Liberal Delusions
by mark steyn
According to
Georgetown Law student Sandra Fluke, invited to address the Democratic
convention and the nation, America faces a stark choice this November.
"During this campaign, we've heard about two profoundly different futures
that could await women in this country – and how one of those futures looks
like an offensive, obsolete relic of our past," she cautioned. "That
future could become real."
In one of those
futures, women will be "shut out and silenced," rape victims will be
"victimized all over again," pregnant women will "die
preventable deaths in our emergency rooms," and "access to birth
control is controlled by people who will never use it." If you're wondering
where all that is on your ballot form, just check the box marked "R."
"We know what
this America would look like," warned Miss Fluke sternly. "In a few
short months, that's the America that we could be. But that's
not the America that we should be. And it's not who we
are."
Fortunately, the
America that we could be that isn't the America that we should be
doesn't have to be the America that we would be. The good news
is that "we've also seen another America that we could choose. In that
America, we'd have the right to choose," said Miss Fluke. This would be
"an America in which our president, when he hears that a young woman has
been verbally attacked, thinks of his daughters, not his delegates or his
donors. And in which our president stands with all women. And strangers come
together, and reach out and lift her up. And then, instead of trying to silence
her, you invite me here, and you give me this microphone – to amplify our
voice. That's the difference."
So, if you're looking for an America where strangers
lift up Sandra Fluke and amplify her voice, that would be the box marked
"D."
"I've seen what these two
futures look like," she said. "And six months from now, we're all
going to be living in one future, or the other. But only one." Because you
can't have two futures simultaneously, even under Obamacare.
With respect to Sandra Fluke,
I think there's a third future looming. The paperback edition of my book comes
out in a week or so, and you can pretty much get the gist of it from the title:
"After America." For me, the likely scenario isn't that the
Republicans will be terrorizing rape victims or that the Democrats will finally
pass the necessary legislation to make contraception available for the
contraceptively starved millions crying out for it, but that America will be
sliding off the cliff – literally, as Joe Biden would literally say. And when
America slides off the cliff it lands with a much bigger thud than Greece or
Iceland. I'm not certain that the Republicans will be able to prevent that
happening. But I know that the Democrats can't. America owes more money than
anybody has ever owed anyone in the history of the planet. But millions of
Americans don't see it, and millions of those who do see it don't see it as a
problem.
Sandra Fluke is one of them.
She completed her education a few weeks ago – at the age of 31, or Grade 25. Before
going to Georgetown, she warmed up with a little light BS in Feminist, Gender
and Sexuality Studies from Cornell. She then studied law at one of the most
prestigious institutions in the nation, where tuition costs 50 grand a year.
The average starting salary for a Georgetown Law graduate is $160,000 per annum
– first job, first paycheck.