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A Cold Civil War?
By Ed Driscoll · October 8, 2007 12:48 AM
· Bobos In Paradise · The Future and its Enemies · The Return of the Primitive
Found via Mark Steyn, here's an interesting turn of phrase by William Gibson, expanded upon by The Hyacinth Girl: At some point last month, I put down William Gibson's newest tome and picked up something written by Victor Davis Hanson. I am only now getting back to Spook Country, and though I'm afraid that I know exactly where Gibson is going with this, I found his idea of this country being in a "cold civil war" to be fascinating. What would that entail, exactly? A cold war is a war without conflict, defined in one of several online dictionaries as "[a] state of rivalry and tension between two factions, groups, or individuals that stops short of open, violent confrontation." In that respect, is the current political climate one of "cold civil war"? I think arguments could be made to that effect. My mother, not much of a political enthusiast, has made similar assessments since the 2000 election, concerned that the political climate (which has become increasingly acrimonious in the last 7 years) would indeed lead to some sort of lukewarm civil war--not hot, not cold, just divisive and destructive. Seven years ago, I laughed off her fears, secure in my naivete.In his Bleat tonight, James Lileks wrote: This is what annoys me to no end about the 60s, to cram it all into a tidy convenient decade; the overculture and the underculture ganged upAnd of course, as David Frum has written, the sixties were really the vanguard, the early warning detector of the looming culture war, which rages--if a "cold civil war" can be said to rage--to this day. Update: I'd say this example of toxic disinhibition qualifies as one front in the Cold Civil War. At least it's a battle that's still cold in the US, because it's just the opposite elsewhere.
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