• REVOLT AGAINST GOD

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    From the Winter 1994 issue of Policy Review magazine:

    REVOLT AGAINST GOD
    America's Spiritual Despair

    WILLIAM J. BENNETT

    We gather in a spirit of celebration. But tonight I speak out of a
    spirit of concern -- for this evening my task is to provide an
    assessment of the social and cultural condition of modern American
    society. And while many people agree that there is much to be
    concerned about these days, I don't think that people fully
    appreciate the depth, or even the nature, of what threatens us --
    and, therefore, we do not yet have a firm hold on what it will take
    to better us. We need to have an honest conversation about these
    issues.

    A few months ago I had lunch with a friend of mine, a man who has
    written for a number of political journals and who now lives in
    Asia. During our conversation the topic turned to America --
    specifically, America as seen through the eyes of foreigners.

    During our conversation, he told me what he had observed during his
    travels: that while the world still regards the United States as
    the leading economic and military power on earth, this same world
    no longer beholds us with the moral respect it once did. When the
    rest of the world looks at America, he said, they see no longer a
    "shining city on a hill." Instead, they see a society in decline,
    with exploding rates of crime and social pathologies. We all know
    that foreigners often come here in fear -- and once they are here,
    they travel in fear. It is our shame to realize that they have good
    reason to fear; a record number of them get killed here.

    Today, many who come to America believe they are visiting a
    degraded society. Yes, America still offers plenty of jobs,
    enormous opportunity, and unmatched material and physical comforts.
    But there is a growing sense among many foreigners that when they
    come here, they are slumming. I have, like many of us, an
    instinctive aversion to foreigners harshly judging my nation; yet
    I must concede that much of what they think is true.


    "You're Becoming American"

    I recently had a conversation with a D.C. cab driver who is doing
    graduate work at American University. He told me that once he
    receives his masters degree he is going back to Africa. His reason?
    His children. He doesn't think they are safe in Washington. He told
    me that he didn't want them to grow up in a country where young men
    will paw his daughter and expect her to be an "easy target," and
    where his son might be a different kind of target -- the target of
    violence from the hands of other young males. "It is more civilized
    where I come from," said this man from Africa. I urged him to move
    outside of Washington; things should improve.

    But it is not only violence and urban terror that signal decay. We
    see it in many forms. Newsweek columnist Joe Klein recently wrote
    about Berenice Belizaire, a young Haitian girl who arrived in New
    York in 1987. When she arrived in America she spoke no English and
    her family lived in a cramped Brooklyn apartment. Eventually
    Berenice enrolled at James Madison High School, where she excelled.
    According to Judith Khan, a math teacher at James Madison, "[The
    immigrants are] why I love teaching in Brooklyn. They have a drive
    in them that we no longer seem to have." And far from New York
    City, in the beautiful Berkshire mountains where I went to school,
    Philip Kasinitz, an assistant professor of sociology at Williams
    College, has observed that Americans have become the object of
    ridicule among immigrant students on campus. "There's an
    interesting phenomenon. When immigrant kids criticize each other
    for getting lazy or loose, they say, `You're becoming American,'"
    Kasinitz says. "Those who work hardest to keep American culture at
    bay have the best chance of becoming American success stories."

    Last year an article was published in the Washington Post which
    pointed out how students from other countries adapt to the
    lifestyle of most American teens. Paulina, a Polish high school
    student studying in the United States, said that when she first
    came here she was amazed by the way teens spent their time.
    According to Paulina:

    In Warsaw, we would talk to friends after school, go home and
    eat with our parents and then do four or five hours of homework.
    When I first came here, it was like going into a crazy world, but
    now I am getting used to it. I'm going to Pizza Hut and watching TV
    and doing less work in school. I can tell it is not a good thing to
    get used to.

    Think long and hard about these words, spoken by a young Polish
    girl about America: "When I first came here it was like going into
    a crazy world, but now I am getting used to it." And, "I can tell
    it is not a good thing to get used to."

    Something has gone wrong with us.


    Social Regression
    This is a conclusion which I come to with great reluctance. During
    the late 1960s and 1970s, I was one of those who reacted strongly
    to criticisms of America that swept across university campuses. I
    believe that many of those criticisms -- "Amerika" as an inherently
    repressive, imperialist, and racist society -- were wrong then, and
    they are wrong now. But intellectual honesty demands that we accept
    facts that we would sometimes like to wish away. Hard truths are
    truths nonetheless. And the hard truth is that something has gone
    wrong with us.

    America is not in danger of becoming a third world country; we are
    too rich, too proud and too strong to allow that to happen. It is
    not that we live in a society completely devoid of virtue. Many
    people live well, decently, even honorably. There are families,
    schools, churches and neighborhoods that work. There are places
    where virtue is taught and learned. But there is a lot less of this
    than there ought to be. And we know it. John Updike put it this
    way: "The fact that... we still live well cannot ease the pain of
    feeling that we no longer live nobly."

    Let me briefly outline some of the empirical evidence that points
    to cultural decline, evidence that while we live well materially,
    we don't live nobly. Earlier this year I released, through the
    auspices of the Heritage Foundation, The Index of Leading Cultural
    Indicators, the most comprehensive statistical portrait available
    of behavioral trends over the last 30 years. Among the findings:
    since 1960, the population has increased 41 percent; the Gross
    Domestic Product has nearly tripled; and total social spending by
    all levels of government (measured in constant 1990 dollars) has
    risen from $142.7 billion to $787 billion -- more than a five-fold
    increase.

    But during the same thirty-year period, there has been a 560
    percent increase in violent crime; more than a 400 percent increase
    in illegitimate births; a quadrupling in divorces; a tripling of
    the percentage of children living in single-parent homes; more than
    a 200 percent increase in the teenage suicide rate; and a drop of
    75 points in the average S.A.T. scores of high-school students.

    These are not good things to get used to.

    Today 30 percent of all births and 68 percent of black births are
    illegitimate. By the end of the decade, according to the most
    reliable projections, 40 percent of all American births and 80
    percent of minority births will occur out of wedlock.

    These are not good things to get used to.

    And then there are the results of an on-going teacher survey. Over
    the years teachers have been asked to identify the top problems in
    America's schools. In 1940 teachers identified them as talking out
    of turn; chewing gum; making noise; running in the hall; cutting in
    line; dress code infractions; and littering. When asked the same
    question in 1990, teachers identified drug use; alcohol abuse;
    pregnancy; suicide; rape; robbery; and assault. These are not good
    things to get used to, either.

    Consider, too, where the United States ranks in comparison with the
    rest of the industrialized world. We are at or near the top in
    rates of abortions, divorces, and unwed births. We lead the
    industrialized world in murder, rape and violent crime. And in
    elementary and secondary education, we are at or near the bottom in
    achievement scores.

    These facts alone are evidence of substantial social regression.
    But there are other signs of decay, ones that do not so easily lend
    themselves to quantitative analyses (some of which I have already
    suggested in my opening anecdotes). What I am talking about is the
    moral, spiritual and aesthetic character and habits of a society --
    what the ancient Greeks referred to as its ethos. And here, too, we
    are facing serious problems. For there is a coarseness, a
    callousness, a cynicism, a banality, and a vulgarity to our time.
    There are just too many signs of de-civilization -- that is,
    civilization gone rotten. And the worst of it has to do with our
    children. Apart from the numbers and the specific facts, there is
    the on-going, chronic crime against children: the crime of making
    them old before their time. We live in a culture which at times
    seems almost dedicated to the corruption of the young, to assuring
    the loss of their innocence before their time.

    This may sound overly pessimistic or even alarmist, but I think
    this is the way it is. And my worry is that people are not
    unsettled enough; I don't think we are angry enough. We have become
    inured to the cultural rot that is setting in. Like Paulina, we are
    getting used to it, even though it is not a good thing to get used
    to. People are experiencing atrocity overload, losing their
    capacity for shock, disgust, and outrage. A few weeks ago eleven
    people were murdered in New York City within ten hours -- and as
    far as I can tell, it barely caused a stir.

    Two weeks ago a violent criminal, who mugged and almost killed a
    72-year old man and was shot by a police officer while fleeing the
    scene of the crime, was awarded $4.3 million. Virtual silence.

    And during last year's Los Angeles riots, Damian Williams and Henry
    Watson were filmed pulling an innocent man out of a truck, crushing
    his skull with a brick, and doing a victory dance over his fallen
    body. Their lawyers then built a successful legal defense on the
    proposition that people cannot be held accountable for getting
    caught up in mob violence. ("They just got caught up in the riot,"
    one juror told the New York Times. "I guess maybe they were in the
    wrong place at the wrong time.") When the trial was over and these
    men were found not guilty on most counts, the sound you heard
    throughout the land was relief. We are "defining deviancy down," in
    Senator Moynihan's memorable phrase. And in the process we are
    losing a once-reliable sense of civic and moral outrage.


    Urban Surrender
    Listen to this story from former New York City Police Commissioner
    Raymond Kelly:

    A number of years ago there began to appear, in the windows of
    automobiles parked on the streets of American cities, signs which
    read: `No radio.' Rather than express outrage, or even annoyance at
    the possibility of a car break-in, people tried to communicate with
    the potential thief in conciliatory terms. The translation of `no
    radio' is: "Please break into someone else's car, there's nothing
    in mine." These `no radio' signs are flags of urban surrender. They
    are hand-written capitulations. Instead of `no radio,' we need new
    signs that say `no surrender.'
    And what is so striking today is not simply the increased number of
    violent crimes, but the nature of those crimes. It is no longer
    "just" murder we see, but murders with a prologue, murders
    accompanied by acts of unspeakable cruelty and inhumanity.

    From pop culture, with our own ears, we have heard the terrible
    debasement of music. Music, harmony and rhythm find their way into
    the soul and fasten mightily upon it, Plato's Republic teaches us.
    Because music has the capacity to lift us up or to bring us down,
    we need to pay more careful attention to it. It is a steep moral
    slide from Bach, and even Buddy Holly, to Guns 'n Roses and 2 Live
    Crew. This week an indicted murderer, Snoop Doggy Dogg, saw his rap
    album, "Doggystyle," debut at number one. It may be useful for you
    to read, as I have, some of his lyrics and other lyrics from heavy
    metal and rap music, and then ask yourself: how much worse could it
    possibly get? And then ask yourself: what will happen when young
    boys who grow up on mean streets, without fathers in their lives,
    are constantly exposed to music which celebrates the torture and
    abuse of women?

    There is a lot of criticism directed at television these days --
    the casual cruelty, the rampant promiscuity, the mindlessness of
    sit-coms and soap operas. Most of the criticisms are justified. But
    this is not the worst of it. The worst of television is the
    day-time television talk shows, where indecent exposure is
    celebrated as a virtue. It is hard to remember now, but there was
    once a time when personal failures, subliminal desires, and
    perverse taste were accompanied by guilt or embarrassment, at least
    by silence.

    Today these are a ticket to appear as a guest on the Sally Jessy
    Raphael show, or one of the dozens or so shows like it. I asked my
    staff to provide me with a list of some of the day-time talk-show
    topics from only the last two weeks. They include: cross-dressing
    couples; a three-way love affair; a man whose chief aim in life is
    to sleep with women and fool them into thinking that he is using a
    condom during sex; women who can't say no to cheating; prostitutes
    who love their jobs; a former drug dealer; and an interview with a
    young girl caught in the middle of a bitter custody battle. These
    shows present a two-edged problem to society: the first edge is
    that some people want to appear on these shows in order to expose
    themselves. The second edge is that lots of people are tuning in to
    watch them expose themselves. This is not a good thing to get used
    to.

    Who's to blame? Here I would caution conservatives against the
    tendency to blame liberals for our social disorders. Contemporary
    liberalism does have a lot for which to answer; many of its
    doctrines have wrought a lot of damage. Universities,
    intellectuals, think tanks, and government departments have put a
    lot of poison into the reservoirs of national discourse. But to
    simply point the finger of blame at liberals and elites is wrong.
    The hard fact of the matter is that this was not something done to
    us; it is also something we have done to ourselves. Liberals may
    have been peddling from an empty wagon, but we were buying.

    Much of what I have said is familiar to many of you. Why is this
    happening? What is behind all this? Intelligent arguments have been
    advanced as to why these things have come to pass. Thoughtful
    people have pointed to materialism and consumerism; an overly
    permissive society; the writings of Rousseau, Marx, Freud,
    Nietzsche; the legacy of the 1960s; and so on. There is truth in
    almost all of these accounts. Let me give you mine.


    Spiritual Acedia
    I submit to you that the real crisis of our time is spiritual.
    Specifically, our problem is what the ancients called acedia.
    Acedia is the sin of sloth. But acedia, as understood by the saints
    of old, is not laziness about life's affairs (which is what we
    normally think sloth to be). Acedia is something else; properly
    understood, acedia is an aversion to and a negation of spiritual
    things. Acedia reveals itself as an undue concern for external
    affairs and worldly things. Acedia is spiritual torpor; an absence
    of zeal for divine things. And it brings with it, according to the
    ancients, "a sadness, a sorrow of the world."

    Acedia manifests itself in man's "joyless, ill-tempered, and
    self-seeking rejection of the nobility of the children of God." The
    slothful man hates the spiritual, and he wants to be free of its
    demands. The old theologians taught that acedia arises from a heart
    steeped in the worldly and carnal, and from a low esteem of divine
    things. It eventually leads to a hatred of the good altogether.
    With hatred comes more rejection, more ill-temper, more sadness,
    and sorrow.

    Spiritual acedia is not a new condition, of course. It is the
    seventh capital sin. But today it is in ascendance. In coming to
    this conclusion, I have relied on two literary giants -- men born
    on vastly different continents, the product of two completely
    different worlds, and shaped by wholly different experiences -- yet
    writers who possess strikingly similar views, and who have had a
    profound impact on my own thinking. It was an unusual and
    surprising moment to find their views coincident.

    When the late novelist Walker Percy was asked what concerned him
    most about the future of America, he answered:

    Probably the fear of seeing America, with all its great
    strength and beauty and freedom... gradually subside into decay
    through default and be defeated, not by the Communist movement....
    but from within by weariness, boredom, cynicism, greed and in the
    end helplessness before its great problems.

    And here are the words of the prophetic Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
    (echoing his 1978 Harvard commencement address in which he warned
    of the West's "spiritual exhaustion"):

    In the United States the difficulties are not a Minotaur or a
    dragon -- not imprisonment, hard labor, death, government
    harassment and censorship -- but cupidity, boredom, sloppiness,
    indifference. Not the acts of a mighty all-pervading repressive
    government but the failure of a listless public to make use of the
    freedom that is its birthright.

    What afflicts us, then, is a corruption of the heart, a turning
    away in the soul. Our aspirations, our affections and our desires
    are turned toward the wrong things. And only when we turn them
    toward the right things -- toward enduring, noble, spiritual things
    -- will things get better.

    Lest I leave the impression of bad news on all fronts, I do want to
    be clear about the areas where I think we have made enormous gains:
    material comforts, economic prosperity and the spread of democracy
    around the world. The American people have achieved a standard of
    living unimagined 50 years ago. We have seen extraordinary advances
    in medicine, science and technology. Life expectancy has increased
    more than 20 years during the last six decades. Opportunity and
    equality have been extended to those who were once denied them. And
    of course America prevailed in our "long, twilight struggle"
    against communism. Impressive achievements, all.

    Yet even with all of this, the conventional analysis is still that
    this nation's major challenges have to do with getting more of the
    same: achieving greater economic growth, job creation, increased
    trade, health care, or more federal programs. Some of these things
    are desirable, such as greater economic growth and increased trade;
    some of them are not, such as more federal programs. But to look to
    any or all of them as the solution to what ails us is akin to
    assigning names to images and shadows, it so widely misses the
    mark.

    If we have full employment and greater economic growth -- if we
    have cities of gold and alabaster -- but our children have not
    learned how to walk in goodness, justice, and mercy, then the
    American experiment, no matter how gilded, will have failed.

    I realize I have laid down strong charges, a tough indictment. Some
    may question them. But if I am wrong, if my diagnosis is not right,
    then someone must explain to me this: why do Americans feel so bad
    when things are economically, militarily and materially so good?
    Why amidst this prosperity and security are enormous numbers of
    people -- almost 70 percent of the public -- saying that we are off
    track? This paradox is described in the Scottish author John
    Buchan's work. Writing a half-century ago, he described the "coming
    of a too garish age, when life would be lived in the glare of neon
    lamps and the spirit would have no solitude." Here is what Buchan
    wrote about his nightmare world:

    In such a [nightmare] world everyone would have leisure. But
    everyone would be restless, for there would be no spiritual
    discipline in life....It would be a feverish, bustling world,
    self-satisfied and yet malcontent, and under the mask of a riotous
    life there would be death at the heart. In the perpetual hurry of
    life there would be no chance of quiet for the soul.... In such a
    bagman's paradise, where life would be rationalised and padded with
    every material comfort, there would be little satisfaction for the
    immortal part of man.

    During the last decade of the twentieth century, many have achieved
    this bagman's paradise. And this is not a good thing to get used
    to.

    In identifying spiritual exhaustion as the central problem, I part
    company with many. There is a disturbing reluctance in our time to
    talk seriously about matters spiritual and religious. Why? Perhaps
    it has to do with the modern sensibility's profound discomfort with
    the language and the commandments of God. Along with other bad
    habits, we have gotten used to not talking about the things which
    matter most -- and so, we don't.

    One will often hear that religious faith is a private matter that
    does not belong in the public arena. But this analysis does not
    hold -- at least on some important points. Whatever your faith --
    or even if you have none at all -- it is a fact that when millions
    of people stop believing in God, or when their belief is so
    attenuated as to be belief in name only, enormous public
    consequences follow. And when this is accompanied by an aversion to
    spiritual language by the political and intellectual class, the
    public consequences are even greater. How could it be otherwise? In
    modernity, nothing has been more consequential, or more public in
    its consequences, than large segments of American society privately
    turning away from God, or considering Him irrelevant, or declaring
    Him dead. Dostoyevsky reminded us in Brothers Karamazov that "if
    God does not exist, everything is permissible." We are now seeing
    "everything." And much of it is not good to get used to.


    Social Regeneration
    What can be done? First, here are the short answers: do not
    surrender; get mad; and get in the fight. Now, let me offer a few,
    somewhat longer, prescriptions.

    1. At the risk of committing heresy before a Washington audience,
    let me suggest that our first task is to recognize that, in
    general, we place too much hope in politics. I am certainly not
    denying the impact (for good and for ill) of public policies. I
    would not have devoted the past decade of my life to public service
    -- and I could not work at the Heritage Foundation -- if I believed
    that the work with which I was engaged amounted to nothing more
    than striving after wind and ashes. But it is foolish, and futile,
    to rely primarily on politics to solve moral, cultural, and
    spiritual afflictions.

    The last quarter-century has taught politicians a hard and humbling
    lesson: there are intrinsic limits to what the state can do,
    particularly when it comes to imparting virtue, and forming and
    forging character, and providing peace to souls. Samuel Johnson
    expressed this (deeply conservative and true) sentiment when he
    wrote "How small, of all that human hearts endure, That part which
    laws or kings can cause or cure!"

    King Lear was a great king -- sufficient to all his political
    responsibilities and obligations. He did well as king, but as a
    father and a man, he messed up terribly. The great king was reduced
    to the mud and ignominy of the heath, cursing his daughters, his
    life, his gods. Politics is a great adventure; it is greatly
    important; but its proper place in our lives has been greatly
    exaggerated. Politics -- especially inside the Beltway politics --
    has too often become the graven image of our time.

    2. We must have public policies that once again make the connection
    between our deepest beliefs and our legislative agenda. Do we
    Americans, for example, believe that man is a spiritual being with
    a potential for individual nobility and moral responsibility? Or do
    we believe that his ultimate fate is to be merely a soulless cog in
    the machine of state? When we teach sex-education courses to
    teen-agers, do we treat them as if they are young animals in heat?
    Or, do we treat them as children of God?

    In terms of public policy, the failure is not so much intellectual;
    it is a failure of will and courage. Right now we are playing a
    rhetorical game: we say one thing and we do another. Consider the
    following:

    We say that we desire from our children more civility and
    responsibility, but in many of our schools we steadfastly refuse to
    teach right and wrong.

    We say that we want law and order in the streets, but we
    allow criminals, including violent criminals, to return to those
    same streets.

    We say that we want to stop illegitimacy, but we continue
    to subsidize the kind of behavior that virtually guarantees high
    rates of illegitimacy.

    We say that we want to discourage teenage sexual
    activity, but in classrooms all across America educators are more
    eager to dispense condoms than moral guidance.

    We say that we want more families to stay together, but
    we liberalize divorce laws and make divorce easier to attain.

    We say that we want to achieve a color blind society and
    judge people by the content of their character, but we continue to
    count by race, skin and pigment.

    We say that we want to encourage virtue and honor among
    the young, but it has become a mark of sophistication to shun the
    language of morality.

    3. We desperately need to recover a sense of the fundamental
    purpose of education, which is to provide for the intellectual and
    moral education of the young. From the ancient Greeks to the
    founding fathers, moral instruction was the central task of
    education. "If you ask what is the good of education," Plato said,
    "the answer is easy -- that education makes good men, and that good
    men act nobly." Jefferson believed that education should aim at
    improving one's "morals" and "faculties." And of education, John
    Locke said this: "Tis' virtue that we aim at, hard virtue, and not
    the subtle arts of shifting." Until a quarter-century or so ago,
    this consensus was so deep as to go virtually unchallenged. Having
    departed from this time-honored belief, we are now reaping the
    whirlwind. And so we talk not about education as the architecture
    of souls, but about "skills facilitation" and "self-esteem" and
    about being "comfortable with ourselves."

    4. As individuals and as a society, we need to return religion to
    its proper place. Religion, after all, provides us with moral
    bearings. And if I am right and the chief problem we face is
    spiritual impoverishment, then the solution depends, finally, on
    spiritual renewal. I am not speaking here about coerced spiritual
    renewal -- in fact, there is no such thing -- but about renewal
    freely taken.

    The enervation of strong religious beliefs -- in both our private
    lives as well as our public conversations -- has de-moralized
    society. We ignore religion and its lessons at our peril. But
    instead of according religion its proper place, much of society
    ridicules and disdains it, and mocks those who are serious about
    their faith. In America today, the only respectable form of bigotry
    is bigotry directed against religious people. This antipathy toward
    religion cannot be explained by the well-publicized moral failures
    and financial excesses of a few leaders or charlatans, or by the
    censoriousness of some of their followers. No, the reason for
    hatred of religion is because it forces modern man to confront
    matters he would prefer to ignore.

    Every serious student of American history, familiar with the
    writings of the founders, knows the civic case for religion. It
    provides society with a moral anchor -- and nothing else has yet
    been found to substitute for it. Religion tames our baser
    appetites, passions, and impulses. And it helps us to thoughtfully
    sort through the "ordo amoris," the order of the loves.

    But remember, too, that for those who believe, it is a mistake to
    treat religion merely as a useful means to worldly ends. Religion
    rightly demands that we take seriously not only the commandments of
    the faith, but that we also take seriously the object of the faith.
    Those who believe know that although we are pilgrims and sojourners
    and wanderers in this earthly kingdom, ultimately we are citizens
    of the City of God -- a City which man did not build and cannot
    destroy, a City where there is no sadness, where the sorrows of the
    world find no haven, and where there is peace the world cannot
    give.


    Pushing Back
    Let me conclude. In his 1950 Nobel Prize acceptance speech, William
    Faulkner declared "I decline to accept the end of man." Man will
    not merely endure but prevail because, as Faulkner said, he alone
    among creatures "has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and
    sacrifice and endurance."

    Today we must in the same way decline to accept the end of moral
    man. We must carry on the struggle, for our children. We will push
    back hard against an age that is pushing hard against us. When we
    do, we will emerge victorious against the trials of our time. When
    we do, we will save our children from the decadence of our time.

    We have a lot of work to do. Let's get to it.


    To reprint more than short quotations, please write or FAX Ben
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    Wes,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23