Not long after he posted his
ninety-five theses on the door of the Wittenberg Cathedral, Martin Luther began
writing about how society should be reformed.
One of the subjects he addressed was marriage, but he did so in a very idealistic
way.
In his book The
Reformation, Dairmaid MacCullough off-handedly remarks that this was
because Luther was, at the time, a monk who had no personal experience with
marriage. What then is Barack Obama’s
excuse? He has been in the White House for
nearly six years. Why hasn’t he learned
the ways of the wicked world?
Leon Panetta is perplexed as
to why the president has not handled our foreign policy more
realistically. He believes that Obama is
both smart and courageous, yet has not dealt with the threat of radical Islam
firmly or decisively. Why is this so?
There are many reasons, but
one is that our chief executive is a born-again idealist. He has the heart, if not the mind, of an
eternal adolescent. Although no longer a
community organizer by occupation, he remains one by emotional commitment.
Consider the fight against
ISIS. Our commander-in-chief would like
a totally antiseptic war. It would be
one in which none of our soldiers was injured.
Not a single one would be shot at because none would have boots on the
ground. With respect to those in the
sky, they would be in-and-out so quickly that the enemy could not touch them.
As for civilian casualties,
they would be reduced to zero by rules of engagement so restrictive that only
the occasional tank caught on open ground would be in danger. This sort of rinky-dink operation would go on
for years until the caliphate laughed itself to death.
Now I understand why
students at Harvard believe that the United States is more of a threat to world
peace than ISIS. They are young and
inexperienced. Although they are
convinced that they understand how things work, they know and have witnessed
far less than they imagine.
But the president of the
United States? His generals have explained
what needs to be done if our forces are to prevail. Why won’t he listen? The only thing that makes sense is that he
doesn’t want to win militarily.
And why doesn’t he? Because he thinks we don’t deserve to win. For him, if we are not the Great Satan, we are
at least the Great Despoiler. We mess up
whatever we arrogantly touch; hence the world would be a better place if we
minded our own business.
Those Harvard students
assume they are enlightened because they realize that George Washington did not
cut down the cherry tree. They assume
this awareness makes them sophisticated.
Unfortunately they do not
know how much they do not know. Yes,
history, including American history, is strewn with untoward events. Countless bad things have happened. Nonetheless many of these are deemed immoral
because we are measuring them by an idealistic yardstick.
Thus, most marriages would
look like disasters if we expected them to exhibit eternal harmony. In fact, many are very good—considering that
the spouses are human. The United States
is likewise a wonderful country given that it is inhabited and governed by
humans. Our history is one of
improvements, not of decline.
For Barack Obama, however,
this is insufficient. His hoped to
change us into a fairytale land of complete equality and everlasting
peace. We would lead by example rather
than impose our parochial values by military might.
Obama’s allies, and there
remain tens of millions of them, are as militantly naïve. They too hope that if we sing Kumbaya in
unison, the sun will break through the clouds and the doves will fly overhead.
Still, those of us who have
not taken the tonsure have a right to be skeptical. We may not be perfect beings, but at least we
know enough to realize that idealism has its limitations.
Melvyn L. Fein, Ph.D.
Professor of Sociology
Kennesaw State University