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Bill Kauffman on “Politicians Without Roots”

April 17th, 2008 · 5 Comments · Politics

Bill Kauffman lives about an hour from me, in Batavia, NY, where I spent my first two years of undergrad (good ol’ GCC).  Politically, he’s a conservative/libertarian and a localist, and he’s written a few books that are on my reading list.  I’ll be able to meet him in a few weeks, as he’ll be speaking at a regular pub gathering that I attend (I was the speaker at the last one…I’m going to start referring to myself as “having opened for Bill Kauffman” now).

Yesterday in CounterPunch, his article “Politicians Without Roots” made the following claim, and I think it’s right on the money:

Why does this matter? What’s wrong with electing competent but rootless people to public office? Because just as one cannot love the “human race” before one loves particular human beings, neither can one love “the world” unless he first achieves a deep understanding of his own little piece of that world. America is not, as the neoconservatives like to say, an idea: it is a place, or rather the sum of a thousand and one little, individuated places, each with its own history and accent and stories. A politician who understands this will act in ways that protect and preserve these real places. A rootless politico will babble on about “the homeland”–a creepily totalitarian phrase that, pre-Bush, was not applied to our country.

People lacking strong identifications with specific places-a block, a village, a city, a state, a region-will transfer their loyalties to abstractions. Woodrow Wilson, a displaced Southern minister’s kid, renounced the traditional American practice of neutrality and tossed the First Amendment in the scrap heap in his crusade to “make the world safe for democracy.” George W. Bush, the Texan-cum-Yankee prep-school cheerleader, has wasted astronomical sums and thousands of lives in a campaign whose ostensible purpose is to democratize the Middle East and “rid the world of evil.” The costs of such grandiose schemes may be measured in billions of dollars and acres of corpses. In addition, political power is centralized, citizens are uprooted, and the economy undergoes wartime distortions. These are reckoned acceptable prices to pay for the achievement of mighty (if ultimately unachievable) abstractions. But democracy was no safer despite the First World War, and I daresay evil will exist long after U.S. troops come home from Iraq.

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5 responses so far ↓

  • 1 lonelypilgrim // Apr 17, 2008 at 11:16 am

    Interesting piece. Consider the fact that all 3 current contenders for 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue are not from where they represent. One is from Illinois, and it is not Obama, but has been first lady of a southern state and now represents a northeastern state. Another was born in Hawaii, lived in quite a few places (both in and out of the “homeland”), and now represents Illinois. The other was born in Panama, has been quite a few places as well and now represents Arizona.

  • 2 Jeremy // Apr 17, 2008 at 11:20 am

    Ah, yes. I love Bill Kauffman, no matter how extreme he becomes sometimes. He’s one of those unique characters whose existence makes me happy.

  • 3 Jeremy // Apr 17, 2008 at 11:23 am

    His new book is out now, by the way.

  • 4 Travis Prinzi // Apr 17, 2008 at 11:25 am

    Jeremy, yes, he’s going to be speaking about that book at this upcoming gathering. I’m excited.

  • 5 grub // Apr 17, 2008 at 9:16 pm

    Travis,
    Where is this gathering?

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