and needs new jobs) and it doesn't generate much technological
innovation (which America's Third Republic has done admirably). It is not
suited to America's folkways--which Lind describes admirably, even
eloquently.&lt;p&gt;
Like Bill Clinton, Michael Lind imagines that most Americans are seething with
anger and envy over the fact that some Americans are getting rich. He supposes
therefore that the majority is ready to support a politician who promises to
take money away from the rich and give it to everyone else. Lind advocates
&quot;unsubtle, crude, old-fashioned redistribution of wealth, through taxation and
public spending.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
But over the past 20 years, as the income distribution has become less
egalitarian, the politics of economic redistribution has become perceptibly
weaker. And that's not because the overclass has prevented such a politics from
emerging: Politicians from Dick Gephardt to Jesse Jackson to John Connally have
preached redistribution and protectionism and haven't gotten very many votes.
The American people don't want the medicine Lind is prescribing, because they
don't think they have the disease he diagnoses.&lt;p&gt;
Near the end of his book, Lind quotes Herbert Croly's &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1555530621/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;The Promise of American Life&lt;/a&gt;, the book which, as Lamar Alexander recently pointed out,
provides the basic argument for a centralized bureaucratic government to solve
common problems and redress economic inequality. But Croly was 1909 and this is
now. Lind should read Alexander or Jim Pinkerton, who argues persuasively that
public opinion is moving to dismantle the centralized bureaucracies of Croly's
Progressive era and to replace them with market mechanisms and forms of choice.
The centralized stuff, of which Lind wants more, just doesn't work very well
anymore.&lt;p&gt;
But nationalism does, or can. Lind takes the risk of sounding foolish in
describing lyrically his vision of American nationalism, and I think he carries
it off very well.&lt;strong&gt; &lt;/strong&gt;If we are in a segmented society, we still need
something to hold us together as a nation, and Lind has done as good a job as
anyone lately in describing what it is: partly a heritage of laws and political
institutions, certain habits of liberty, particular folkways and styles of
behavior.&lt;p&gt;
There is much in common here with the nationalism of Newt Gingrich, but
unfortunately Lind seems determined to damn the Republican right and all its
works. The result is a set of nationalist policies unlikely to be embraced by
the American people and likely to diminish the nation, economically and
otherwise, if they are.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">29729@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Aug 1995 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Michael Barone)</author>
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