The dust-up between Senator
Barbara Boxer and the head of the National Black Chamber of Commerce
has been the talk of the town these past few days. In case you
missed it here is a brief summary.
On July 16 Barbara Boxer in
her official capacity as the ranking senator from the State of California
was conducting a senate hearing on environmental policy. In keeping
with the Senator’s partisan biases she attempted to stack the rhetorical
deck in favor of the Obama administration’s Goreistic Green
assumptions and all concurrent social and economic goals. With this
as the context, one expert called before Senator Boxer’s committee
was the president & CEO of the National Black Chamber of Commerce,
Harry C. Alford. The following is a summary of the exchange in
question (see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FoekBjhtWE for more detail).
Barbara Boxer began by quoting
a resolution on climate change from the NAACP (Note: In case you
missed the obvious here: Mr. Alford is African American and Senator
Boxer is Caucasian). The Senator attempted to use this document as a
challenge to Mr. Alford’s position. Mr. Alford took umbrage
and tried to get Senator Boxer to clarify why she was referring to the
NAACP document as her primary source of rebuttal when the NAACP was
essentially expressing a generic concern for the environment rather
than a cart blanche endorsement of cap and trade policies. Feeling
frustrated (and perhaps a bit cornered) Boxer brought an additional
source to bear: another African American named John Grant who reportedly
represents an organization called 100 Black Men of Atlanta. The dialogue
and debate then proceeded as follows.
Alford: "Madam Chair,
that is condescending to me. I'm the [CEO of the] National Black Chamber
of Commerce and you're trying to put some other black group up to pit
against me."
Boxer: "If this gentleman
[referring, we can assume, to Mr. Grant] were here he would be proud
that he was being quoted."
Alford:
"He should have been invited!"
Boxer: "...just so
you know he would be proud [Second time she uses the word] that you
are here… He’s proud [Third time she uses the word], I’m sure
that I am quoting him…"
Alford: "It is condescending
to me… All that's condescending and I don't like it. It's racial.
I don't like it. I take offense to it. As an African-American and a
veteran of this country, I take offense to that… We are referring
to the experts regardless of their color. And for someone to tell me,
an African-American, college-educated veteran of the United States Army
that I must contend with some other black group and put aside everything
else in here -- this has nothing to do with the NAACP and really has
nothing to do with the National Black Chamber of Commerce. We're talking
energy and that road the chair went down, I think, is god-awful."
In the midst of the media flurry
of conservative indignation and liberal angst that has swirled around
this political thrust and parry may I suggest that we have perhaps missed
the forest for the trees in our evaluation of the Senator’s overtures
and Mr. Alford’s response?
The trees that we see are obvious:
a conservative black businessman finally has had enough and he has the
intestinal fortitude to say so. He rises up and shouts what millions
are thinking: “Stop patting us on the head and telling us that
you are proud of us! Stop implying that just because we are intelligent
enough to express a coherent opinion that we should be proud of ourselves
and proud of each other. And please - please stop pitting “us
black folk” against each other as a means of perpetuating your myopic
partisan views. Black people have brains too! We are fully
capable of self-confidence and self-direction. We don’t have
to agree with everything a white progressive says and frankly we are
sick of your patronizing condescension - especially in the face of your
transparent efforts to ‘keep us in line.’ Your demagoguery,
and its implicit racism, is obvious and we don’t like it!”
Yes the soft pines of the Left’s fallacious tolerance of everything
but what it deems to be intolerable are waving their shadowy branches
all around us aren’t they…?
But look further beyond these
trees: beyond the trunks and shrubs of agreement or disagreement with
Alford or Boxer and look, as the Oxford Don C.S. Lewis admonishes us,
“farther up and farther in.” Step back and take a look
at the “forest.”
Three times in her attempted
harangue and scold of Alford, Senator Boxer used a derivative of the
word “pride.” Three times she said “he would be proud” or implied
that “you should be proud.” Three times she did what almost all
of us do when flustered: She showed her cards and her real priorities.
When cornered we all do this. When we are set back on our heals
by a counter punch we all (whether intentional or not), put up our strongest
defense - our highest good - our summum bonum – our guiding
apologetic – our fallback position, if you will. Watch any debate
or argument. When it escalates beyond the point of the controlled and
the scripted to the level of reflex, instinct and emotion you will always
find the underlying assumptions and values of the protagonist and antagonist.
When flustered we become more honest. You do. I do. Alford did and so
did Senator Boxer.
For Senator Boxer the strongest
counterpunch she could muster in the face of Mr. Alford’s foray was
that of pride. She repeated it three times. Proud! Proud!
Proud! And therein we start to see the “forest” of her argument.
Pride is the ultimate value. Pride is the trump card against all
other hands. Boxer seems to almost be subconsciously paraphrasing
Michael Douglas’ infamous 1987 Wall Street quote whereby Gordon
Gekko elevated another of the seven deadly sins (i.e. greed) to that
of virtue versus vice. Can you hear her? “The point is ladies and
gentlemen, that [pride], for lack of a better word, is good, [pride]
is right, [pride] works. [Pride] clarifies, cuts through and captures
the essence of the evolutionary spirit. [Pride] in all of its
forms…has marked the upward surge of mankind … and [Pride], you
mark my words will … not only save [our environment and our economy]
but [also] the …United States of America.”
Once commenting on the infinite
varieties of human waywardness Chaucer said “The root of all these
seven [deadly] sins is Pride: the general root of all harms.”
Augustine added that Pride “inordinately enamored with its own power
…despises the more just dominion of a higher authority” and one
of our most endearing twentieth century apologists, C.S. Lewis, ties
it all together: “Pride leads to every other vice. Pride is the complete
anti-God state of mind.” Pride ultimately leads all who embrace it
to declare “I am it. I am the universe. I am your God…” (Perelandra,
C.S. Lewis 1965).
You see, Barbara Boxer’s
juvenile mantra of Pride, Pride, Pride, betrays a dark forest of rotting
trees waving gnarly branches of arrogance, condescension, haughtiness,
hubris, self-congratulation and the ultimate of all progressive self-refuting
claims: a sanctimonious call for tolerance while not tolerating anyone
(especially a conservative African American businessman) who dares to
disagree and refuses to follow blindly and obediently behind the emperor
of the Left who happens to be wearing no clothes.
Mr. Alford said it well.
This kind of pride is indeed God-awful. It’s awful in the eyes
of God and awful as well as to all who seek God and wish to be protected
from the pride and prejudice of those among us who yearn to be God.