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- ╚January 5, 1970Man and Woman of the Year: The Middle Americans
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- The Supreme Court had forbidden it, but they prayed
- defiantly in a school on Netcong, N.J., reading the morning
- invocation from the Congressional Record. In the state
- legislatures, they introduced more than 100 Draconian bills to
- put down campus dissent. In West Virginia, they passed a law
- absolving police in advance of guilt in any riot deaths. In
- Minneapolis they elected a police detective to be mayor.
- Everywhere, they flew the colors of assertive patriots. Their
- car windows were plastered with American-flag decals, their
- ideological totems. In the bumper-sticker dialogue of the
- freeways, they answered Make Love Not War with Honor America or
- Spiro is My Hero. They sent Richard Nixon to the White House and
- two teams of astronauts to the moon. They were both exalted and
- afraid. The mysteries of space were nothing, after all, compared
- with the menacing confusions of their own society.
-
- The American dream that they were living was no longer the
- dream as advertised. They feared that they were beginning to
- lose their grip on the country. Others seemed to be taking over
- -- the liberals, the radicals, the defiant young, a
- communications industry that they often believed was lying to
- them. The Saturday Evening Post folded, but the older world of
- Norman Rockwell icons was long gone anyway. No one celebrated
- them: intellectuals dismissed their lore as banality.
- Pornography, dissent and drugs seemed to wash over them in
- waves, bearing some of their children away.
-
- But in 1969 they began to assert themselves. They were
- "discovered" first by politicians and the press, and then they
- started to discover themselves. In the Administration's voices
- -- especially in the Vice President's and the Attorney General's
- -- in the achievements and the character of the astronauts, in
- a murmurous and pervasive discontent, they sought to reclaim
- their culture. It was their interpretation of patriotism that
- brought Richard Nixon the time to pursue a gradual withdrawal
- from the war. By their silent but newly felt presence, they
- influenced the mood of government and the course of legislation,
- and this began to shape the course of the nation and the
- nation's course in the world. The Men and Women of the Year were
- the Middle Americans.
-
- The Battleground of Change
- "Some say that you can't rationalize the plight of the
- kids," observes the Hudson Institute's Frank Armbruster, "you
- have got to feel it. The same thing is true of Middle America;
- you have to feel it. "The Middle Americans cherish,
- apprehensively, a system of values that they see assaulted and
- mocked everywhere -- everywhere except in Richard Nixon's
- Washington. "This," they will say with an air of embarrassment
- that such a truth need be stated at all, "is the greatest
- country in the world. Why are people trying to tear it down?"
-
- Middle Americans both physically and ideologically inhabit
- the battleground of change, and they feel themselves most
- threatened by it Taxes hit them the hardest, and yet they feel
- that they have less and less voice in where and how their money
- is spent. The Woman of the Year, perhaps even more than her
- husband, senses the chaos. Often enough, inflation determines
- the diet she feeds her family. She is anxious about safety in
- the streets. She worries about her children being bussed, about
- the sex education to which they are subjected, the drugs they
- might pick up at school, the smut for sale on the drugstore
- newsstand and the neighborhood movie screen. For too long no one
- has seemed to care about the Middle Americans' concerns. They
- have felt ignored while angry minorities dominated the headlines
- and the Government's domestic action. If not ignored, they have
- been treated with condescension.
-
- Paul M. Deac, executive vice president of the National
- Confederation of American Ethnic Groups, which says it
- represents 18 million foreign-born and first- and second-
- generation Americans expressed the especially virulent outrage
- of the poorer Middle Americans. "The professional liberals let
- the genie out of the bottle -- racial hatred, lawlessness,"
- says Deac. The backlash today is not so much against blacks per
- se, or against black militancy and the white intellectuals: "The
- Moratorium was a stab in the back to our boys on the firing
- lines. Our families don't have long-haired brats-- they'd tear
- the hair off them. Our boys don't smoke pot or raise hell or
- seek deferments. Our people are too busy making a living and
- trying to be good Americans."
-
- Heroes and Villains
- The gaps between Middle America and the vanguard of fashion
- are deep. The daughters of Middle America learn baton twirling,
- not Hermann Hesse. Middle Americans line up in the cold each
- Christmas season at Manhattan's Radio City Music Hall; the
- Rockettes, not Oh! Calcutta! are their entertainment. While the
- rest of the nation's youth has been watching Dustin Hoffman in
- Midnight Cowboy, Middle American teen-agers have been taking in
- John Wayne for the second or third time in The Green Berets.
- Middle Americans have been largely responsible for more than
- 10,000 Christmas cards sent to General Creighton Abrams in
- Saigon. They sing the national anthem at football games -- and
- mean it.
-
- The culture no longer seems to supply many heroes, but
- Middle Americans admire men like Neil Armstrong and to some
- extent, Spiro Agnew. California Governor Ronald Reagan and San
- Francisco State College President S.I. Hayakawa have won
- approval for their hard line on dissent. Before his death last
- year, Dwight Eisenhower was listed as the most admired man in
- the nation -- and Middle America cast much of the vote. In
- death, John Kennedy is also a hero. Ironically, Robert Kennedy
- had the allegiance of much of Middle America along with his
- constituency of blacks and the young. Whatever their politics,
- both Kennedys had an idealism about America, a pride about it
- to which Middle Americans responded because they shared it.
-
- Middle America's villains are less easily singled out.
- Yippie Abbie Hoffman or S.D.S. leaders like Mark Rudd are hardly
- important enough by themselves to constitute major devils. With
- such faceless groups as the Weathermen, they merely serve as
- symbols of all the radicals who pronounce the country evil and
- ripe for destruction. Disliked, too, are the vaguely identified
- "liberals" and "intellectuals" who are seen as sympathizing with
- the radicals. Perhaps the most authentic individual villains to
- Middle America are the Black Panther leaders, Eldridge Cleaver
- and Bobby Seale.
-
- But there is a danger of over simplifying both the loves
- and hates of Middle America. Despite all the evidence of a shift
- to the right, Middle America for years -- certainly since the
- New Deal -- has been part of the country's basic leftward trend,
- and still is. The Middle is located much farther toward the left
- today than it was a decade ago.
-
- Defining Middle America
- Who precisely are the Middle Americans? Columnist Joseph
- Kraft gave the term currency in late 1967. They make up the core
- of the group that Richard Nixon now invokes as the "forgotten
- Americans" or "the Great Silent Majority," though Middle
- Americans themselves may not be a majority of the U.S. All
- Americans doubtless share some Middle American beliefs, and many
- Middle Americans would disagree among themselves on some
- issues. The lower middle class, including blue-collar workers,
- service employees and farm workers, numbers some 40 million.
- Many of the nation's 20 million elderly citizens, frequently
- living on fixed incomes, are Middle American. So is a
- substantial portion of the 36 million white-collar workers.
- Although a hard figure is not possible, the total of Middle
- Americans possibly approaches 100 million, or half the U.S.
- population.
-
- A State of Mind
- The Middle Americans tend to be groped in the nation's
- heartland more than on its coasts. But they live in Queens,
- N.Y., and Van Nuys, Calif., as well as in Skokie and
- Chillicothe. They tend toward the middle-aged and the
- middlebrow. They are defined as much by what they are not as
- what they are. As a rule, they are not the poor or the rich.
- Still, many wealthy business executives are Middle Americans.
- H. Ross Perot, the Texas millionaire who organized a group
- called "United We Stand Inc." to support the President on the
- war, is an example. Few blacks march in the ranks of Middle
- America. Nor do the nation's intellectuals, its liberals, its
- professors, its surgeons. Many general practitioners, though are
- Middle Americans. Needless to say, Middle America offers no
- haven to the New Left, although Middle Americans might count a
- number of old leftists -- unionists, for example -- in their
- numbers. They are not extremists of the right despite the fact
- that some of them voted for Gorge Wallace in 1968. They are both
- Republicans and Democrats: many cast their ballots for Richard
- Nixon, but it may be that nearly as many voted for Hubert
- Humphrey.
-
- Above all Middle America is a state of mind, a morality,
- a construct of values and prejudices and a complex of fears.
- The Man and Woman of the Year represent a vast, unorganized
- fraternity bound together by a roughly similar way of seeing
- things.
-
- The American mood during the past year has been
- unquestionably calmer than it was in 1968, which seemed to be
- the violent crescendo for the '60s. A new Administration given
- to understatement -- on the part of the President if not the
- Vice President -- soothed the national psyche. When Spiro Agnew
- erupted against television and newspaper commentators and
- against dissent's "effete corps of impudent snobs," Middle
- America was further comforted -- and also aroused to an
- intimation of its own potential strength. The flights of Apollo
- 11 and 12 were a quintessential adventure of American technology
- and daring, the "triumph of the squares" is what Eric Hoffer,
- the forklift philosopher and spokesman of the workingman, called
- the Apollo program. The astronauts themselves were paragons
- of Middle American aspiration. Redolent of charcoal cookouts,
- their vocabularies an engaging mix of space jargon and "gee
- whiz," the space explorer gave back to Middle America where such
- things still matter; that among Neil Armstrong's
- extraterrestrial baggage was a special badge of his college
- fraternity, Phi Delta Theta. He used it symbolically to
- establish Moon Alpha Chapter.
-
- No Clear Victories
- For most of the '60s, the nation was transfixed by its
- darker side, as if some impulse of Ahab were obsessively driving
- it to a suicidal reunion with an evil deep in its own nature.
- The astronauts reasserted the chief mate Starbuck's cool,
- professional sanity. Not intellect, but intelligence. Not evil,
- but remediable errors, course corrections, chatter from Capcom
- to Houston. In the Middle American version, the Pequod steers
- for him, Moby Dick is a holdful of whale oil for the nation's
- lamps.
-
- Some liberals grumbled that the Apollo programs $26 billion
- would have been better spent on curing hunger or the urban
- malaise. Poet W.H. Auden wrote dyspeptically:
- "It's natural the Boys should whoop it up for
- so huge a phallic triumph, an adventure
- it would not have occurred to woman
- to think worthwhile, made possible only
- because we like huddling in gangs and knowing
- the exact time . . ."
-
- Yet Americans, particularly Middle Americans, reveled in
- the lunar landings precisely because they were victories purely
- accomplished: in Viet Nam, in the various slums, in the polluted
- environment, no clear victories seemed possible any longer.
-
- "To go forward at all," Richard Nixon said at his
- inauguration, "is to go forward together." Assuming office
- after a year of wrenching passions, Nixon enjoyed a honeymoon
- of lowered voices that lasted at least through the summer.
- Except for the further radical fringes, antiwar dissenters
- wanted to allow Nixon time to make good his pledge to extricate
- the U.S. from Viet Nam. The nation had overcommited itself both
- at home and abroad, and Nixon took it to be time to stop making
- promises, to realign American obligations with the nation's
- resources and desires. There are many who feel that America's
- problems are so great and urgent that it could not endure an
- era of "consolidation." But the Nixon Doctrine appealed to
- Middle America.
-
- Contradictory Mixture
- He recast domestic policy, established a White House
- Council for Urban Affairs designed to give coherence and
- continuity to urban planning. Like most Middle Americans, Nixon
- reflected what would have traditionally seemed a contradictory
- mixture of liberal and conservative impulses. From a liberal
- point of view, the record of Nixon's first year is probably
- better than his poor public relations and awkward rhetoric would
- indicate. At year's end, the Administration saved its
- "Philadelphia Plan," designed to open construction trade unions
- to thousands more black workers. His bold welfare reforms for
- the first time proposed a policy of guaranteed annual wages
- combined with a work incentive. His draft reform, instituting
- selection by lottery, brought a new equity to the Selective
- Service system. He won liberal applause for ending the U.S.
- production of biological weapons and for beginning the Strategic
- Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) with the Soviet Union.
-
- But Nixon counterpointed such liberal moves with a series
- of gestures toward the conservative instincts of his Middle
- American constituency. In naming U.S. Court of Appeals Judge
- Warren Burger to be Earl Warren's successor as Chief Justice,
- he began readjusting the Supreme Court's balance toward a
- stricter constructionism. His voting rights bill would have the
- effect of weakening the Negro gains accomplished under the 1965
- Voting Rights Act. Even though the Supreme Court ordered "all
- deliberate speed" in school integration 15 years ago, the
- Administration sought to delay the process once again by
- allowing some Southern school districts more time to formulate
- their desegregation plans. Then the Supreme Court, in its first
- major decision after Berger became Chief Justice, unanimously
- rejected the delays.
-
- Civics-Book decency
- Nixon was pursing not so much a "Southern strategy" as a
- Middle American strategy. The South is only one part of the
- Middle America that Nixon has installed in Washington. His
- Administration -- with such exceptions as Daniel Patrick
- Moynahan and Henry Kissinger -- is like the reunion photograph
- of a Depression class that rose to the top by Horatio Alger
- virtues. Interior Secretary Walter Hickel arrived in Alaska at
- the age of 20 with 37 cents in his pocket. George Romney, the
- Secretary of Housing and Urban Development is the son of a
- Mormon who was driven out of Mexico by Pancho Villa and
- supported his ten children for a time as a carpenter in El Paso.
-
- Nixon himself is the embodiment of Middle America. There
- is opportunity for everyone, his mother taught him back in
- Whittier, Calif. -- work hard, love your country, never give up.
- God likes fighters. Nixon's philosophers are Norman Vincent
- Peale and Billy Graham. Like the rest of his Administration, the
- President has gone far beyond his humble origins. But Nixon,
- John Mitchell and Spiro Agnew minister to and play upon the
- discontent of Middle America by conjuring up the imperatives of
- discipline and restraint.
-
- Americans of different generations inhabit the same
- continent, but they exist in different eras. The American mind
- is, in effect, stretched out over several decades. The radical
- young dwell in projection of the 70's. The values of many of
- their fathers are the ethics of the Depression, of World War II
- or the later 40's. In the imagination of his ideals, the Middle
- American glimpses cracked snapshots through a scrim: a khaki
- uniform, trousers gathered at a waist; a souvenir samurai sword;
- a "ruptured duck"; a girl with Betty Grable hair and hemline;
- the lawn of a barely remembered house. The ideological order
- that he sees is a civics-book sense of decency. The Depression
- taught him the wisdom of accumulation and the fear of
- joblessness. He knew from schooling on the G.I. Bill what
- education could do and what it meant.
-
- The Middle American's faith is not merely grounded upon
- nostalgia and emotion. He believes in a system that did work and
- in large measure still does; a brilliant, highly adaptable
- system, heir to the Enlightenment and classic democracy, with
- innumerable, ingenious, local accretions. But the country has
- become too complex and the long-hidden inequities too glaring
- for the system to continue without drastic changes. The Middle
- American's education does not dwell upon the agonizing moral
- discrepancies of American history -- the story of the Indians
- or the blacks, or the national tradition of violence. He quite
- sincerely rejects the charge that he is prejudiced against the
- blacks or callused about the poor. He cannot believe that the
- society he has come to accept as the best possible on earth,
- the order he sees as natural, contains wrongs so deeply built-
- in that he does not notice them. His sense of indignation is
- all too easily served by the fact that so many reformers have
- gone beyond the reform as being too slow, and are using methods
- ranging from rude to downright totalitarian. The issues that
- arouse and haunt Middle America form a catalogue of national
- crisis in values:
-
- -- Race. The rising level of crime frightens the Middle
- American, and when he speaks of crime, though he does not like
- to admit it, he means blacks. On the one hand, Middle America
- largely agrees with the advances toward equality made by blacks
- in the past ten years. Says Robert Rosenthal, an insurance
- auditor in New York City: "Sure, I know it's only a handful of
- Negroes who are causing the trouble. Most of them are the same
- as whites." His daughter Nancy, 17, attends a school that is
- 60% black and she expresses both the adaptability and anxiety
- of the Middle Americans: "I always look down the stairway to
- make sure no one is down there before I walk. It's not really
- bad, except that you can't go into the bathroom because they'll
- take your money."
-
- Middle Americans express respect for moderate black
- leaders like Roy Wilkins and Whitney Young -- which is easy
- enough. Middle Americans would generally like to see the quality
- of black education improve. But the idea of sacrificing their
- own children's education to a long-range improvement for blacks
- appalls them. "They moved to the suburbs for their children, to
- get fresh air and find good schools," says Frank Armbruster. But
- programs such as bussing "negated all their sacrifices to
- provide their children an education."
-
- Open admissions programs at universities strike Middle
- Americans an unfair and illogical violations of the merit
- system. Beyond that, they see a bias toward blacks in
- conventional admissions policies. "If anything," says Futurist
- Herman Kahn, "they believe that a black face helps. A Middle
- American can't send his kid to Harvard, but he knows the black
- man down the street can, if the boy is bright enough." Middle
- American workers frequently feel that blacks are given
- preferential treatment in job hiring. Says Harvard Psychiatrist
- Robert Coles, who has made a study of the grievances of Middle
- America: "They say that the Negro should be given jobs, but only
- so long as he does not go faster than they had to go."
-
- -- Black Militancy. It is the black militants who especially
- anger the white Middle. During 1969, job militants at
- construction sites in Pittsburgh came up against phalanxes of
- hard-hatted white workers determined to prove that they were
- capable of counterviolence. "The threats strike me as
- blackmail," says Al Breselton, an Atlanta advertising man.
- "Negroes have got to confront the white community strongly, but
- we had better not be met with shotguns, because we're got a lot
- more of them than they have." Without exactly meaning to, white
- Middle America rests upon the unspoken threat of sheer presence
- and the six-gun deterrent, Gary Cooper's fingers twitching two
- inches from his holster. No wonder the Middle Americans recoil
- when the twitching fingers are black -- as at Cornell, or at
- Black Panther headquarters.
-
- -- Dissent. Middle Americans associate black militancy with
- white students' dissent -- university revolts that the white
- middle, brought up to cherish education as an almost sacred
- instrument of self-improvement, find incomprehensible. "San
- Francisco State is being destroyed by a bunch of crummy punks,"
- says Eric Hoffer. "Who the hell would have dreamt that a thing
- like this was possible? Ignorant, bedraggled, illiterate punks!
- Our institutions are tremendously vulnerable. What are we afraid
- of? Of the Government? Of the police? Of Congress? No, for God's
- sake, we're afraid of the individual, of the beast masquerading
- as man." Some less volcanic thinkers -- among them many liberals
- and academics -- have also expressed dismay. All institutions
- are fallible, says Columbia University's Jacques Barzun, and
- unending criticism can bring down the entire structure of
- society.
-
- No one expresses the ideology of the Nixonian nation on
- dissent better than Historian Daniel Boorstin, whose book, The
- Decline of Radicalism, Nixon sometimes studies in a secluded den
- in the Executive Office Building. For an academic, Boorstin is
- almost ferocious about dissent: "Disagreement is the lifeblood
- of democracy, dissention is its cancer. Disagreers seek
- solutions to common problems, dissenters seek power for
- themselves." In a section on the "Rise of Minority Veto," which
- must be Agnew's text, he writes: "Small groups have more power
- than ever before . . . We are witnessing the explosive rebellion
- of small groups, who reject the American past, deny their
- relation to the community. This atavism, this new barbarism,
- cannot last if the nation is to survive." To that, Middle
- America offers a resounding amen.
-
- Middle Americans believe that the radical young are
- operating in a vast misunderstanding of their nation. Brandeis
- Political Scientist John Roche tells an anecdote about the
- Chicago convention trouble. As he was being collared by a cop,
- a dissident shouted: "Long live the dictatorship of the
- proletariat!" Raising his nightstick, the cop retorted "I am the
- proletariat." Bash, bash.
-
- -- Viet Nam the war, which has claimed so many of his sons,
- leaves Middle American in a moral perplexity. Most probably
- agree that the U.S. commitment was a mistake in the first place.
- Yet they want "an honorable withdrawal." The idea of a U.S.
- defeat troubles them. Edward Looney, a Brooklyn bus driver, lost
- a son a year ago; he was killed by a misdirected American
- shell. "We may find out some day that what we're doing in Viet
- Nam is wrong," he says, "but until then, it's my country right
- or wrong."
-
- The My Lai massacre has only deepened the confusion. Many
- Middle Americans stoutly refuse to believe that it even
- occurred. This was true of 49% of those polled by the
- Minneapolis Tribune last month. When they do believe that the
- massacre happened, they attribute it to battlefield error and
- not to the malignancy of American soldiers. Middle America
- teeters on the edge of a different fear: What of all that death
- and maiming were to amount to little or nothing, of so much
- sacrifice made no real difference to Southeast Asia, to the
- containment of Communism? American sons keep coming homeward in
- zippered plastic body bags, and a sizable percentage of
- Americans tell the pollsters that they believe Viet Nam will
- eventually turn Communist in any case.
-
- -- Morals. When their own children desert to the
- "counterculture" and in effect become strangers, Middle
- Americans say in bewilderment, "Either we neglected them or we
- spoiled them." A surprisingly large number of Middle Americans
- attribute the weakening of the family structures to the fact
- that so many mothers have gone to work. In the youthful
- disrespect for American institutions they see reflected the
- breakdown of their own parental authority, although a great many
- still control their children and command their respect.
-
- The proliferation of drugs seems to the Middle American an
- apt metaphor for his sense that American life has grown
- contaminated. The spectacle of Woodstock -- quite apart from
- the nudity and the mess -- was offensive to Middle America
- because it seemed that everyone was dropping something or
- smoking something, and the police stood by and watched. At the
- same time, the widespread use of marijuana, sometimes by their
- own children, is leading many Middle Americans toward a bit more
- sophistication, and ability to distinguish between the use of
- pot and harder drugs. For some months of his presidency, the
- distinction seemed lost on Nixon and his Justice Department,
- whose crackdown on marijuana induced a pot famine and sent many
- of the young to amphetamines, barbiturates and other more
- serious drugs. Said Abbie Hoffman with typical hyperbole:
- "Richard Nixon was becoming the biggest pill pusher of us all."
- At a WHite House conference on narcotics in December, Nixon
- confessed: "I thought that the answer was simply enforce the
- law. But when you're talking about 14-year-olds and 15-year-
- olds, the answer is information. The answer is understanding."
-
- -- Inflation. Treadmill inflation has betrayed Middle
- America's faith in the work ethic; American affluence seems
- indefinitely expandable, all right, but prices expand just as
- rapidly, or more so. Last year, despite his wage increases, the
- average American worker barely broke even in actual buying
- power. Inflation has a profound psychological as well as
- material importance, for its stacks the deck against the old
- American gamble. The nation has always bet -- with extraordinary
- diligence, skill and luck -- the promise of opportunity could
- be redeemed, that the nation's natural fertility would justify
- the values of hard work and individualism. Now many of the
- Middle Americans, who have banked on work ethic, find
- themselves in a losing streak with the loser's psychology.
-
- This feeling is reinforced by an all-around frustration.
- "Nothing seems to work properly any more," says Political
- Analyst William Pfaff. "Industry makes cheap goods but wrecks
- the landscape and pollutes the air and rivers. Technocrats tell
- us all problems are solvable, but their submarines sink at the
- dock and scientific administrators spill nerve gas onto grazing
- lands and then lie about it. Bureaucracies make the system
- function, but they meddle in private lives." Telephones don't
- seem to work very well. Public transportation grows ramshackle.
- The quality of schools declines -- in part because inflation
- prompts Middle Americans to vote against school-bond issues,
- against one of their own deepest values.
-
- The Politics of Againstness
- Where will the Man and Woman of the Year be led by their
- discontent? The left sees the nation already on the edge of a
- long night of repression. Nixon, says the left, is subtly
- calling forth the night riders. The liberal-oriented National
- Committee for an Effective Congress worries that the
- Administration is molding the Middle Americans into a
- respectable new right based on the militant Goldwater morality.
- "The Administration is working the hidden veins of fear, racism
- and resentment which lie deep in Middle America," says the
- committee in its annual report. "Respect for the past, distrust
- of the future, the politics of 'againstness.'"
-
- Witness, says the left, the Chicago conspiracy trial, in
- which seven defendants face possible $10,000 fines and five-year
- jail terms for violating a law of doubtful constitutionality.
- Or witness what seems to be radicals -- and many others -- to
- be a systematic police slaughter of Black Panther leaders. They
- point to John Mitchell's wiretapping policies, preventive-
- detection program and no-knock raiding techniques. They see
- harsh drug laws as political instruments by which Middle
- America means to destroy dissent and counterculture. In
- Dansville, Va., last July, an 80-year-old judge sentenced a 20-
- year-old student to 20 years for possession of marijuana.
-
- Some Middle Americans doubtless do believe that repression
- is the only answer. They were disposed to take Spiro Agnew
- seriously when he tossed off his line, "We can afford to
- separate them from our society with mo more regret that we
- should feel over discarding rotten apples from the barrel." Yet
- most Middle Americans would find repression incomprehensible and
- intolerable, a violation precisely of the American values they
- cherish. Certainly, a species of Know-Nothingism is evident in
- the U.S. But, as Harvard's Seymour Martin Lipset points out,
- the reaction does not begin to approach the tenor of the 20s,
- when many Government leaders preached a blatantly anti-immigrant
- racism.
-
- Right or Left?
- In the 20's it was merely the values of small-town America
- that were challenged. In the 60s and into the 70s, it is the
- nation itself. Americans, almost unique in the world, are
- incapable of imagining a different form of government of the
- nation. As William Pfaff observes, "The Constitution is all."
- Thus, to assault America, to call for revolutionary change, as
- some black and white radicals do, is a profoundly spiritual
- offense, an invitation to Armageddon. Most Middle Americans,
- and most radicals, share one blind spot: they tend to forget
- that both the form and content of the U.S. Government has
- undergone enormous changes over the years, and that the
- Constitution will tolerate much more change without having the
- entire system collapse.
-
- The present shift to the right is in one perspective
- illusory. Since the start of the New Deal, the tide of the
- nation has flowed to the left. Middle America is now swimming
- against the tide in some issues, but the current is likely to
- continue, carrying it ever more leftward. The mass of Americans
- have grown steadily more tolerant over the last few generations.
- One can glimpse the changes in small incidents of the popular
- culture. When Ingrid Bergman became adulterously pregnant by
- Roberto Rossillini in 1949, she was all but stoned out of the
- country. Mia Farrow and Andre Previn, anticipating the joys of
- unwed motherhood and fatherhood, have aroused only minor
- indignation. Middle Americans accept Bayard Rustin as an
- eminently sensible black moderate now, but only a few years ago
- they thought him a firebrand. The idea of socialized medicine
- gives apoplexy to the patients. Middle Americans have more or
- less accepted the principles of guaranteed annual income, of
- coexistence with Communism.
-
- "Recently," says Columbia Sociologist Amitai Etzioni,
- "there has been almost unanimous agreement among newspaper
- commentators that the country is moving sharply to the right.
- These statements are far from accurate." In terms of philosophy,
- Etzioni observes, practically all Americans would call
- themselves conservatives, favoring more individualism, more
- freedom, less government power. But on an operational level, he
- insists, in terms of the specific Government policies it will
- accept, the country is liberal. According to a study that
- Etzioni completed last summer for the Office of Economic
- Opportunity, the nation, in operational terms is 65% liberal,
- 21% middle-of-the-road and only 14% conservative. (By "liberal,
- Etzioni means willing to accept government intervention for
- specific, progressive social programs.)
-
- Middle America does not express its likes and dislikes very
- well, "It's really too bad that we middle Americans don't have
- an articulate spokesman," says Opie Shelton of the Atlanta
- Chamber of Commerce. Nixon, Mitchell and Agnew speak to Middle
- America, but they are not its leaders. Nixon, in fact, excites
- little of the personal enthusiasm the even Agnew can arouse. Nor
- does Middle America have any organization. The anti-moratorium
- rallies, for example, were largely a failure. For all the great
- joiner's tradition in the U.S., Middle America is diffuse and
- tends to be private to the point of self-consciousness --
- demonstrating is not its style.
-
- To Assist, Not Resist
- Yet the Man and Woman of the Year have, with a new sense
- of truculent self-awareness presented Nixon with a special
- paradox. According to Etzioni, the issues that have thrust
- forward his relatively conservative politics are inflation and
- crime. If he solves both problems, the saliency of the issues
- will diminish and the voter will go back to attaching more
- weight to the liberal issues -- and may vote Democratic as a
- result. If Nixon does not redress inflation and cut crime, then
- the country may turn even more conservative -- to George Wallace
- -- particularly if the Viet Nam War is viewed as a defeat.
-
- TIME's Washington Bureau Chief High Sidey confesses "the
- uneasy sensation that Nixon is riding the crest of the huge wave
- called MIddle America, but he is reacting to it rather than
- leading it." There is a precedent for that view of the
- president. Woodrow Wilson wrote that "the ear of the leader
- must ring with the voices of the people. He cannot be of the
- school of the prophets; he must be of the number of those who
- studiously serve the slow-paced daily need."
-
- The trouble with that formulation is that America's needs
- have long since ceased to be slow-paced or daily. Problems
- whose resolution will require years need to be attacked now, the
- priorities set and the programs begun. Solving America's most
- pressing problems will require the enlistment of Middle
- Americans, who live in the thick of them. To denounce the evils
- of radicalism is not enough. In the long run, the burden will
- be on Middle America to show that nonradical reform can
- accomplish what needs to be done. However unfair it may seem,
- this will require sacrifices in Middle America's part -- and
- on the part of other portions of U.S. society as well. In this
- situation, it may be that Middle America will find itself in
- alliance with liberals newly awakened to its concern. Many
- Middle Americans, listening to the slogans of the farther left,
- may well come to prefer liberal formulas.
-
- If the U.S. is to go forward as Nixon has promised, Middle
- America must be led to assist change rather than resent and
- resist it, to help shape the future rather than try to preserve
- and already vanished America. In that task, a presidential
- prophet might find himself surprisingly honored in Middle
- American country. The Man and Woman of the Year still want
- to believe in America and the American dream. It has dimmed for
- too many, sometimes because of their failed expectations,
- sometimes because of the assaults on their complacency. Yet if
- the dream were to be redefined properly for them, Middle
- Americans could again provide abundantly that felicitous mixture
- of idealism and sound common sense on which the U.S. was
- founded.
-
-