The great historian of Germany, Fritz Stern, wrote a column in 1988 in the New York Times pointing out that liberalism was both America’s “noblest tradition” and “the best promise of the West.” “Attacks on the L-word debase us all,” he wrote.
The column came in the wake of the 1988 Republican National Convention in New Orleans, where President Ronald Reagan had volubly denounced the Democrats as being “liberal, liberal, liberal.” Stern, a refugee from Nazi Germany and the author of classic books on the rise of the Nazis, including The Politics of Cultural Despair, retorted that the US was, in fact, liberalism’s greatest achievement, just as Nazism was its most terrible negation. Liberalism’s “greatest victory has been the American Revolution; its greatest pronouncement, the Declaration of Independence; its greatest bulwark, the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights.”
As America prepares to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, Stern’s argument is worth reiterating for two reasons — one sad and the other even sadder. The sad reason is that the Republican demonization of the word “liberal” has continued so relentlessly since 1988 that many Americans now associate liberalism with the excesses of wokery rather than the glories of the US Constitution. The even sadder reason is that the denunciation of liberalism has grown from a political strategy into a political program.
[OP] bloomberg | a month ago
Adrian Wooldridge for Bloomberg News
The great historian of Germany, Fritz Stern, wrote a column in 1988 in the New York Times pointing out that liberalism was both America’s “noblest tradition” and “the best promise of the West.” “Attacks on the L-word debase us all,” he wrote.
The column came in the wake of the 1988 Republican National Convention in New Orleans, where President Ronald Reagan had volubly denounced the Democrats as being “liberal, liberal, liberal.” Stern, a refugee from Nazi Germany and the author of classic books on the rise of the Nazis, including The Politics of Cultural Despair, retorted that the US was, in fact, liberalism’s greatest achievement, just as Nazism was its most terrible negation. Liberalism’s “greatest victory has been the American Revolution; its greatest pronouncement, the Declaration of Independence; its greatest bulwark, the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights.”
As America prepares to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, Stern’s argument is worth reiterating for two reasons — one sad and the other even sadder. The sad reason is that the Republican demonization of the word “liberal” has continued so relentlessly since 1988 that many Americans now associate liberalism with the excesses of wokery rather than the glories of the US Constitution. The even sadder reason is that the denunciation of liberalism has grown from a political strategy into a political program.
Read the full essay here.