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Peeve Farm
Breeding peeves for show, not just to keep as pets
  Blog \Blôg\, n. [Jrg, fr. Jrg. "Web-log".
     See {Blogger, BlogSpot, LiveJournal}.]
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Sunday, March 2, 2003
00:17 - Dilemmas

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On the way home from the dog show near Fresno, I saw a line of windmills on the ridge of hills lining the pass traversed by Highway 152 from the Central Valley over to Gilroy. A few of the mills were turning lazily, but not many appeared to be doing much good.

And it reminded me: one thing about the modern "liberal" mindset that must be really galling for those who espouse it is that so many of the morally pure, honest liberal causes so frequently clash directly with other morally pure, honest liberal causes. When this happens, you've got two crusades at odds with each other, both of which spring from the same political genesis, with the other side of the traditional political spectrum left scratching its head outside the loop.

Like, for instance, wind power. A group will lobby to get windmills installed on every ridgetop in the Coastal Ranges in the Bay Area region. It's unclear whether these windmills will ever produce anywhere near enough energy to even register on the grid, but that's beside the point: it's free, clean, safe energy, and that's all that really matters.

Except that it kills birds. If I recall correctly, there's a major problem with power-generating windmills, in that birds (endangered ones in particular, it wouldn't surprise me) seem to fly into the whirling blades with astonishing frequency, getting scimitarred out of the sky with deadly efficiency. And so the liberal animal-rights groups spring up, ready to do battle-- with the liberal clean-energy force that got wind power instituted in the first place. Their enemies are their own ideological compatriots. Who will win? In either case, is it a victory or a defeat for liberal values?

The same goes for the flap a year or two ago over the sale of live turtles in shops in Chinatown in San Francisco. Traditional Chinese food stores would sell turtles to customers by hacking off the shells while the turtles were still alive. Cruel, perhaps, but it's the traditional Chinese way of doing things. It's culture, dammit-- and non-American culture to boot, which makes it worthy of protection in its most pristine form, and defense against the corrupting and miscegenating influence of American life. We can't have that, no sir.

... Except when it's animal rights we're talking about, in which case all bets are presumably off. Which liberal cause wins? Multiculturalism or animal rights? Which side should a good liberal choose?

I keep noticing these little dichotomies, and I wonder whether there's a corresponding kind of tendency on the conservative side-- I can't think of one offhand, but there must be something. If we accept the structural symmetry of left- and right-wing politics, there have got to be analogs on both sides, including these kinds of second-order phenomena. Conservative causes must clash from time to time-- business freedom versus parochialism, for instance, or patriotic fundamentalism versus government non-intrusiveness in private matters, or something. I'm sure these causes can be fit together in ways that develop the same sorts of schisms. I'm sure it happens every day.

But for some reason, it's the do-gooding leftist causes that seem to really invite disbelief and ridicule when they collide.


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© Brian Tiemann