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23/04/03
The Death of Right and Wrong
Tammy Bruce
FrontPageMag
The Following is an abridged excerpt from
Tammy Bruce's new book The Death of Right and Wrong, released today.
Epilogue
In 1994 I was in my fourth year as president
of the Los Angeles chapter of NOW. I had also served on the National NOW Board
of Directors. It was a year I remember, for several reasons. It was the year O.
J. Simpson killed Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman, and the year
my town was hit by the devastating Northridge earthquake. It was also the year
Ronald Reagan announced to the nation that he had Alzheimer’s.
Ronald Reagan was hated, and still is, in the
feminist-establishment circles in which I grew up. That milieu subsists on
enemies and hatred. I took my cues from the women around me, women I admired.
They were strong and confident, and they knew. They knew who was out to get us.
They knew who was determined to throw us back into the Dark Ages. They knew
Reagan was evil.
I tell you this not as an excuse for my past
actions but as a further illustration of what I’ve been discussing throughout
this book--the way malignant narcissism is spread. You see, the seed of my
politics, the politics I espouse now, were already manifested in my voting for
President Reagan 10 years earlier. I liked him, and I believed he had the best
interests of Americans in mind. During my involvement with NOW, however, what
took over was my need to be accepted, the romanticization of my "victimhood,"
and the power I could achieve by following the models of the women at the top.
Those women were happy that Reagan was sick, so I would be, too.
The conditioning of the Left Elite works so
well partly because the people attracted to that camp are looking for family,
they are looking to belong; consequently people like that--people like me--are
easy pickings. My emptiness compelled me to cheer when a decent man who followed
his principles was struck down by an unforgiving assailant. Alzheimer’s had
done what many feminist leaders fantasized about doing themselves, if only they
could get away with it.
Today, I am still pro-choice, and I still
support fetal tissue research. But I now realize that those who disagree with me
also have good points. I hope they reflect on their position as often as I do on
mine, because both camps are on the razor’s edge. I have made my commitment to
women and reproductive freedom, while my compatriots on the other side of the
fence, mostly because of their religious faith, have made a pact with what they
call the unborn.
We will have to agree to disagree, but only
now do I consider those on that other side decent people--as decent as I, but
with a different focus. Ronald Reagan is one of those decent people, but in all
the feminist establishment’s mirth about his illness, never did they consider,
never would they consider, the humanity of the man. Some may have made
sympathetic public comments, but, like Madelyn Toogood, the woman who beat her
little girl in a parking lot, they were simply looking around to make sure no
one was watching before they returned to privately declaring that Reagan
deserved to suffer.
By now, you may not be surprised to learn that
in certain gay and feminist circles, bottles of champagne wait in refrigerators
to be opened when Reagan dies. I write this on the night Nancy Reagan appeared
on 60 Minutes II. Mike Wallace interviewed her about the former president, their
marriage, and their history. Watching the show, I remembered why I liked Reagan
so much--old footage of an early interview with Mike Wallace, at the time Reagan
announced his first candidacy in 1976 (I was 14), deeply moved me and reminded
me what great leadership was to come...
During the interview, Mrs. Reagan disclosed
that she’s not sure her husband recognizes her anymore. Long ago he had
stopped recognizing his children, but he always knew her. Now, it seems, he
doesn’t. There was a deep sadness in the woman’s face. It was the "long
goodbye," as she called it. The Reagans, like so many other people, had
probably approached their Golden Years trusting, assuming, that memories would
be shared, and laughed and cried about. For Nancy Reagan that doesn’t exist.
She hasn’t said goodbye to her husband because "he’s still here,"
but the welling of tears in her eyes revealed a wounded, sad woman. I found it
heartbreaking to see, as would any decent person of any political persuasion.
Part of my life, however, is still reflective
of what I call my "old" life--my years of leadership in the feminist
establishment and involvement in the gay-rights movement. This night, those two
lives collided. As I cried after the interview because of the sadness of it and
my own guilt and shame, I checked my phone messages. There was one from a gay
male friend, whom I see infrequently these days but with whom I share some fun
and important activist memories. He had been watching the same interview, but he
was cheering. "Woo hoo! It looks like we might be opening up that champagne
sooner than later! I hope you were watching the Dragon Lady on 60 Minutes
tonight. I suppose with Alzheimer’s, he’s not suffering anymore, but it sure
looks like she is! There is a God after all."
I had never thought of my friend as an
indecent person, just as I never thought of myself as one. But he really hates
those two people and wishes them awful things. He believes he’s in the right
and they’re wrong. He also believes that the questions that divide them are
moral issues about life and death. The difference, however, is that I think it’s
safe to say neither Nancy nor Ronald Reagan ever had a bottle of champagne in
the fridge waiting for a gay man or a feminist to die. The Reagans, I’ll bet,
don’t hoot and holler at someone else’s pain.
Mrs. Reagan’s humanity illustrated by
counterpoint the soullessness of the Left. We, the Feminist and Gay Elites,
inflicted on society narcissists’ biggest crime of all: We couldn’t see
beyond our own interests and desires. We became indecent in defending our
principles.
While I don’t hold out any hope for the
damaged Left Elite I’ve exposed for you in this book, I know that we as
individuals can overcome and reject what the Left demands of us--the abandonment
of right and wrong, the banishment of decency and integrity, the rejection of
what the Reagans, both of them, represent.
We can instead do our best to live honest
lives, replete with the discomfort of shame, the difficulties of personal
responsibility, and the joy, the genuine happiness, that only right and good can
bring. We will have the reward of being better people.
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