Restoring the Eternal Verities
by Nelson Hultberg
May 14, 2004
A Review of Broad Sides:
One Woman's Clash with a Corrupt Culture,
by Ilana Mercer
Medford
Evans once said about Gone With the Wind that it "is not specifically
Southern; it is a world book. And it is a world book mainly because
Scarlett is Everywoman, in whom every woman recognizes herself, and
every man recognizes something dangerous and marvelous."
In her new book, Broad Sides, Ilana Mercer is Scarlett O'Hara
reincarnated with an intellect. She is dangerous and marvelous. She
takes on today's corrupted establishment the way Scarlett took on
the marauding Yankee soldier climbing the stairs at Tara to have
his way with her. Scarlett impudently unloaded a pistol into the
Yankee's face, and Ms. Mercer does the same to our collectivist establishment
today. Her prose style is .44-caliber Magnum force. Her insights
are like silver bullets.
Here is just a taste of that style: "Our society revels in a drunken
orgy of self-indulgence and self-abasement. We live in an era in
which all rational standards are mocked and dismissed as irrelevant
and impotent. The quest for moral reputation has been supplanted
by an obsession for instant notoriety -- a ferocious competition
in attention-seeking that elevates shameless degenerates. 'Reality'
TV lifts from well-deserved obscurity a procession of vacuous narcissists
who flaunt their neuroses and intimacies before millions of video
voyeurs, themselves desperate to fill dull mornings and empty evenings
with the solace of vicarious titillation."
The paramount need in modern America is to find our way back to
that hierarchy of values that all great, free cultures must possess
if they are to remain great and free. America once radiated such
a hierarchy because we as a people understood what Jefferson meant
by "a natural aristocracy among men composed of virtues and talents."
In our national youth -- before liberalism dumbed us down to the
mediocrity and mendacity of egalitarianism -- we were not afraid
to accept the obvious realities of the world. We did not flinch in
face of the fact that cultures are not equal. We were not afraid
to pass judgment on the moral vacuity of certain ways of life. In
this wide-ranging series of essays, Ms. Mercer brings us back to
Jefferson. She passes judgment, and it is marvelous.
Broad Sides cuts a vibrant swath across the tyrannical shams
of modernity -- from creeping statism at home, to Pax Americana abroad,
to the insanity of open borders, the myth of Rousseau's "Noble Savage," and
the "boundless ignorance" of the neoconservatives masquerading as
America's champions. Ms. Mercer enlightens us as to what is needed
if we as a nation are to reverse our miasmic slide into the decadence
that has, this past century, been consuming our lives like crack
cocaine swallows up a ghetto.
Mercer shows us that freedom and virtue are companions, that a free
people do not need to be a trashy people. America was meant to be
a land of libertarian politics and traditional values. The Founders'
legacy was about precisely such a combination. Mercer's scintillating
mind offers us a vision of that legacy again and says to us that
it is not dead, that if we in America wish to regain our high-minded
form of freedom, all we need is to hearken back to the philosophy
of Jefferson and Madison.
Such a philosophy is not ephemeral; it is eternal. Today's computerized
world needs a hierarchy of values taught to its young just as Jefferson's
world did. That the liberals bamboozled three generations of intellectuals
into the madness of relativism is our most nefarious crime. It is
here at the level of basic values that the battle must be waged.
Mercer comes armed with Excalibur to show us how and why.
Margaret Mitchell created one of the great literary heroines of
all time in Scarlett O'Hara. There was a spirit about her that stood
up to the bumptious idiocy and cruelty that life so often throws
at us. Scarlett did not know how to back down. That, more than her
beauty, was why men found her so appealing. That is the kind of spirit
that permeates this book.
Ilana Mercer's intellect, like Scarlett's spirit, does not back
down from the unsettling truths of life and the debauchery that we
have made of it today. Broad Sides is a dangerous and marvelous
book. It will threaten the oleaginous elites of Washington and enthrall
bedrock Americans in the heartland.
© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com
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