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Browsing Tag: Victor Davis Hanson

May the Door Not Hit You in Your Ample Backside.

November 2020.

     Victor Davis Hanson was doubtless displeased with the election’s outcome.  Though still not quite conceding the loss, Mr. Hanson applied himself to a new task:  a frantic airbrushing of the Trump regime.  Who knew that President Quarter Pounder with Cheese was so misunderstood and that the animus toward him sprang not from his actions but was merely a quibble over style?  Mr. Hanson surpassed himself on this one.  My response was printed by The Richmond Times-Dispatch.

Here’s Victor Davis Hanson’s opinion:

Victor Davis Hanson, “Will Trump Ride Off into the Sunset?” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 13 November 2020, A15; “Will Donald Trump Ride Off into the Sunset, Another Tragic Hero?” The Chicago Tribune, 11 November 2020 (www.chicagotribune.com/opinion/commentary/ct-opinion-trump-legacy-victor-davis-hanson-20201111-t6aqm2ofb5cy5archlpuw5zo3a-story.html).  If The Richmond Times-Dispatch posted an online version of this article, its search engine is unable to locate it.  The link above leads to the version in The Chicago Tribune.

Here’s the letter:

“Hanson’s Defense of Trump Rides Off on Wrong Trail,” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 17 November 2020, A14 (https://richmond.com/opinion/letters/letter-to-the-editor-nov-17-2020-hansons-defense-of-trump-rides-off-on-wrong/article_a9607437-092c-5b20-af96-0b94582b4d39.html).

An addendum.

To observe the length policy, the letter’s final paragraph was dropped before submission.  Here it is:

     Hanson likes cinematic references.  Here is one for him:  Harry Potter’s Professor Dumbledore and his Pensieve, a receptacle for storing memories for later reference and sharing with others.  Hanson’s Pensieve, however, consigns his memories to oblivion.  De rigueur for Hanson’s right-wing coterie is magical thinking followed by a deep drink from the River Lethe.  The classical allusion should not be lost on Hanson.  Then again, perhaps he has forgotten it.

A Progressive VP? The Horror. . .

May 2020.

     Why would any Democrat accept strategic advice from Victor Davis Hanson, a commentator whose political proclivities are no secret?  His lionizing of The Cryptofascist in Chief has been unflagging and he in no wise wishes the left well.  Perhaps his motive, should his favored result not materialize, is to mitigate the damage by pushing the Democratic ticket rightward.  It’s political advice worthy of a Never Trumper, which Mr. Hanson is not.  It’s also an absurdity.  The Richmond Times-Dispatch didn’t print my response.

Here’s Victor Davis Hanson’s op-ed:

Victor Davis Hanson, “As in 1944, the Democratic Running Mate Seems Pivotal,” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 1 May 2020, A15 (https://richmond.com/opinion/columnists/victor-davis-hanson-column-as-in-1944-democratic-running-mate-selection-seems-pivotal/article_d169b479-9ee6-594f-920e-3d591b694eef.html).

Here’s the unpublished letter:

     Victor Davis Hanson’s feigning of concern for the impact of Joe Biden’s vice-presidential pick upon his electoral prospects conceals neither Hanson’s defective drawing of historical analogies nor his continuing demonization any politician a scintilla left of center.  No rational Democrat should accept political counsel from an apologist for President Trump.  A far better historical parallel for the current moment is not the 1944 election, when Henry Wallace gave way to Harry Truman as FDR’s running mate, but the 1932 election that brought Roosevelt to power.

     Mired in the Great Depression, a disillusioned electorate faced a stark choice:  A GOP candidate, whatever his virtues, who subscribed to an outmoded philosophy of governance providing the people no succor and who implied that putting on a happy face would somehow dissipate the crisis, versus an empathetic Roosevelt, who pledged to move the levers of power to alleviate misery.

     Hanson, moreover, breeds confusion through misleading political labeling.  He has long equated “social democracy” with “socialism” and “socialism” in turn with “communism,” despite their manifest differences.  He now tosses “progressivism” into his nomenclature cauldron to concoct a verbal witches’ brew intended to frighten political naifs.

     What concerns fuel Hanson’s historical and political misapprehensions?  Has the coronavirus too tellingly stripped bare fissures in the American social compact and vindicated the progressive social critique?  Is the so-called Overton window – the spectrum of acceptable political discourse – opening too widely to be readily slammed shut again?  Might a progressive running mate prove the Democratic Party the big tent it purports itself to be and further endanger the president’s electoral fortunes?  Could it be the that the voters will not recoil from a progressive but embrace one?  Hanson’s motives aside, the anointing of a milquetoast centrist will serve neither the Democratic Party’s nor the nation’s interest at this juncture.

Better Dead Than Red. Really?

September 2019.

     Is it any surprise that Victor Davis Hanson, as a personal project, endeavors to perpetuate a hoary conservative fable:  Socialism is precisely equivalent to rule by Mao, Lenin, Stalin, and Castro and even uttering the word socialist will transform the US of A into Venezuela overnight.  “The gentleman doth protest to much, methinks.”  Hyperventilation such as Mr. Hanson’s says one thing to me:  His fear is not that a more expansive safety new won’t work but that it will.  The Richmond Times-Dispatch printed this response to Mr. Hanson.

Here’s Victor Davis Hanson’s column:

Victor Davis Hanson, “Historical Ignorance:  Why Socialism and Why Now?” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 30 August 2019, A9 (www.providencejournal.com/opinion/20190831/my-turn-victor-davis-hanson-why-socialism-and-why-now).  If The Richmond Times-Dispatch posted an online version of this article, its search engine is unable to locate it.  The link above is to the version that appeared the The Providence Journal.

Here’s the letter:

“Hanson Offered Outdated Analysis of Socialism,” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 7 September 2019, A10 (https://richmond.com/opinion/letters-to-editor/letters-to-the-editor-sept-7-2019-drug-price-discrepancy-infuriates-reader/article_24217b96-d6da-5b7e-bcd7-be6acf1a4ca0.html). (Scroll down).

Completely, One Hundred Percent Exonerated!

May 2019.

     Muddying the findings of the Mueller report became a cottage industry in GOP World.  If obfuscation is the game, who better to enlist than Victor Davis Hanson?  Ever the good soldier, he applied himself with gusto to a willful misreading – if there was a reading – of the Special Counsel’s conclusions.  This was not a difficult letter to write, since George Terwilliger III had served as Mr. Hanson’s warmup act.

Here’s Victor Davis Hanson’s opinion:

Victor Davis Hanson, “Progressives Face a Bleak Post-Mueller Landscape,” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 10 May 2019, A9; Yahoo, 9 May 2019 (https://news.yahoo.com/progressives-face-bleak-post-mueller-103001666.html).  If The Richmond Times-Dispatch posted an online version of this article, its search engine is unable to locate it.  The link above is to the version that appeared on Yahoo.

Here’s the letter:

“Hanson Misrepresents Mueller Report Findings,” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 16 May 2019, A10 (https://richmond.com/opinion/letters-to-editor/letters-to-the-editor-may-16-2019-hanson-misrepresents-mueller-report-findings/article_26be70e6-9913-57d2-88a5-e83a1a4b74ca.html).

There Are Lies, Damned Lies, and Then There Are. . .

October 2018.

The Richmond Times-Dispatch often prints syndicated columns by Victor Davis Hanson, a classics professor and fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution.  I began to read some of his political opinions after the election from a commitment to peruse more right-leaning commentary to see how the election of Donald of Queens was being processed in those circles.  His editorials seemed consistently dubious factually.  When, in a single piece, he misleadingly asserted both that His Loathsomeness was making great strides with the Black electorate and that economic growth was substantially higher than under the Obama administration, a response was warranted.  I took a dive into the data, my suspicions regarding Mr. Hanson’s factual claims were confirmed, and a letter was sent.  The Richmond Times-Dispatch didn’t print the bit, but that didn’t alter a conviction I had formed.  Mr. Hanson’s apparently willful, calculated distortions merited a rebuttal.

Here’s Victor Davis Hanson’s editorial:

Victor Davis Hanson, “Trump Reaches Out for Black Voters,” The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 19 October 2018, A11; “Could Trump Win 20 Percent of the African American Vote in 2020?” The Providence Journal, 20 October 2018 (www.providencejournal.com/opinion/20181020/my-turn-victor-davis-hanson-could-trump-win-20-percent-of-african-american-vote-in-2020).  If The Richmond Times-Dispatch posted an online version of this article, its search engine is unable to locate it.  The link above is to the version that appeared the The Providence Journal.

Here’s the unpublished letter:

     Victor Davis Hanson engages in statistical sleight of hand to buttress his claim of burgeoning African-American support for President Trump.

     An approval rating of 20% among African Americans in “some” unnamed polls provides grist for Hanson’s mill.  He presumably relies on an August NAACP survey placing Trump’s rating at 21%; however, he neglects contemporaneous polls with lower figures (Gallup, Reuters, and YouGov/Economist, all 13%; Quinnipiac, 9%).[1]  He ignores 3% approval and 93% disapproval found by Washington Post-ABC News [2] and does not trouble himself with the NAACP poll’s 79% disapproval.[3]  Sober reading of the evidence places African-American support for Democrats somewhere between 85 and 90%, a range Hanson identifies as “usual.”  His phenomenon is illusory.

     Hanson’s assessment of the economic conditions undergirding his notional surge in African-American affection for Trump is likewise problematic.  He cites a decline in African-American youth unemployment to 19.3% – a welcome development – but chooses for his comparative benchmark the highest figure from President Obama’s tenure, 48.9% in 2010, its Great Recession zenith, while forgetting that it fell as low as 23.2% (November 2015).  A rate surpassing this Obama-era low has occurred nine times under Trump and was 29% this past April [4].  Hanson also plays fast and loose with measures of the nation’s overall economic performance when he places growth at “nearly 4 percent per year.”[5]  Two facts emerge:  Economic indices can fluctuate widely across short periods and Trump’s main economic accomplishment has been his inability to derail economic improvement that began years before his election.

     One must ponder the reasons for Hanson’s unscholarly reading of evidence.  Is he enlisted in Trump’s post-truth cadres?  Is he endeavoring to manufacture a self-fulfilling prophecy through statistical obfuscation?  If the GOP believes its prospects with the African-American electorate are sunny, then why the efforts, especially in Georgia [6], to suppress votes?

[1] Ramsey Touchberry, “Donald Trump’s Approval Rating Among Black Americans Is Actually Too Good To Be True,” Newsweek 17 August 2018 (www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-approval-rating-black-americans-1078598 [accessed 19 October 2018]).

[2] Washington Post-ABC News Poll, Aug. 26-29, 2018, published 4 September 2018 (https://apps.washingtonpost.com/g/page/politics/washington-post-abc-news-poll-aug-26-29-2018/2324/ [accessed 21 October 2018]).

[3] Paul Bedard, “Blacks’ Approval of Trump Reaches a High of 21% and NAACP Charges ‘Racism,’” The Washington Examiner, 7 August 2018 (www.washingtonexaminer.com/washington-secrets/blacks-approval-of-trump-reaches-a-high-of-21-and-naacp-charges-racism [accessed 19 October 2018]).

[4] The rate under Trump was 24.8, 24.6, 28.7, and 26.5%, February-May 2017; 25.5%, November 2017; and 24.3, 27.2, and 2.78%, January-March 2018.  “Unemployment Rate:  16 to 19 Years, Black or African American, Percent Monthly, Seasonally Adjusted,” Federal Reserve Economic Data, Economic Research Division, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/LNS14000018 [accessed 19 October 2018]).

[5] GDP did rise 4.2% in the second quarter but was 2.8, 2.3, and 2.2 percent in the preceding three.  Hanson’s math is fuzzy.  By his reasoning, Obama could have trumpeted similar growth in 2014 from second and third quarter rates of 5.1 and 4.9% despite bookending figures of -1.0 and 1.9%.  Bureau of Economic Analysis New Release, “Gross Domestic Product:  Second Quarter 2018 (Third Estimate); Corporate Profit:  Second Quarter 2018 (Revised Estimate,” 27 September 2018, p. 7 (www.bea.gov/system/files/2018-09/gdp2q18_3rd_3.pdf [accessed 19 October 2018]).  “Quarterly Growth of the Real GDP in the United States from 2011 to 2018,” Statista (www.statista.com/statistics/188185/percent-chance-from-preceding-period-in-real-gdp-in-the-us/ [accessed 21 October 2018]).

[6] Astead W. Herndon, “Accusations of Voter Suppression as Some in Georgia Begin to Cast Their Ballots,” The New York Times, 20 October 2018, A15 (www.nytimes.com/2018/10/19/us/politics/georgia-voter-suppression.html [accessed 21 October 2018]).