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Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Be Thankful

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Nov. 26, 2014
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No. 148
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By Jonathan V. Last
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COLD OPEN

We will start today from gratitude.

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Tomorrow you may be too bound up with cooking and cleaning and eating to have much time for a real thanksgiving_at least not until the kids are in bed and the company’s gone and you’re finishing up the last of the dishes and getting ready to have one more glass of port before heading up to bed. That’s why I’ve always believed that the day before is actually better suited for giving thanks.

And not just for this, the stuff of the immediate world around us. Yes, we’re thankful for our families and our comforts, our health, and all the other blessings. But there ought to be more there. There ought to be some serious, philosophical gratitude.

In the course of editing The Seven Deadly Virtues I became convinced of the primacy of gratitude among the virtues. Cicero has a great line about gratitude, saying that it "is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others." I think this is exactly right.

A few years ago Yuval Levin gave a lecture on gratitude which I’ve quoted before, but is worth reading again, because it is a perfect meditation for this day:

To my mind, conservatism is gratitude. Conservatives tend to begin from gratitude for what is good and what works in our society and then strive to build on it, while liberals tend to begin from outrage at what is bad and broken and seek to uproot it.

You need both, because some of what is good about our world is irreplaceable and has to be guarded, while some of what is bad is unacceptable and has to be changed. We should never forget that the people who oppose our various endeavors and argue for another way are well intentioned too, even when they’re wrong, and that they’re not always wrong.

But we can also never forget what moves us to gratitude, and so what we stand for and defend: the extraordinary cultural inheritance we have; the amazing country built for us by others and defended by our best and bravest; America’s unmatched potential for lifting the poor and the weak; the legacy of freedom_of ordered liberty_built up over centuries of hard work.

We value these things not because they are triumphant and invincible but because they are precious and vulnerable, because they weren’t fated to happen, and they’re not certain to survive. They need us_and our gratitude for them should move us to defend them and to build on them.

That’s not to say that conservatives are never outraged, of course. We’ve had a lot of reason to be outraged lately. But it tends to be when we think the legacy and promise we cherish are threatened, rather than when some burning ambition is frustrated.

Conservatives often begin from gratitude because we start from modest expectations of human affairs_we know that people are imperfect, and fallen, and weak; that human knowledge and power are not all they’re cracked up to be; and we’re enormously impressed by the institutions that have managed to make something great of this imperfect raw material. So we want to build on them because we don’t imagine we could do better starting from scratch.

Liberals often begin from outrage because they have much higher expectations_maybe even utopian expectations_about the perfectibility of human things and the potential of human knowledge and power. They’re often willing to ignore tradition and to push aside institutions that channel generations of wisdom because they think we can do better on our own.

This can sometimes leave conservatives feeling like we are the brakes on American life, while people on the left hold the steering wheel. Like they push for their idea of progress and we just want to go a little more slowly. But that’s a serious mistake.

The American idea of progress is the tradition that we’re defending. It is made possible precisely by sustaining our deep ties to the ideals of liberty, and equality, and human dignity expressed in our founding and our institutions. The great moral advances in our history have involved the vindication of those principles_have involved America becoming more like itself.

And in any society, the task of sustaining those kinds of institutions for the next generation is the essential task_the irreplaceable precondition for everything else. That is the work first and foremost of families, and of communities. It can also be the work of educators, and of legislators. The work of democratic capitalism and of our constitutional order.

They are all connected by the need to sustain the great gift that is our country, and when we fail to see them as connected_when for instance we think we can advance our economic agenda at the expense of our concerns about the culture_we risk losing that gift altogether.

Of course it is sometimes essential to push the envelope of those traditions when they become stifling, and to make sure that the past is not an undue burden on the future. But that is always a reactive or oppositional effort. It is never the essence, and could never be more important than the work of making sure that the foundations of American life_our free society, economy, and government; our culture of virtue_are sustained.

Without those, there is no future. The work of preserving them is therefore not passive work, it’s not restraint; it is the active work of keeping our society alive and thriving. It’s not a brake, it’s the very engine of the American story.

That’s the work so many of you do; the work of active gratitude.

More below.

LOOKING BACK

"In a city of well over half a million government employees_city, state, and federal_in which the largest source of 'private sector’ employment is government-subsidized health care providers, as well as numerous, often government-funded, 'nonprofit’ organizations, de Blasio’s 'populist’ vote came heavily from those with a direct personal stake in the outcome.

"Populism in America has been traditionally associated with self-employed farmers and miners fighting the great railroads and agricultural combines, looking to get a fair shake from government. Gotham’s 'populists,’ better described as 'statists,’ are people looking for a greater transfer of wealth from the private to the public sector. And therein lie the limits of de Blasio’s agenda.

_Fred Siegel, "A Curious Form of 'Populism’" from our November 25, 2013, issue.

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THE READING LIST
William Schambra on non-profits, the community, and the whole person.
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Heather Mac Donald on microaggressions at UCLA.
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Lord Sacks on man and woman. (Courtesy of Rod Dreher.)
INSTANT CLASSIC

"'To the two-thirds of voters who chose not to participate in the process yesterday, I hear you, too,’ Obama said at his post-election press conference. How can he hear these voters? Dental fillings? By what means does he divine their hopes, fears, and needs? A Ouija board?

"I have a test to determine the lunacy of a Democratic talking point: If E.J. Dionne is the only reporter who parrots it, then it’s too crazy for most journalists. Sure enough, writes Dionne, by issuing his unconstitutional executive order, Obama 'is paying close attention to the feelings of a very important group of voters_the tens of millions who supported him two years ago but were so dispirited that they stayed away from the polls on November 4.’ It’s the silent majority_so silent it does not even vote."

_Matthew Continetti on Obama and the future, November 21, 2014

THE LAST WORD

I’m with Yuval, full stop.

So start Thanksgiving early by being extra grateful today. Travel safe. Hold your families close. Let gratitude be your lodestar.

And if you’re ready to start your Christmas shopping, The Seven Deadly Virtues is waiting for you.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Best,
JVL

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