Open Thread: The British Political 'Disease'

July 19th, 2010 8:48 AM

Janet Daley writes in the Telegraph,

When David Cameron visits the United States this week, he will find a country whose national political argument has become more like our own in Britain than probably he – and certainly I – would ever have imagined. For America has learned, thanks to Barack Obama's crash course in European-style government, about the titanic force of class differences. The president's determination to transform the US into a social democracy, complete with a centrally run healthcare programme and a redistributive tax system, has collided rather magnificently with America's history as a nation of displaced people who were prepared to risk their futures on a bid to be free from the power of the state...

Liberal politics is now – over there as much as here – a form of social snobbery. To express concern about mass immigration, or reservations about the Obama healthcare plan, is unacceptable in bien-pensant circles because this is simply not the way educated people are supposed to think. It follows that those who do think (and talk) this way are small-minded bigots, rednecks, oiks, or whatever your local code word is for "not the right sort".

For much, much more on this political "disease," see Angelo Codevilla's recent essay "America's Ruling Class." What is to be done about America's slide toward social democracy and the concurrent cultural shifts? Is an election enough to turn the tide (Codevilla doesn't think so)?