The Left and patriotism
Volokh, Eugene
VOLOKH at law.ucla.edu
Fri Jan 27 13:43:18 PST 2006
Many on the Left quite properly bristle when others suggest that
they're unpatriotic. In fact, I think that the great majority of
Democrats -- and certainly of Blue-state residents -- are quite
patriotic. One can oppose aspects of our Constitution and still be
patriotic. Certainly defending the Constitution against what one sees
(rightly or wrongly) as governmental overreaching may reflect great
patriotism. It is this reality of American patriotism that, I think,
makes discussion of secession so weirdly counterfactual, as if we were
talking about the state-centric nation of 150 years ago, a nation riven
by a moral atrocity of the magnitude of slavery, or a nation ready to
descend into civil war such as Yugoslavia.
Yet if any Democratic, liberal, or left-wing organization
endorsed, or even spoke positively, of secession, it seems to me that it
would be very hard for the organization's members to credibly complain
when they are called unpatriotic (at least when the patrie involved is
America). Patriotism, it seems to me, generally involves (among many
other things) some degree of emotional commitment to the nation. This
ought not be complete emotional commitment above all else; surely one
should also have the moral sense to see when the nation is doing wrong,
or even when the nation needs to be dissolved. But shouldn't it be
enough emotional commitment to overcome the annoyances of 6 years' worth
of perceived mistake and misgovernment, the displeasure at seeing your
tax money go to other states, and even strong disagreement with the
views of many of your countrymen?
Of course, if one lacks this commitment, and thinks that it
really would be better if California, Oregon, and Washington went their
own way, one can certainly be a morally wonderful person. One can even
be a California patriot. It's just that I doubt that one can still say
that one is much of an American patriot -- or can even see an accusation
of lack of patriotism as a pejorative, much less as unfair.
Eugene
More information about the Conlawprof
mailing list