https://tomklingenstein.com/the-american-way-of-life-is-under-threat/
Let us begin by listening to the progressive vision of America.
The late Todd Gitlin, a leading student activist of the 1960s New Left who went on to a career in academia, declares that America is the fulfillment of the Enlightenment. But, Gitlin writes, “the point is not to celebrate some accomplished Enlightenment with its Declaration of Independence…its Federalist Papers and Constitutional debates,” but to see the American project as “an aspiration, an invitation, a commitment to a process that seriously aims to bring about understandings that do not yet exist.”
Michael Walzer, another major left-wing intellectual of Gitlin’s generation, writes that America is “a radically unfinished society.” The late Richard Rorty, one of the most influential public philosophers of the second half of the twentieth century, described the American project as the utopian dream of Walt Whitman and John Dewey. Rorty declares that Whitman and Dewey, influenced by Hegel’s concept of progressive evolution, “wanted…utopian America to replace God as the unconditional object of desire. They wanted the struggle for social justice to be the country’s animating principle.”
This is the shared vision of the progressive political coalition that includes both the hard Left, with its neo-Marxist oppressor vs. oppressed framework, and the mainstream of the Democratic party. These forces represent progressive fusionism, its constituent parts working in tandem just as the twentieth-century conservative fusionist coalition worked together politically, despite philosophical differences.
Different elements of the progressive coalition emphasize distinct yet complementary visions of America. All find our nation deeply flawed and in need of transformation.
The hard left tells us that America is (and always has been) an oppressive society.For example, the Organization of American Historians praises the 1619 Project and declares America is “a nation built on slavery, exploitation, and exclusion. Critical race theory provides a lens through which we can examine and understand systemic racism and its many consequences.”
The narrative of the mainstream Democratic party must be more political. Their argument runs as follows:
America’s past is deeply problematic. But we have great ideals. The core of those ideals is the continuing expansion of social justice to those previously “oppressed” groups: blacks, women, gays, undocumented immigrants and as President Biden noted “transgender rights are the civil rights issue of our time.”