Richard Spencer

Varieties of the Gersonian Experience

Posted by Richard Spencer on January 18, 2008

A new column by Michael Gerson is best read aloud with an old recording of “We Are The World, We Are the Children” playing the background. If there ever was a cross between Paul Wolfowitz, a Sunday school teacher, and Bono it is the former Bush speechwriter. 

Today’s installment certainly does not dissapoint. Here Gerson attacks Fred Thompson for his “lack of moral seriousness” after the senator balked at supporting George Bush’s massive “global AIDS initiative.”

Thompson’s words, which horrified Saint Michael, amount to a pretty standard conservative critique of foreign aid and budget busting “humanitarian programs.” First, it’s perfectly natural and moral to take care of your family, friends, and neighbors before trying to save people far away whom you barely understand. Secondly, the kind of lack of accountability and inefficiency that afflicts federal programs will surely be multiplied when the U.S. government tries to manage global poverty and the like. Small private charity can be much more effective.
There is also some pretty solid empirical evidence that Gerson’s beloved humanitarian programs simply ain’t what they’re cracked up to be.

William Easterly has estimated that the First World has given 450 billion in aid to Africa over the past 40 years, and the economy on the continent has actually declined. A comparison with China, which has received nothing in the way “development” grants and was completely isolated from the West for much of Moa’s reign, reveals the way in which long-term historical and civilization factors trump the designs of global bureaucrats. Secondly, while Gerson thinks that relying on private charities is naïve, as David Freddoso has pointed out, during the 2005 Tsunami, individual donations accounted for much more in the way of relief than government funds.

But for Gerson, such talk amounts to “anti-government extremism.” And, in many ways, trying to argue with him is futile. For Gerson is far more concerned with the great moral uplift involved with aid to Africa, and I imagine he’d support massive programs even if it could be irrefutably proven that they did no good.

Gerson sits on the Council on Foreign Relations, and so amidst his maudlin sentimentality, he now likes to make diffuse statements such as, “America is engaged in a high-stakes ideological struggle in Africa.” But even when discussing geopolitics, he substitutes emotion for analysis. As Daniel Larison observers, “For Gerson, governing isn’t a matter of making choices and setting priorities in the American interest, but of unburdening his conscience about suffering on the other side of the world with someone else’s money.”

For all of Gerson’s pretensions of “moral seriousness,” I really can’t imagine a more childish, inane political program than that derived from looking upon an AIDS-stricken African single mom and exclaiming, “why doesn’t the government just do something!?!” Gerson might as well ask, “with 70% of the earth covered with water, why do some still die of thirst?” or “with so much money in the world, why are some people still poor?”

A more interesting topic: in light of Thompson “callous” remarks on foreign aid, and despite his “stay the course” position on Iraq, does he deserve a second look from conservatives? If someone like Gerson hates him this much, then I’m beginning to think he does. 


Comments

Compassionate Conservatism at its best. Print some more borrowed money whilst bawling all day about the need to help people while we careen past Saddam Hussein’s own Civilian Death Toll in Iraq.

Meanwhile, here at home........the economy tanks and we print more borrowed money so we can, ahem, er....help people.

With Conservatives like these, who needs Huns? Thompson will look as good as any of em dressed in furs and wearing a nice Bronze Helmet with Steer Horns.

Hey Dirk how about a little sympathy for the Huns?  They only took what you had on you at the time.  The Neo-cons want not only what you have but what you might get. They want to brainwasy your kids, and then they want to get what they will ever have too.  The neo cons kill a victim at 25 and keep the body animated through black magic so it can spit coins into their coffers for globalist agendas for the next fifty.

Quite right Nucci,
The Huns rode in, raped pillaged and were gone. These Neo Cons practice the art of Compound Mugging. One is held up and before the mugging is completed, the victim has signed a 30 year note with an adjustable rate that goes only up.

Post a Comment

By submitting this form, you give Taki's Magazine permission to publish this comment. Comments will be published at our discretion, and may be edited for clarity and length. Personal attacks, ethnic slurs, the riding of hobby horses and the beating of dead ones will be deleted as soon as they are detected by our small but alert staff. Repeat abusers of this policy will be barred from leaving comments. All comments reflect only the views of those posting them and not necessarily those of this website, its editors, or authors. For best formatting, please limit your response to one paragraph and don't hit "enter" to force line breaks.

Commenting is not available in this section entry.