More on Mark Levin's Free Ride

Written by David Frum on Friday May 7, 2010

Can anybody imagine the major conservative intellectual magazines publishing anything critical today about our conservative entertainers?

Here is a 2002 essay in Dissent, a flagship magazine of the American Left, on Michael Moore.

It's balanced, but with the balance tilting to the negative.

The conclusion:

Here is what I would call the Moorean dilemma: do leftists stay on the margins or do we bust through and play by the rules of the entertainment industry? I am not against humor (ask my friends). But I am worried about what happens to the vision of the left when it plays on the grounds of the sound-bite society.

None of what I've discussed here would matter if Moore's techniques didn't symbolize bigger weaknesses in the American left today. Moore is not just a quirky guy with enough talent and dough to reach a wide audience. His political criticism signals problems faced by the left more generally: marginalization, a tendency to seek the purity of confrontation rather than to work for long-term political solutions, a cynicism about the possibilities of politics today, and questionable political judgments. Moore exhibits all these weaknesses. Unfortunately, an effective left cannot draw energy or inspiration from a deeply cynical view of politics that blurs entertainment and argument. Moore takes short-cuts when it comes to politics. He entertains, but he doesn't always do much more. That speaks to the state of the left; we are angry and sometimes vocal, but we have too little to offer those looking for or needing social change. Meanwhile, the entertainment industry chugs on, denigrating serious political argument and avoiding deliberation. That is the depressing world Michael Moore has broken into.

Question: Can anybody imagine the major conservative intellectual magazines publishing anything remotely like such a statement today about our conservative entertainers?

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