Reinhold Niebuhr at TNR
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There's a well-established rhetorical practice available very often in the op-ed pages of The New York Times that ought to be called the Brooks Maneuver. It involves framing a complicated public policy issue in terms of abstract and conflicting principles that the columnist sympathizes with but deems tragically incompatible, before concluding that any resolution will require a brave new kind of politics that just doesn't exist. Thus, sadly, no action is advisable until high-minded solons take charge, a course of action that happens to coincide, amazingly, with the short-term strategic needs of the Republican Party.
Mr. Brooks provided a virtuoso performance of his Maneuver yesterday, in a column on health care. Check out this opening gambit:
[L]ike all great public issues, the health care debate is fundamentally a debate about values. It’s a debate about what kind of country we want America to be.
During the first many decades of this nation’s existence, the United States was a wide-open, dynamic country with a rapidly expanding economy. It was also a country that tolerated a large amount of cruelty and pain — poor people living in misery, workers suffering from exploitation.
Over the years, Americans decided they wanted a little more safety and security. This is what happens as nations grow wealthier; they use money to buy civilization.
From this lofty perspective, Brooks goes on to stipulate that the health care reform debate represents a choice between "security" and "vitality," because, he says (on the authority of a Wall Street Journal column), the current legislation is sure to rapidly accelerate health care costs and seriously damage the economy.
And so he concludes:
[Reform] would heal a wound in the social fabric while piling another expensive and untouchable promise on top of the many such promises we’ve already made. America would be a less youthful, ragged and unforgiving nation, and a more middle-aged, civilized and sedate one.
We all have to decide what we want at this moment in history, vitality or security. We can debate this or that provision, but where we come down will depend on that moral preference.
The Brooks Maneuver on health care accomplishes two invidious purposes.
First, it identifies the opponents of health care reform with "vitality" and "growth." In reality, what most reform foes are defending is the status quo in health care, which is hardly "vital" or entrepreneurial in any significant way. Costs are already skyrocketing, most health decision are greatly affected by massive private and public-sector bureaucracies, and the "cruelty" Brooks admits is accompanied by extraordinary inefficiency. Brooks is a past master at "plague on both houses" formulations, but this one, more than most, represents a terribly false moral equivalency.
Second, by lamenting the supposedly long-lost opportunity to control costs, Brooks suggests indirectly that someday, somehow, a health care reform strategy might be devised that transcends the unsavory choice between ruthless laissez-fairism and economic collapse. That must, surely, be worth waiting for, right? So without coming right out and saying it, the column leads the reader in the direction of rejecting today's reforms for those that will someday emerge, when the horrible partisan viccisitudes of the past few years are behind us and America once again finds the "sweet spot" where conflicting values can be reconciled.
Am I overinterpeting Brooks? Maybe, maybe not. But without question, by arguing that the health reform debate poses an impossible choice, he's avoiding the real choice between a status quo whose few virtues are fading each day, and a chance to head in a different direction. That, too, is a matter of "moral preference."
This item is cross-posted from The Democratic Strategist, where Ed Kilgore is Managing Editor.
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COMMENTS (6)
Maybe it's something about the name; investment capitalist Peter Brooke was on NPR's "On Point" today and, although deploring the abuses of unscrupulous private-equity firms who raid businesses and leave them to die, he felt that the only fix would be a return to old-fashioned morals within the industry -- certainly NOT government regulation.
Maybe it's something about the name; investment capitalist Peter Brooke was on NPR's "On Point" today and, although deploring the abuses of unscrupulous private-equity firms who raid businesses and leave them to die, he felt that the only fix would be a return to old-fashioned morals within the industry -- certainly NOT government regulation.
Beautiful, Ed. The "some day in the future" argument is a sugary way of choking debate if the author does not provide a solution that will steer policy toward that place. Its macro-procrastination, and its an unhealthy way of thinking.
Beautiful, Ed. The "some day in the future" argument is a sugary way of choking debate if the author does not provide a solution that will steer policy toward that place. Its macro-procrastination, and its an unhealthy way of thinking.
Investment capitalists... with morals. Go on, pull the other one...
Investment capitalists... with morals. Go on, pull the other one...
The 'some day in the future' argument is the flip-side of the conservative mantra that everything they can't quite oppose outright (like end-of-life consultation) will lead via the 'slippery slope' towards catastrophy (death panels).
The 'some day in the future' argument is the flip-side of the conservative mantra that everything they can't quite oppose outright (like end-of-life consultation) will lead via the 'slippery slope' towards catastrophy (death panels).
I say yay for vitality, bring back child labor, lets work people to death before they are 50, then we would not have to look at their sagging jowls.
I also love how Brooks makes up history, like there were never a series of recessions (and depression) in those halcyon bygone days, just never ending growth and vitality until FDR came and ruined it all. Honest to God, the article looks like it is written by a YAFfer still a freshman in college, filled with meaningless generalities like: The unregulated market wants to direct capital to the productive and the young. No, unless the people want to become poor quickly they diversify. AT&T wasn't called Ma Bell because it was young.
Until Unioni ... view full comment
I say yay for vitality, bring back child labor, lets work people to death before they are 50, then we would not have to look at their sagging jowls.
I also love how Brooks makes up history, like there were never a series of recessions (and depression) in those halcyon bygone days, just never ending growth and vitality until FDR came and ruined it all. Honest to God, the article looks like it is written by a YAFfer still a freshman in college, filled with meaningless generalities like: The unregulated market wants to direct capital to the productive and the young. No, unless the people want to become poor quickly they diversify. AT&T wasn't called Ma Bell because it was young.
Until Unionism came along (and labor reforms) businesses did not prosper as much as they could have because the majority of the workers in the US couldn't afford the goods. To say Reform would make us a more decent society, but also a less vibrant one is idiotic, since he simply has no idea to what extent a healthy society is a productive society. "It would ease the anxiety of millions at the cost of future growth." According to Brooks, but people said the same things about FDR and most Democrats. Hell, it was lack of reform (or removal of such, see Bush II banking system) that destroyed growth.
Brooks has an old mans mind.
Heaven help us if we take even a step toward anything Europe has managed for decades. It's been nothing but stagnation and an inexorable descent into squalor over there.
Brooks: we should do nothing and hope to have better ideas in the future, even though we are on an unsustainable path that is heading toward a death spiral for our health care "system". It's not like things are actually improving in the status quo.
Heaven help us if we take even a step toward anything Europe has managed for decades. It's been nothing but stagnation and an inexorable descent into squalor over there.
Brooks: we should do nothing and hope to have better ideas in the future, even though we are on an unsustainable path that is heading toward a death spiral for our health care "system". It's not like things are actually improving in the status quo.