Posted
Wednesday,
March 3, 1999
| March 15, 1999 | The mail is still
pouring in
[to
The
Nation]
on Christopher Hitchens's decision
to submit an affidavit to the House
managers contradicting Sidney
Blumenthal's sworn denial that he
passed misleading allegations to the
press. There is the occasional admiring
note--"He's a man of his
convictions...courageous enough to walk
the plank for the sake of truth," "a hero
with plenty of integrity thrown in," "he
has not only ethics but cojones." But most
(about 95 percent) letter writers are
furious. There are cancellations, threats
("if I see his byline again I will
cancel") and demands that Hitchens be
fired. Others suggest he move to
National Review,
People,
Playgirl, the National
Enquirer or stay at Vanity
Fair. Some decry his "tawdry
conduct" and "sensational self-promotion,"
while others call the affair "the saddest
part of an awful story," "very troubling"
or "no time to give the right-wing zealots
a bone to chew on." | McCarthy, HUAC
and namers of names have been invoked, and
readers compare Hitchens to Judas, Brutus,
Elia Kazan, Matt Drudge, Jeffrey Dahmer...
Many characterize him as the left's own
Linda Tripp ("and his hairdo is not much
better"). We also invited people to air
their opinions in a forum on our Web site,
at
www.thenation.com. There Hitchens
had as many defenders as assailants, with
an insistent minority urging us to move on
to subjects of "more substance." There was
the "just fire his butt" crowd and a
comment that "if Joe McCarthy suddenly
rises from his grave, I'll be sure to give
him Hitchens's address," balanced by
comments like "We need more
whistleblowers" and "When someone...rises
above crass self-interest and political
expediency...the whole world goes crazy."
A sampling follows. | Hitchens
& the Starr Wars Rochester, N.Y. What
underlying motive could have prompted
Christopher Hitchens, whose writing I
have often admired, especially when he
used his acerbic wit to gore many a
sacred cow and deflate many a gasbag,
to vacate his role as a journalist to
become a player in the impeachment
morality play? What public purpose will
be served by tossing Sidney in the
slammer? Tom Powers Elkins Park, Pa. I was
astonished and saddened by Christopher
Hitchens's action, which produces
unfortunate echoes of the naming names
days of the fifties. Anti-Clinton venom
has induced a judgment-destroying fever
in a number of otherwise sensible
writers. But there's also the larger
picture. History should have taught us
that the left's contempt and animosity
toward its moderate allies can have
dire consequences. Hitchens has made
himself a tragic figure. A very
accomplished writer, an astute critic
of the powerful, he has misused his
talents with an attack on a man hardly
more powerful than himself.
Mark Sacharoff Seattle I must write to praise
Christopher Hitchens for his remarkable
act of courage and integrity. With his
politics, he has few friends among
conservatives in this country, and with
this act, he will doubtlessly be
pilloried by the other half of the
nation, leaving him about as friendless
as an irritated skunk. Alfredo
Escalona New York City Like Linda
Tripp, Christopher Hitchens has willed
himself into impeachment politics. Like
Linda Tripp, he has traded a friend's
confidences and offhand remarks for the
ugly prominence that follows from
making yourself useful to the repellent
Kenneth Starr and his repellent
investigations. Like Linda Tripp, the
personal write-offs were a small price
to pay for the glory of being a player
on the impeachment stage. And like
Linda Tripp and Lucianne Goldberg,
self-described as "two middle-aged
broads who just couldn't take it
anymore," Hitchens has sought to
exonerate his rank opportunism by
taking offense at the idea that
presidential adviser Sidney Blumenthal
was spreading gossip about Monica
Lewinsky. This is a surprisingly
delicate sensibility for the Hitchens
who ghoulishly trashed Princess Diana
upon her death. I am sure The
Nation seeks diversity in its
writers, but it must not arrive at a
state of tolerance cum political
schizophrenia that would allow it to
continue to offer its pages to
Christopher Hitchens. Frances
Genovese Seattle No matter the fallout
of the Blumenthal affair, Christopher
Hitchens is a brilliant writer and an
unyielding critic of the politics of
mediocrity that permeates DC.
Chad Moody Croton, N.Y. At the very
moment when Zippergate was near
closing, it was especially distressing
to learn that a Nation writer
lags behind Henry Hyde and the
Dixiecrat lynch mob with which Nixon
infected the Republican Party in
recognizing that few North American
vertebrates give a damn what the
President and an airhead bimbo did or
did not do. I have reconsidered my
initial decision to place my
Nation subscription on hold
until it, Hitchens or I expire. As a
second-generation Nation
subscriber, I shouldn't let Hitchens's
inexplicable lapse deprive me of one of
the few sources of independent,
informed, in-depth analysis--including
your attention to the forces propelling
the overextended get-Clinton
inquisition. Trev
Léger Encino, Calif. Being an
immigrant from a country where years
ago actions like Hitchens's resulted in
prison, torture and death for valuable
people, I am very affected by such
issues. In my country they called
people like Hitchens delators.
And like Hitchens they always had some
leftist-sounding explanation for
helping the fascist repression, and
when confronted they gave similar
excuses ("I told them something that
they already knew"). Are there any
other delators among
Nation writers?
Gregory Lerner Katonah, N.Y. A denouement to
die for: The President, impeached on
partisan grounds, is acquitted on
partisan grounds; Kenneth Starr indicts
Sidney Blumenthal for lying to Congress
under oath; Christopher Hitchens, true
to his affirmation on TV, refuses to
testify against Blumenthal, who goes
free; Starr does a Susan McDougal on
Hitchens, who uses the time in prison
to explain to the world why he has,
since 1992, held Clinton in a contempt
greater than that which he presumably
has for the truly dangerous forces
arrayed against the integrity of the
electoral process. Theodore
Goetz Scottsdale, Ariz. Bravo!
Bravo! Bravo! to Christopher Hitchens
for upholding his principles and coming
forth despite the slings and arrows
that undoubtedly will accompany his
actions. Clinton has fouled the office
of President, which, thank God, he
holds temporarily. The citizenry has
been lulled into the belief that this
is only about a private matter and that
Clinton must remain in office to
continue his good work.
Clinton is about one thing: Bill
Clinton at any cost! His bombings have
reduced him to the basest of creatures,
and the ghosts of those he destroyed
should give him sleepless nights, as
they did Richard III. The shroud of
silence that covers those acts will
eventually be lifted and history will
show of what this man was made. Bill
and Hillary Macbeth will live on in
infamy. Again, my thanks for a breath
of constitutional fresh air.
Karen Kreutz From our Web forum I applaud
Christopher Hitchens for sticking it to
Bill Clinton's deluded apologists and
their proxy, Sidney Blumenthal.
Strangely, a significant portion of
Nation readers seem to think
that the progressive movement gains
something by Clinton's presidency, when
in fact, Bubba has routinely embraced
legislation and policy that stands to
the right of Richard Nixon--and, in
some instances, even the "new world
order" of George Bush. And re this
dubious debate about "journalistic
ethics"--sorry, but there aren't any.
While the "profession" has muscularly
worked to concoct the illusion that
reporters subscribe to some higher
standard of ethics, any sane person
knows that journalists simply reflect
the class biases to which they--or
their employers--subscribe. What the
pros and their "sources" hate is the
prospect that their real opinions and
objectives may actually be exposed.
That is exactly what Hitchens's actions
have achieved, and I encourage him and
every other self-respecting left
journalist in this country to report
aggressively every "off record" slur,
bigoted private slip and nefarious
effort to spin reality for mass
consumption. Finally, let's get one
thing straight. Progressives,
minorities, the poor, women, gays,
working people and organized labor do
not need friends like Sidney
Blumenthal--or Bubba. My only real beef
with Hitchens is his choice of pals. If
he's got any other cronies out there
like Blumenthal, I hope he burns their
butts, too. Chris
Geovanis From our Web forum What seems
to be at the heart of the matter is not
that Hitchens spoke a truth he felt
compelled to give but when and if he
should have spoken it at all. I fall on
the side of asserting your voice in the
face of controversy and intimidation. I
stand against those who consider the
most important matter in speaking to be
the fear of how it will be used.
Getting lost in the speculative and
comparative swirl of Hitchens's
"motivation" falls away from the heart
of the matter: purging the growing lump
in your own throat. Most assuredly, he
stands for this principle in everyone.
Wendy Rupnow Stone Park, Ill. Because of
Hitchens's conduct, I gave the
Nation credit card a two-week
suspension. Carl Sluer
(socialist for 70
years!) | Send
your letter to the editor to
[email protected].
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