Yesterday, we wrote part one of From The Author Of SC&A: Plaza San Marco And Blog Wars, in which we discussed the recent flare up between some right of center bloggers.
We were going to publish the concluding and final post on the matter on Monday, but because of some of the emails we received, we decided to publish on the matter today.
We noted yesterday that, ‘Ideas are meant to provoke thought, not necessarily agreement.’
Unfortunately in just about every environment and discipline, personalities often obscure that truth. There are global warming scientists who take great umbrage at their peers who question their work and conclusions, there are politicians who will insist that evil cam be negotiated away and there are entire populations who will embrace dysfunction with open arms so as to avoid reality. There are still others who will hold on to ideas long after they are disproved because they feel that somehow, they have been personally discredited. The same behavior can be found in the lesser disciplined blog world. Personalities often trump ideas when it comes to criticism or even the validity of ideas.
I have noted on more than one occasion that when the scientist who discovers a cure for cancer, the ‘Euruka!’ moment will not be the result of his work alone or his to claim as his own. The cure to cancer and other diseases will come about because of the failures of others. Every researcher who undertakes a study or research project that does not pan out, adds to the body of knowledge from which that the ‘Eureka!’ scientist will have learned. The efforts and direction he takes in his quest comes about as the result of those who preceded him. When it is all said and done, the cure to cancer will have been arrived at by the work of thousands of researchers. Scientists and researchers understand this. The reason there are so many professional journals is because they serve as an outlet for ideas that inform, educate and most importantly, build upon a body of knowledge and serve as a springboard for new ideas. Sometimes the published work becomes accepted science or medicine, sometimes that published research is disproved by other research. In all cases, the bodies of work of the various disciplines are enhanced.
Notwithstanding how the media plays the story or their need for heroes, the aforementioned is the truth about research and science, When personalities get in the way, objectivity gets tossed out the window and we are all the poorer for it.
Objecting or rejecting to an idea is not objecting to or rejecting an individual.
The authors of Gates of Vienna have certain ideas (many of which this writer agrees with, though not all) that they are passionate about. In Europe, those same ideas have found various political outlets and vehicles. The GOV have attached themselves to some of those vehicles and have come to represent those interests on this side of the Atlantic (whether they wanted to or not).
Predictably, there were those who were highly critical of the authors of the GOV. Some of the people associated with the movement to which they are aligned have less than stellar pasts and some have been aligned with the hard right these new groups wish to disassociate. That said, simply clicking their heels three times and wishing for their past associations to disappear isn’t a very good idea.
(It is here that I must point out that it is my belief that authors of GOV would never knowingly or willingly associate or align themselves with any group or individual they believed to be in the least bit xenophobic, racist or bigoted.)
The right to criticize or question to with ideas and groups with GOV have chosen to align themselves is inviolate. It is up to the GOV to present their case and argue their ideas. Even if and when the criticism becomes personal, their positions can only be strengthened by arguing their case and not responding to anything other than substantive critique.
When Michelle Malkin wrote the NYT bestseller In Defense of Internment, she was excoriated by a broad spectrum of the media and blogosphere. She did not respond to the visceral hatred (very few of whom actually read her book)- instead, she responded to the serious criticism of her work and she acquitted herself more than admirably. I also have no doubt that further editions will reflect ideas that she may want to revisit and she will do so fairly and honestly.
Had Malkin responded to those who made their attacks personal, she would have been the lesser for it.
The same can be said for GOV and those who attacked them. What started off as a disagreement of ideas quickly descended into a clash of personalities. Had the exchanges focused on substance and not on personalities, this ‘family feud’ would not have escalated into the bloodletting we all see.
Charles Johnson author of Little Green Footballs was correct to address the reality of the European hard right. The truth of the matter is that the hard right in Europe not only exists, but thrives. Reader Expat left a comment on our initial post. She writes and addresses the truth that Euro politics are not clear and dry cut. Neither GOV or Johnson can address the issues that face Europe, easily or glibly:
Just today there were neo-Nazi demonstrators at the May Day rallies in Hamburg and Nuremburg (about 1000 each). There were counter-rallies by normal people who reject their ideology, but there were also counter-rallies by leftist thugs looking for a fight. In the east, some towns have sizable neo-Nazi groups that the government is worried about. A lot of these people have been the losers of reunification who resent lost jobs and competition from immigrants. Some probably feel that they get less help from the government than the foreigners. I think there is also a sex imbalance because young women moved west. It is very complex. It should also be noted that far left ideology is also gaining ground.
One thing is certain: Amid all the left-right name calling, it is hard to discuss the problem of radical Islam at a level most of us would prefer, that is to say at a level that is productive. Two of the most focused in Germany are Seyran Ates and Necla Kelek, both of whom point out that glib multiculti slogans are not the way to go. They say that Germany has to stand up for womens rights and the democratic values.
If we want to save Europe from the same fate as Venice, name calling will only detract from the matter. The far European far right is no more a myth than is the European far left.
Sadly, it appears that parts of the right blogosphere are beginning to resemble the majority of the left blogosphere, a place where style upends substance and ‘pivot and attack’ are the response to questions or requests for discussion.
Criticism is not a zero sum game- it not an all or nothing proposition. We can criticize and disagree and still share core beliefs. To believe otherwise is to play the game the way the Democrats are in this presidential campaign. The hatred between Obama and Clinton is vicious and visceral and when the dust settles, no amount of sawdust will clean up the bloodbath. The same is true of this latest LGF-GOV dust up.
There is enough bad behavior here to go around. Both Johnson and the GOV have made accusations and counter accusations. Both have used projection and displacement on each and on anyone who happens to agree or disagree with them on any one point. Each of the protagonists seek to secure a certain victim status at the hands of the other and at times the exchanges have reached histrionic proportions.
In the end, even when there is but a hairsbreadth separating some on the right, this dust up has proved we can be just as petty and malevolent as those on the left, with equally as destructive consequences.
What a pity.

May 2, 2008 at 9:20 am
I have found this series extremely interesting. When I found relatives in former East Germany, we made a trip to meet them. It was an eye opener for me, to say the least. I sat and listened to their stories of how life was before the wall came down and how it is now after the wall is down. Although so many years have already past since that wall came down, the bitterness and pain these people experience is still very acute. They really felt that life was easier in many ways living under communism. When they took me around various places in former East Germany (the Dresden area), I was shocked to still see so much destruction from WW II. This was 10 years ago when I met them…but I still speak with them on the phone at times and I always want to hear their perspective on things. The common man can give you some real insight.
This is a great series. Great thoughts to ponder.
May 2, 2008 at 10:03 am
Viola,
One thing that bothered me after reunification was that western systems were sometimes unwisely imposed on the East. Some of this was understandable: there were many decisions to be made in a very short time and expectations were high. I was struck, however, that the eastern Polykliniks were dissolved. These were medical facilities with different specialties represented that provided primary care. With reunification, these doctors were expected to set up private practices as in the West. It was seen as a financial burden, and it was rightly resented by the people, who said they liked the clinics.
I also remember visiting Leipzig a few months after “die Wende” and seeing the academic bookstore windows full of books on insurance and taxes. What an intro to democracy!
May 2, 2008 at 1:08 pm
[...] marvelous two-parter up about the escalating row between several right-of-center bloggers. Part 1. Part 2. ‘Ideas are meant to provoke thought, not necessarily [...]
May 4, 2008 at 9:44 am
In re: how slowly paradigms shift: There is an old comment, the attribution of which now escapes my memory, to the effect that scientific theories change one death at a time. Scientists, those most well versed in the scientific method and most aware of the need to disinvest their personal integrity in their theories, do not easily give up old paradigms, even in the face of new data. The old paradigms finally evolve only when the old scientists give them up for good.