{"id":9875,"date":"2007-06-20T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2007-06-20T04:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/thenewatlantis.com\/publications\/heroism-modernism-and-the-utopian-impulse"},"modified":"2021-09-13T16:14:24","modified_gmt":"2021-09-13T20:14:24","slug":"heroism-modernism-and-the-utopian-impulse","status":"publish","type":"article","link":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/publications\/heroism-modernism-and-the-utopian-impulse","title":{"rendered":"Heroism, Modernism, and the Utopian Impulse"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"lazyblock-epigraph-1y7j8m wp-block-lazyblock-epigraph\"><div class=\"block-tna-editors-note md:mx-6 lg:mx-16 py-8 px-10 mb-6 \">\r\n  \t<div class=\"text-lg leading-relaxed\">\r\n\t  <p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><em>Why should men love the Church? Why should they love her laws?<\/em><br \/><em>She tells them of Life and Death, and of all that they would forget.<\/em><br \/><em>She is tender where they would be hard, and hard where they like to be soft.<\/em><br \/><em>She tells them of Evil and Sin, and other unpleasant facts.<\/em><br \/><em>They constantly try to escape<\/em><br \/><em>From the darkness outside and within<\/em><br \/><em>By dreaming of systems so perfect that no one will need to be good.<\/em><br \/><em>But the man that is will shadow<\/em><br \/><em>The man that pretends to be.<\/em><\/p>\t<\/div>\r\n\t    <div class=\"text-lg text-right mt-1\">\r\n      \u2014 T.S. Eliot, \u201cChoruses from \u2018The Rock\u2019\u201d    <\/div>\r\n  <\/div><\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\">Writing in the <em>Washington Post<\/em> about the dedication of the new Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington, D.C., Philip Kennicott suggested that there is encoded in it the subtextual and \u201ccontentious\u201d claim that \u201cthe left failed to adequately oppose communism.\u201d As the memorial consists of a statue based on the replica of the Statue of Liberty carried by the students of Tiananmen Square in 1989, while the inscription on the plinth doesn\u2019t mention \u201cthe left\u201d at all but only says \u201cto the more than one hundred million victims of communism and to those who love liberty,\u201d you might almost think that somebody on the left had a sore conscience. It is hard to see, moreover, what would have been \u201ccontentious\u201d about the claim \u2014 if it had been made \u2014 that, so far from opposing communism \u201cadequately,\u201d many on the American left hardly opposed it at all. Many others were unashamed apologists for the regimes that murdered the (estimated) 100 million people now being memorialized. Much of the left was \u2014 and remains \u2014 \u201canti-anti-communist.\u201d This is what accounts for what Ferdinand Mount calls the \u201casymmetry of indulgence\u201d afforded communistic and fascistic state-sponsored murders.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Robert Service, writing in <em>The New Statesman<\/em>, recently complained that merely because his book <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/067402530X\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>Comrades: A World History of Communism<\/strong><\/a><\/em> had noticed the toll taken on the lives and liberties of those unfortunate enough to have lived under Communist dictatorships, a reviewer in the British press had assigned to him the most despised epithet in the vocabulary of the contemporary British intellectual: \u201cneocon.\u201d Service noted ruefully that, though discredited wherever it has been instituted, \u201cCommunism, like nuclear fuel, has a long afterlife.\u201d Indeed it does. But it didn\u2019t occur to him to ask why. I think it is because Communism was a powerful example of the recurring strain of utopianism in the intellectual life of the West. Communism itself may have failed, but the utopian habit of thought on which it was based lingers on even among those who find Communism repugnant and hateful \u2014 even, perhaps, among the dreaded neocons themselves. And this survival, in turn, is a result of our culture\u2019s having nowhere else to go in its long flight away from a heroic past it is determined to reject.<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-1bEkQB wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tBeyond the Need for Heroes\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>T<\/span>he day before the shootings at Virginia Tech University in April 2007, I had returned from a conference in California on heroes and heroism. Therefore, perhaps, it struck me with more force than it otherwise might have done that the extensive media coverage of the event which ensued seemed to go out of its way to play down the one or two instances of heroism which that tragedy had elicited. In particular, the case of the 76-year-old Holocaust survivor, Liviu Librescu, who died after using his body to block the door of his classroom against the murderer\u2019s entrance for long enough to allow a number of his students to escape out a window, seemed to me to call for special attention and celebration, at the very least. Yet the news media evinced an unmistakable desire to play this story down. Librescu\u2019s brave deed was mentioned in passing from time to time, but only in contexts where he was seen as just another of the killer\u2019s victims.<\/p>\n<p>The impulse to de-emphasize heroic actions was also evident in Paul Greengrass\u2019s 2006 film <em><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/gp\/product\/B000GH3CR0\/002-9534070-1200033?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=B000GH3CR0\">United 93<\/a><\/strong><\/em>. Greengrass was frank in admitting that the condition of his obtaining the cooperation and support of the families of the victims of the hijacking of the fourth plane on September 11, 2001 \u2014 the one that crashed into a field in Pennsylvania \u2014 was that no one should be singled out as a hero. As it happens, we know the names of at least four men on that flight who behaved heroically by any standard \u2014 Todd Beamer, Jeremy Glick, Thomas Burnett, and Mark Bingham. But it was thought that any attempt to recognize or celebrate that heroism was implicitly demeaning to the passengers who were not so recognized. Jere Longman, who wrote a book about Flight 93\u2019s resistance to the hijackers called <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/0060099097\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>Among the Heroes<\/strong><\/a><\/em>, tells of a meeting of the victims\u2019 families at which the mother of Mark Bingham had said that the passengers \u201cwere not all heroes\u201d and that to insist on such enforced equality \u201cdoes a disservice to their memory and the truth.\u201d At this, Longman reports that \u201ctwo or three people grew so angered that they left the room.\u201d One of the other family members said: \u201cIt was, like, \u2018Why diminish everyone else? They\u2019re all dead.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p>How did our culture get to the point where the heroism of some is thought to diminish others \u2014 where heroism in general has become an embarrassment, something not to be talked of in public for fear of giving offense to non-heroes? As it happens, the California conference I attended had devoted one of its sessions to a discussion of John Ford\u2019s film <em><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/gp\/product\/B00005ASGG\/002-9534070-1200033?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=B00005ASGG\">The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance<\/a><\/strong><\/em>. Released in 1962, this classic Western tells the story of a frontier town called Shinbone that is terrorized by a murderer, thief, and gun-for-hire who bears the significant name of Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin). A lawyer called Ransom Stoddard (James Stewart) comes to town with the idea of setting up a practice there. But before he even arrives his stagecoach is waylaid by Liberty and his gang, and he is robbed and beaten. Symbolically, Liberty tears the pages out of one of Stoddard\u2019s law books. On his arrival in Shinbone, the lawyer is nonplussed to find that there is no law enforcement there willing or able to bring Valance to justice. Tom Doniphan (John Wayne), the only man in town capable of standing up to him, is disposed to mind his own business. On the frontier, the law is otiose because (as Tom explains to the newcomer) there, \u201cmen take care of their own problems.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The point being made by Ford and his screenwriters, James Bellah and Willis Goldbeck, is that what\u2019s needed for the establishment of civilization is, in the first instance anyway, not law but heroism. Someone has to risk his life to put an end to the threat of violence and disorder to the whole community. The problem, as in the parable of the mice, is that there is no incentive for any particular individual to be the one to bell the cat. And even if there were, there could be no question of due process about the exercise. The man who took on Liberty Valance would have to be as much outside the law as Liberty is \u2014 at least so long as his ability to intimidate witnesses makes the law powerless against him. But the filmmakers also seek to show us how this has become an unpalatable truth and one that people seek to disguise from themselves. Doniphon is induced to shoot Valance in what he himself describes as an act of \u201cmurder, pure and simple\u201d \u2014 but in such a way that it looks like an act of self-defense by Stoddard, who is the representative of culture (he teaches the illiterates of the town to read), as well as law and civilization.<\/p>\n<p>When these desirable things all proceed, after the death of Valance, to thrive in Shinbone, the story of that death is then mythologized into a founding legend of the town and of the territory, shortly to become a state. Although he is told the truth years later, the local newspaper proprietor (Carleton Young) doesn\u2019t want to know it. He responds with what has become the movie\u2019s most famous line: \u201cThis is the West, Sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.\u201d In this, he is echoing the irony of Dutton Peabody (Edmond O\u2019Brien), his predecessor as editor of <em>The Shinbone Star<\/em>, on that memorable occasion years before when Valance and his henchmen had been made to back down in a confrontation with Doniphon, occasioned by Valance\u2019s deliberate tripping of Stoddard as he was carrying a tray of food.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWell now; what do you suppose caused them to leave?\u201d Doniphon asks the newspaperman of Valance\u2019s ignominious departure.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhy,\u201d Peabody replies ironically, \u201cit was the specter of law and order rising from the gravy and the mashed potatoes.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The suggestion is that the power of \u201cthe specter of law and order\u201d \u2014 in its own right, that is, and independent of the willingness of brave and powerful men to express their will to dominance by killing or threatening to kill each other \u2014 is a form of mythology which is foundational to their, and our, civilization. And so it is too, but only to the extent that that civilization\u2019s principles are utopian in nature, as ours increasingly are. Virginia Tech, for example, had proclaimed itself \u201ca Gun-Free School Zone\u201d \u2014 an offering to the specter of law and order which, in sickening retrospect, looks like some kind of propitiatory offering to the deity of a primitive culture, trying to ward off a plague. America is full of \u201cnuclear-free\u201d cities and \u201cdrug-free\u201d schools, all built on the same superstitious belief in the ability of democratic and well-meaning assemblies to call new realities into existence by merely passing resolutions. The only political repercussions of the Virginia Tech massacre arose out of the latest reawakening of the periodically powerful but recently dormant impulse to ban the instruments of violence \u2014 a similarly utopian measure.<\/p>\n<p>For whatever might be the marginal benefits of banning guns \u2014 and reasonable people may differ on this question \u2014 it is hard not to connect the urge to do so with a utopian belief in social engineering by legislation. The point of such engineering is always to create one of Eliot\u2019s \u201csystems so perfect that no one will need to be good.\u201d Or, we might add, heroic. If merely preventing gun violence were the aim, a much surer course would be to arm <em>all<\/em> students with handguns since, at the very least, you could be sure that no killer would claim more than one or two victims before being killed himself. But there is something un-utopian about fighting the evil that the utopian stubbornly insists should not exist in the first place. Better to pass a resolution anathematizing it. This worldview clings to its implicit belief in the power of the specter of law and order\u2019s rising from the gravy and the mashed potatoes. The passionate advocacy by some of a gun ban as a solution to the problem of school shootings, a solution whose efficacy had just been disproved by this same school shooting, showed a need on their part to believe in the power of politics and law to solve even the most intractable and dangerous problems.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-2kTKn5 wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tModernist Dreams\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>T<\/span>he utopian tendency is much more firmly rooted in our culture than we are likely to realize. Just over a fortnight before the shootings in Blacksburg, an exhibition titled \u201cModernism,\u201d first mounted last year by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, came to the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C. It was a fascinating look at a stylistic revolution, now a century old, which is still immensely influential, and not least on account of its utopianism \u2014 which was the central focus of the exhibition. On walking into the first room of the exhibition, the visitor was greeted by a sign asking \u201cWhat is Modernism?\u201d \u2014 and answering as follows: \u201cThe Iconic Objects in this room&#8230;were created by practitioners who believed that their art could help bring about Utopia within their lifetimes.\u201d This belief was expressed in all kinds of ways, as the exhibition shows, from calisthenics to kitchen design, from the cantilevered chair of Mies van der Rohe to the colorful rectilinear paintings of Piet Mondrian.<\/p>\n<p>I wish I could say that I thought the exhibition made room for some skepticism, or even a touch of irony about modernist utopianism, or some realization that \u201cutopia\u201d means \u201cno place\u201d and so cannot be \u201cbrought about.\u201d It doesn\u2019t. \u201cUtopia\u201d is capitalized because the writer thinks it\u2019s Some Place \u2014 if not now, then in the future. As Timothy Benson has put it, \u201cUtopia functioned within Modernism as a continuous, constructive means of self-critical renewal, an enactment of the central tenet of the avant-garde: creative artistic endeavors can embody hope and prepare the way for better conditions for humanity.\u201d This observation is quoted in the exhibition catalogue by Christina Lodder, in an essay titled \u201cSearching for Utopia,\u201d who also shows how neatly she can give to airy nothing a local habitation and a name by noting that \u201cUtopia comes from the Greek, and suggests two neologisms simultaneously: <em>outopia<\/em>, meaning no place, and <em>eutopia<\/em>, meaning a good place.\u201d In other words, No Place becomes Some Place because it is a pun in Greek. It\u2019s enough, at any rate, to make the \u201cModernism\u201d exhibition as much a celebration of utopianism as it is of modernism. Both, though once controversial, are now evidently to be regarded as settled cultural law.<\/p>\n<p>Still, it might be useful to try to go back to the time of that great anti-utopian, T. S. Eliot \u2014 of course there is no mention in the exhibition of this aspect of one of the greatest of the modernists \u2014 in order to re-imagine why both were controversial in the first place. Beginning with Filippo Tommaso Marinetti and the Futurists before the First World War and continuing with Die Stijl and Bauhaus after it, there was always a strong element of political radicalism associated with Modernism. Particularly in the 1920s and 1930s when it was in its heyday, Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius, and others envisaged a sweeping architectural revolution \u2014 more or less explicitly as a complement to the political ones that were projected or actual at the time \u2014 to provide for simple, efficient, undecorated \u201cworkers\u2019 housing\u201d and do away with luxury, sentimentality, ornament and other \u201cbourgeois\u201d values. Tradition had to be cleared away along with traditional images and traditional architectures in order for ideological and architectural engineers to build a new civilization from the ground up.<\/p>\n<p>The foolishness of this frank and full-blown utopian project is hardly even controversial anymore \u2014 or not any more than ritual condemnation of the crimes of Communism, which even Kennicott does not dispute. As long ago as 1981, Tom Wolfe ridiculed the utopian aspect of modernism in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/055338063X\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>From Bauhaus to Our House<\/strong><\/a><\/em>. And yet the architecture of the glass box about which he was so scathing continues to dominate our cities more than a quarter of a century later. As the title of Nathan Glazer\u2019s new book puts it, Modernism has gone <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/0691129576\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>From a Cause to a Style<\/strong><\/a><\/em>. The rags of a failed utopianism still hang from it long after it became routine for banks to commission for their headquarters Mies-style glass towers or for reproductions of Picasso and Matisse \u2014 the originals, are of course, only available to the very richest \u2014 to decorate the \u201cliving rooms\u201d of the <em>haute bourgeoisie<\/em>. We may not be conscious utopians ourselves anymore, but we still believe that those who are (or were) are entitled to full credit and even a certain veneration merely for the goodness and the nobility of their intentions.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-Z104oSl wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tThe Politics of Utopia\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>T<\/span>hat feeling is also what lies behind Tom Stoppard\u2019s epic of 2002, <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/0802143407\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>The Coast of Utopia<\/strong><\/a> \u2014 <\/em>three closely linked plays called <em>Voyage<\/em>, <em>Shipwreck<\/em>, and <em>Salvage<\/em>, which premiered on Broadway in late 2006 and early 2007 after a successful run in the West End of London \u2014 and behind the record-breaking number of Tony awards it won in June 2007. The triptych of plays presents the intellectual ferment of socialism, communism, anarchism, and other &#8211;<em>isms<\/em> in the 1840s, which eventually gave rise to the twentieth century\u2019s various utopian ideologies, as a sort of tragic farce: not worth taking seriously as political philosophy but carrying with it a great deal of poignancy because of the human quality in the lives and loves and petty rivalries among the utopian thinkers themselves. These included (especially) Mikhail Bakunin and Alexander Herzen. Karl Marx puts in an appearance, but he is regarded by Stoppard as rather a sinister buffoon. Herzen is his darling, because of his realization of the human limitations that will eventually thwart all utopian projects. \u201cIf we can\u2019t arrange our own happiness,\u201d the play has him say, \u201cit\u2019s a conceit beyond vulgarity to arrange the happiness of those who come after us.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cHe came to the conclusion that there was no abstract formula at work on our history,\u201d Stoppard has said elsewhere about Herzen. \u201cThere was nothing going on that was inevitable. The big bond between me and him is that he found an appalling arrogance in the way that people might construct an abstract narrative of our society and subordinate the individual life to it. He found that morally repellent.\u201d There is no reason to disbelieve this characterization of his own views, and yet Stoppard himself must be regarded as a sort of sentimentalist utopian as, I think, Edmund Wilson was in his great history of nineteenth-century utopian socialism, <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/1590170334\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>To the Finland Station<\/strong><\/a><\/em> \u2014 or E. H. Carr in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/1897959559\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>The Romantic Exiles<\/strong><\/a><\/em> or Isaiah Berlin in his <a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/0140136258\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong><em>Russian Thinkers<\/em><\/strong><\/a>, the two books which, along with Herzen\u2019s <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/exec\/obidos\/ASIN\/0520042107\/the-new-atlantis-20\"><strong>My Past and Thoughts<\/strong><\/a><\/em>, provided so much of the source material for <em>The Coast of Utopia<\/em>. All, though more or less skeptical of utopianism itself, sought to romanticize the utopian philosophers as a way of salvaging something from the \u201cshipwreck\u201d of their ideas that could be usable to liberals.<\/p>\n<p>What they came away with was a sort of tragic well-meaning. Certainly in <em>The Coast of Utopia<\/em>, the nightmarish twentieth century to which everything is leading up seems to recede ever further into the distant future as the focus turns to the humanity of that future\u2019s architects. All is forgiven, it seems, because their intentions were so good, their righteous anger against the abuses of tsarism so noble, and their commitment to authenticity of feeling in their private lives so much like our own. The works of the German philosophers so loved by Bakunin and his circle come off as little better than gibberish, a sort of comically obscure counterpoint to the serious business of Life and Death and Love, which get all the kudos in the end. Though Marx is all but ignored, it\u2019s not so easy as Tom Stoppard might think to dissociate his disastrous imprint on twentieth-century history from the intellectual soup out of which his ideas evolved. As Anthony Grafton pointed out in his review of the Broadway production in the <em>New York Review of Books<\/em>, Lenin looked back on the inspiration provided to him and the revolution by Herzen as second only to that of Marx.<\/p>\n<p>Yet Grafton is also seduced by what he calls the \u201crevolution of the sensibilities\u201d that <em>The Coast of Utopia<\/em> celebrates and inspires:<\/p>\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote\"><p>In the age of <em>Blink <\/em>and Blahnik, when the stupidity of a radio shock jock inspires a fit of moral indignation in the American press but the destructive ineptitude of the American government does not, Stoppard has made us see what it was like to love ideas with a whole heart, to fight for a better world with all one\u2019s strength, to write for readers who waited for days for each new article, to hurt the people one loves most, and to insist that no ends, however good, can justify immoral means. <em>The Coast of Utopia <\/em>brings us face to face with complex, articulated characters, doing their imperfect best to solve the hardest problems with which existence confronts us.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n<p>In other words, utopia-lite ends up being process, not system; journey, not destination. The point is not to build something, but merely to care passionately about the idea of building something. It\u2019s this which lifts the failed or frustrated utopians onto a higher moral plane than, say, \u201cthe American government.\u201d Yet the routine swipe at the Bush administration should not be allowed to pass without noting that its supposedly \u201cdestructive ineptitude\u201d is really just the liberal utopia of passionate carers translated into political and military reality. How is President Bush materially different from those \u201ccomplex, articulated characters, doing their imperfect best to solve the hardest problems with which existence confronts us\u201d? He is at least partly, and to the extent that he believes a democratic government can be imposed on the Iraqis, a victim of the great modernist paradox, which is that we don\u2019t want the utopias themselves anymore, but we want the utopian style. And we want it because it is a self-validation. It shows that we believe in the right things \u2014 in peace, in progress, in compassion for life\u2019s victims, and in universal principles \u2014 even though we no longer have any intellectually coherent program for institutionalizing them among men. It also shows that we don\u2019t believe in the wrong things. And the principal of all the wrong things we don\u2019t believe in is the hero, the man on the white horse (a fascist emblem, we now believe) who seeks to win glory for himself and honor for his people by fighting against those who would do evil.<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s why President Bush gets no credit for his utopianism from the sentimentalist-utopians of the left: because it depends on people \u2014 and, in particular, on Americans \u2014 being good and fighting what he calls \u201cevil-doers.\u201d \u201cUnhappy the land that is in need of heroes,\u201d says the Galileo of that heretical utopian, Bertolt Brecht, whose belief in the existence of the happy land that has no need of heroes was still undimmed by disillusionment with Soviet-style utopianism. He was making a point very much like that of <em>The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance<\/em>. We don\u2019t want Tom Doniphan any more than we want Liberty Valance, since both are free men, unconstrained by the laws and regulations of compassionate social engineers. We may have lost confidence in the ability of those engineers to design a perfect system, or even to live up to their own high expectations of humanity, but it is easier to go on clinging to their fantasies as if we believed them to be real than to submit to the despair of admitting to ourselves that life is still for us what it was to our great-grandfathers who believed \u2014 or at least pretended to believe \u2014 that there was nothing in it more important than being good.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Writing in the Washington Post about the dedication of the new Victims of Communism Memorial in Washington, D.C., Philip Kennicott suggested that there is encoded in it the subtextual and \u201ccontentious\u201d claim that \u201cthe left failed to adequately oppose communism.\u201d As the memorial consists of a statue based on the replica of the Statue of Liberty carried by the students of Tiananmen Square in 1989, while the inscription on the plinth doesn\u2019t mention \u201cthe left\u201d at all but only says \u201cto the more than one hundred million victims of communism and to those who love liberty,\u201d you might almost think&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"template":"","article_type":[13],"noteworthy_people":[],"topics":[5029,2266],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article\/9875"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/article"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article\/9875\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":23134,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article\/9875\/revisions\/23134"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=9875"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"article_type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article_type?post=9875"},{"taxonomy":"noteworthy_people","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/noteworthy_people?post=9875"},{"taxonomy":"topics","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/topics?post=9875"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}