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Politically Speaking: Writer Jonah Goldberg on the perils confronting American democracy

Jonah Goldberg is a syndicated columnist and senior editor for National Review.
Jason Rosenbaum I St. Louis Public Radio
Jonah Goldberg is a syndicated columnist and senior editor for National Review.

Conservative writer Jonah Goldberg is the latest guest on Politically Speaking. He joined St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum and Jo Mannies to talk about his bookSuicide of the West: How the Rebirth of Tribalism, Populism, Nationalism, and Identity Politics is Destroying American Democracy.

Goldberg is a syndicated columnist and a senior editor for National Review. He was intimately involved in the start ofNational Review Online, one of the most enduring political sites devoted to conservative politics.

Goldberg was in St. Louis this week for a Show-Me Institute event at Washington University Law School. Among other things, Goldberg discussed how extreme poverty has been rampant throughout most of human history.

But that changed after a “cultural revolution” in the 17th and 18th centuries in England, where philosophers began to believe that people’s rights “came from God, not from government.” This point of view democratized prosperity in a way where average people ended up getting richer.

Instead of promoting “market-based, classical liberal ideas,” Goldberg said there’s a propensity in America to not to appreciate those values.

“We teach people that American history and western history is one story of evil and oppression after another that define us — rather than getting rid of, or overcoming, these setbacks,” Goldberg said.

Among Goldberg’s observations on the show:

  • For most of history, average humans dealt with “abject poverty, punctuated with early death from violence or bowel-stewing disease.”  Most people living now don’t appreciate that, even with their problems, they're also experiencing a time of unprecedented wealth, health and advancement.
  • Civilized behavior is breaking down, in part because of the demise of organized religion and other civic institutions. That includes the reduced clout of political parties, which used to act as gatekeepers and moderators for candidates. Goldberg also blames the decline of marriage, which he says is often overlooked as a key factor in civilizing a society.
  • President Donald Trump has contributed to the breaking-down trend, but is not the cause of it. What Trump has done is break “the blood-brain barrier between politics and entertainment,’’ and contributed to the “cult of personality’’ that has risen in politics in the last 20 years. Former President Barack Obama is another key example, Goldberg said, recalling that some of his supporters saw Obama as “a messianic figure.”
  • Trump is helping the GOP attract working-class whites who used to be part of Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s coalition. But the president is hurting the Republican Party by exacerbating the exodus of suburban, white college-educated women from the GOP to the Democratic fold.
  • The debate over Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is largely fueled by Democrats’ anger about what they see as the mistreatment of Obama’s 20016 nominee, Merrick Garland, who wasn’t granted a hearing. But Goldberg says the dispute also reflects both sides’ entrenched belief that the “imagined worst behavior of our opponents justifies a ‘Chicago way’ escalation in everything.”


Follow Jason Rosenbaum on Twitter:@jrosenbaum

Follow Jo Mannies on Twitter:@jmannies

Follow Jonah Goldberg on Twitter:@JonahNRO

Music: “Space Cowboy” by *NSYNC

Copyright 2018 St. Louis Public Radio

Since entering the world of professional journalism in 2006, Jason Rosenbaum dove head first into the world of politics, policy and even rock and roll music. A graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, Rosenbaum spent more than four years in the Missouri State Capitol writing for the Columbia Daily Tribune, Missouri Lawyers Media and the St. Louis Beacon. Since moving to St. Louis in 2010, Rosenbaum's work appeared in Missouri Lawyers Media, the St. Louis Business Journal and the Riverfront Times' music section. He also served on staff at the St. Louis Beacon as a politics reporter. Rosenbaum lives in Richmond Heights with with his wife Lauren and their two sons.
Jo Mannies has been covering Missouri politics and government for almost four decades, much of that time as a reporter and columnist at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. She was the first woman to cover St. Louis City Hall, was the newspaper’s second woman sportswriter in its history, and spent four years in the Post-Dispatch Washington Bureau. She joined the St. Louis Beacon in 2009. She has won several local, regional and national awards, and has covered every president since Jimmy Carter. She scared fellow first-graders in the late 1950s when she showed them how close Alaska was to Russia and met Richard M. Nixon when she was in high school. She graduated from Valparaiso University in northwest Indiana, and was the daughter of a high school basketball coach. She is married and has two grown children, both lawyers. She’s a history and movie buff, cultivates a massive flower garden, and bakes banana bread regularly for her colleagues.