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Judaism and the Culture of Outburst
We’re Mad as Hell, and We’re Not Going To Fake It Anymore
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It feels like we’re “Falling Down” again. Fourteen years ago, Michael Douglas’s badly coiffed Everyman captured a cultural moment of impotent white rage: Furious at downsizing, outsourcing and the increasing falseness of American life, but powerless to stop any of it, Douglas’s character finally snaps — and we watched, mostly sympathetically. That year, 1993, came the dawn of both globalization and true multiculturalism in America, and so, on both Left and Right there was a sense of something spiraling out of control.

Today, the outburst is back — and while our official response is condemnation, the truth is far more complex. Consider the eruptions in the past few months alone: Don Imus (who’d gotten away with years of sexism and homophobia) lost his job, thanks to the words “nappy-headed hos”; the word “macaca,” uttered by former Virginia governor George Allen, arguably tipped the Senate in favor of the Democrats; Michael Richards’s use of the “N-word” wound up on YouTube; Mel Gibson’s drunken antisemitic tirade made headlines. Even the professionally obnoxious Ann Coulter got in trouble for calling presidential hopeful John Edwards a “faggot.”

The pattern that followed was strikingly similar in all these cases. With the exception of Coulter, these offenders were found guilty in the court of public opinion, no matter the profuseness of their apologies — not because they offended American public opinion, but because they expressed it: These celebrities expressed anger, fear and prejudice that many people feel, and feel guilty about feeling, and in language that we, like frightened schoolchildren terrified of punishment, have been sternly warned not to use. Indeed, we have a very Jewish system of condemning certain acts, and a very Christian one of implying evil intents. The result? A cultural moment of intense anger roiling under ubiquitous false speech. And when someone’s ire comes bursting to the surface so publicly, we can’t help but stop and stare.

Consider first the rage, which transcends political ideology. For those on the Left, the reasons include a lost and pointless war, unstoppable globalization, an inept president, climate change, the homogenization of American culture and a shocking erosion of civil liberties. For those on the Right, they include a loss of American prestige, an implacable and barbaric enemy, the “pornographication” of American society, the loss of traditional values and, not least, the loss of European-American hegemony: Classical music and classic rock both giving way to the barbaric beats of rap. Indeed, fully a quarter of the nation thinks that we are trapped in a doomsday war of civilizations, and that “American culture” is being destroyed by unchecked immigration and loss of “values.”

Yet on both the Right and the Left, the rage that is at the heart of these concerns goes unaddressed, even unspoken. Not since Barry Goldwater (or perhaps Pat Buchanan) has a mainstream conservative politician “told it like it is” and given voice to anti-multiculturalist rage — unlike in Europe, where French, Dutch and German elites do so all the time. And on the Left, the last politician to seriously criticize American imperialism, hyper-capitalism and globalization was Ralph Nader, and we all know how that turned out. With mainstream public figures having calibrated their message for maximum inoffensiveness, to actually give voice to any of these deep concerns relegates one to the blogosphere.

Juxtaposed with this infuriating cocktail of rage and repression is a pervasive culture of B.S., surrounding us with meaningless nonspeech and pointless legalism. By now we’re all used to endless phone trees (“To ensure customer service, this call may be recorded”); operators in Bangalore pretending to be from Topeka; divesting ourselves of shoes and fluids at the airport; flight attendants reciting legal formulae from rote and ubiquitous “customer service” initiatives.

Enter the outburst. Again, the press tends to treat these explosions as if they’re offenses against the American way, but really they’re expressions of it. These bigoted outbursts are angry, honest and against the rules — rules with which many, many people do not agree. No wonder we can’t help but watch; we get both the frisson of a taboo being transgressed and the sense that there but for the grace of God go I.

Americans have never much liked double-talk, at least in theory; “fancy speech” is for the Europeans, and “Give ’em hell, Harry” Truman is the kind of hero only this country could produce. But our current culture offends an even deeper norm: that people are supposed to be judged not by how best they conform to a set of written rules, but by the truth of their souls. In our idealized town squares, courtrooms and homes, we’re meant to be judged on who we really are, not just on what we say or do. After all, aren’t we supposed to evaluate our fellow citizens by “the content of their character”?

If this sounds religious, it’s because it is. Our current agon around political correctness is a direct repetition of one of the fundamental struggles of Judaism and Christianity: the great debate between Paul and the talmudic rabbis. In Jewish law, the emphasis is on acts, not intentions; deed, not creed; external duties, not internal predilections — circumcise the flesh; avoid forbidden foods; do not do work on the Sabbath. Early Christianity, in contrast, places the emphasis on the internal rather than the external — circumcise the heart, not the flesh (“Real circumcision,” said Paul in Romans 2:29, “is a matter of the heart — it is spiritual and not literal”); act with love, not with ritual purity; have faith. The Talmud spelled out the details of tort law, but Jesus asked us to love our enemies. Jewish law governs the body (what you say, what you do), Christian faith the soul (what you feel, what you believe). For biblical and talmudic Judaism, there is no “who we really are” apart from what we actually do, but Jesus called the Pharisees “whitewashed tombs, which on the outside are beautiful, but inside… full of the bones of the dead and of all kinds of filth.” (Matthew 23:27)

Today we have cooked up a toxic brew of the Jewish and the Protestant. On the one hand, our taboos are very “Jewish.” They govern the external (what one says), not the internal (what one feels); in the hyper-PC world, you can be as racist or communist as you like, as long as you keep your mouth shut. (Indeed, the whole post-outburst conversation is like some political parody of “Seinfeld,” parsing the meanings of “nappy-headed” and “macaca,” condemning the utterers of these talismanic phrases.) On the other hand, our response to these Old Testament transgressions is a New Testament assumption that racist speech means a racist heart. At the risk of oversimplification, the Jewish approach is “Thou shalt not say this word.” The Christian approach is “Thou shalt not have this thought.” And our current approach is “If you say this word, you probably have this thought, and so we condemn you.” Thus by necessity we’ve all become whitewashed tombs, ever on the lookout for the slightest trace of filth.

Of course, we should not simply legitimize offensive speech; surely by putting some comments beyond the pale of civility, we do make our society safer and more inclusive. But code-based legalism is diametrically opposed to evaluation of inner character — and combined, they lead to disaster. Our culture is so filled with dissemblance that when a public figure blurts a single epithet, we instantly see evidence of a corrupt and bigoted heart: “Aha! This is what he really thinks! This is who he really is!” We can’t help but look, because we ourselves are under the same yoke of repression as our celebrity heroes. Thus the repression of speech that led to the outburst in the first place is strengthened, and the deep causes of prejudice left unchecked. (In this regard, it’s noteworthy that such homophobic statements as Coulter’s “faggot” joke or former NBA star Tim Hardaway’s “I hate gay people” radio rant do not lead to banishment; regarding gay rights, unlike racial/ethnic multiculturalism there is still a public debate on the merits.)

Without a respectable forum for conservative concerns about race, sexuality and ethnicity, or liberal ones about economic and social justice, we’re reduced to a nation of pathetic and puritanical detectives, looking for hints of animus in cryptic utterances, and ever more closely holding the reins of what we are and are not allowed to say. Yes, our Pharisaic system of speech-patrol has made hate speech unacceptable in polite circles. But is enforced politeness really the way to truth — or reconciliation?

Jay Michaelson has a law degree from Yale and is pursuing his doctorate at the Hebrew University, where his masters thesis was on “Anti-lawyerism and Anti-Semitism.”

Fri. May 11, 2007


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Comments

Paul Gertz said:

A place to begin is to un-hyphenate america

Thu. May 10, 2007

BDL said:

The culture of outburst is a creation of lazy news-media. What could be easier than reporting an outrageous statement and then sitting back while every public person who wants to grab a headline eagerly volunteers statements of condemnation? Much easier than the hard work of investigative journalism!

Thu. May 17, 2007

Anita said:

enforced politeness - perhaps you do not worry about it because the time when insulting jews has passed at least in the US. so you have no apprehension that you will turn on the TV and hear someone making a seriously anti-semitic remark. it is taken for granted by all decent people that the old stereotypes about jews are wrong and that those who think like that still should not be given a public forum to disseminate their views. As a black person, I am glad for the enforced politeness that prevents people from saying that I look like a monkey or something like that.

I guess it comes down to what do you want to say. I am against what we call multiculturalism, affirmative action, and the whole America is evil school of thought. Is it not possible to talk about those things from a conservative viewpoint without insulting people?

Thu. May 17, 2007

BIll said:

Martha Nussbaum writes: The real "clash of civilizations" is... within virtually all modern nations — between people who are prepared to live on terms of equal respect with others who are different, and those who seek the protection of homogeneity and the domination of a single "pure" religious and ethnic tradition. At a deeper level, as Gandhi claimed, it is a clash within the individual self, between the urge to dominate and defile the other and a willingness to live respectfully on terms of compassion and equality, with all the vulnerability that such a life entails." (see http://chronicle.com/temp/reprint.php?id=t15b1l92nf46jb6sq8b82dpsct9f9003)

Enforced politeness then becomes, with respect to the "conservative concerns about race, sexuality, and ethnicity" a mechanism not only for the control of speech but resultingly a mechanism for the control of action, since speech, repeatedly approved, leads to action. And this, I think, is a strong and positive good -- yes, I'm a straight white guy, but you know what? Imus was in the wrong, Hardaway doesn't know what he's talking about, and fundamentalists of all stripes want to impose their fundamentalism.

It's a shame that the BS-ness of discourse prevents the emergence of a real dialogue about economic and social justice, but that's far more a function of the economic institutions we've allowed to control our mechanisms of speech than it is a cultural antipathy to straight talk.

Thu. May 17, 2007

Claire Ducker said:

Terrific article! I'd like to mention, just for the record, that the inner transformation that should accompany Christian faith is supposed to lead, at least over time, to better behavior.

Thu. May 17, 2007

Jamil Nasir said:

Not to argue with the article's conclusions, but isn't it also true that PC originated in a salutary attempt by American cultural "authorities" (such as college administrators) to replace with external rules a vanished internalized code of civility, at least in venues whose core functions would be facilitated thereby (such as college campuses)? The collapse of this internalized code can be seen in such things as the proliferation of "shock jocks" and in rap music itself. I wonder if such a code is not more needed in modern America than in many other places, if only because of the wide divergence in the cultural assumptions of the many minorities who make up our culture.

An example: a couple of weeks ago, a Hispanic man yelled at me for taking his spot in a Sam's Club parking lot. My instincts impelled me to go over to his car to talk to him, a conciliatory gesture in Arab culture. This nearly led to a fistfight, as his own Hispanic instincts apparently interpreted this advance into conversational space as a challenge. In a country whose demographics (like it or not) require people with such divergent cultural instincts to rub shoulders, what substitute is there for an external rule of civility, enforced by social pressure? Unlike European countries, the US has no officially sanctioned culture against which cultural minorities can be judged and found wanting.

I would modify Michaelson's conclusion to the extent of saying that the desirability of PC, like so many other things, is a matter of degree. In some contexts -- e.g., preventing white supremacists from intimidating black students on college campuses through otherwise protected speech -- it is clearly salutary. In other contexts it is clearly absurd. It seems to me that neither a wholesale rejection or acceptance of PC is correct; unfortunately, the issue is more complex and more nuanced than that.

Freud long ago identified the "rage" that every civilized man harbors within himself at the restrictions and limitations with which he is encircled by the requirements of modern life. He concluded that this was an inescapable condition of modern humans, and not necessarily a failing in the rules that restrained them. That is, what the Pharisees had wrong was not that external rules are needed, but in the absurd degree to which they applied these. Unfortunately, life is complicated, and shades of grey must often be distinguished.

Thu. May 17, 2007

Jon said:

I don't get it. If Don Imus really thought the team were 'nappy-headed hos' then he shouldn't have his job, and if he didn't really think it then he shouldn't have said it. How is allowing celebrities to abuse their access to broadcast media striking a blow for freedom, exactly?

Thu. May 17, 2007

kippy said:

Don Imus didn't get in trouble only for the "n****-headed h*s," though people like you want to keep repeating this. His fellow on-air commentator Bernard McGuirk also used the term "jigaboos." People use racist and anti-Semitic discourse all the time, without penalty. Look at Rush Limbaugh, for example, or the "mainstream" media's commentary about Barack Obama. It's not just the small swathes of the Far Right. There's a lot less "speech-control" than you appear to be aware of or imagine.

Thu. May 17, 2007

Edward J. Rodríguez said:

There is no such thing as "Hispanic instincts." This is a really ignorant and insulting comment. But hey, why not characterize a vast and diverse people with appalling generalities like this? Because it's just as bad when people run around assuming that "Arab instincts" conclude with suicide bombings or holy war. Think about it!

Thu. May 17, 2007

alice said:

Jon and Bill are both completely right. Imus was wrong to say something so ugly, hurtful, and irrelevent. There is no defence. And Amere icans should be ashamed for making celebrities out of ugly hate-mongers.

Fri. May 18, 2007

PK said:

"Americans have never much liked double-talk" ???

This from the nation that gave us "passed" instead of died, "issue" instead of problem, etc etc.

Of course, we in rest of world would happily ignore "land of the euphemism and home of the weasal word", except for the fact that USA political (democracy! freedom!) and military (collateral damage!) doublespeak continues to make a mockery of those of us who would otherwise defend your practices, let alone principles.

However, you may like to note that bigotry and intolerance is generic, not specific, to our species.

Repeat after me:

"Amercica is not the world, the world is not America"

Tue. May 22, 2007

Jon Monroe said:

Policing speech is what cultures do. Without it, there is no culture.

The problem with today's speech police is the same as the problem with religious fundamentalism: the reading of morality into every nook and cranny of human existence. This is what stagnates and strangles a culture, as opposed to building one.

America has no problem with speech patrolers, it has a problem with moralizers.

Wed. May 23, 2007