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"It's Not Elitist; It's Clearly Snobbish"
By Ed Driscoll · April 15, 2008 05:51 PM · Bobos In Paradise · The Making of the President

Jonah Goldberg parses the difference between "elite", "snob", "arrogant", and other nouns and adjectives that are fun to put Dr. Evil’s patented air quotations around:

In his telling Pennsylvania was once Belgium on the Susquehanna — cheese parties, Sam Harris book clubs etc — and it can be again if only these people get good enough jobs to lay down their guns and bibles. As just about everyone has observed by now, this is a fundamentally Marxist way of looking at the world and Obama deserves to be called on it.

But it's not elitist, not really. It clearly snobbish. It's certainly myopic and arrogant. And it's absolutely wrong. But I don't think it's elitist. Maybe I'm biased because I don't have any pressing problem with elitism, rightly understood. Elite derives from the Latin for elect and in our elections we decide who will be our (political) elite. Jefferson believed in a democratic elite which rose up on merit. I do too. We're all elitists in one way or another (Show of hands: Who wants an elite surgeon to perform their heart-lung transplant and who wants a really average surgeon to do it? If you answer that you want the surgeon from the really meaty part of the bell curve, I will concede you are no elitist).

What's offensive about Obama's comment isn't its elitism per se, but the arrogance of assuming that those who see the world through a different prism or who are relatively immune to his charms are somehow embittered and confused and therefore less equipped to decide who should be our elected elite.

And yes, I understand that elitism has come to mean snobbish arrogance and all that, which is what most people mean when they say elitist. But I'm going to cling to my view of elitism regardless of which way the tide pulls me.

Or as Mickey Kaus writes:
I'm convinced that the great achievement of Republicanism over the past decades was getting average Americans to think that it was the Democrats who were the snobs. The person who convinced me of this (in a highly persuasive lecture) was Thomas Frank.
Kaus notes, that Frank's theories "are on the verge of convincing millions of average Americans that the Republicans were right, at least about the likely Dem nominee."



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