ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Commentary: Beware of all the men who pretend to be our protectors

BOSTON -- For those who have ever wondered when a promise of protection becomes a protection racket, this is your moment. We now have the forced admission that in 2003 George W. Bush himself approved the leaking of classified intelligence gathere...

BOSTON -- For those who have ever wondered when a promise of protection becomes a protection racket, this is your moment.

We now have the forced admission that in 2003 George W. Bush himself approved the leaking of classified intelligence gathered before the Iraq War. He didn't let it all leak out. He authorized a trickle of information buttressing his case that Saddam Hussein had been a nuclear threat. Information that had already been discredited.

After manipulating this faucet of fear, the president then defended the war in the name of national security, casting himself as the country's father-protector. In short, he sold himself as the person we needed to protect us from the fear he provoked.

And lest you forget, his re-election campaign was run by the same racketeers. George W. was transformed from a conservative who was compassionate to a commander in chief who was unflappable. John Kerry was accused of the unmanly crime of nuance and caricatured as flip-floppable. We were subjected to an endless strongman debate with Arnold Schwarzenegger leading the attack on "girlie men."

A stock figure of the election cycle was the soccer mom transformed into the security mom. This was the woman scared right -- into the arms of the president.

ADVERTISEMENT

The security mom was something of a cartoon figure and the balloon over her head now reads: "What was I thinking?" There are enough second thoughts in the citizenry to make Bush's approval rating look like the "Summit Plummet" ride at Disney World. But I'm afraid the racketeers aren't filing for bankruptcy yet.

Consider the success of Harvey Mansfield's book, a last-ditch defense of "Manliness." Harvard's token conservative has written a plea to common sense replete with enough provocative nonsense to make you wonder if he handled public relations for Larry Summers. Women, he asserts manfully, like changing diapers, fear spiders and are cute when they're mad.

Mansfield defines manliness as "confidence in the face of risk." His manly man is something of a drama king who prefers times of conflict and war. He "asserts himself so that he and the justice he demands are not overlooked." And if an occasional woman who overcomes her love of diapers and fear of spiders also asserts herself -- see Margaret Thatcher -- she is simply declared to be manly.

What makes this a somewhat modest defense is that Mansfield acknowledges good and bad manliness. The same characteristics can lead a terrorist to fly a plane directly into a building or a firefighter to race up the stairs to save lives.

So Mansfield believes we need to bolster the "good" manliness to protect us from the "bad" manliness. "Manliness is the only remedy for the trouble it causes," he writes. But here is where the scam clicks in. He calls on women to accept, jolly, humor and respect manly men as a way of muting their danger. Protection Rackets Inc.

Despite the existence of women terrorists, soldiers and secretaries of state, most wars have indeed been initiated and waged by men.

But sometimes we have to just ask: How well have humoring and jollying muted the dangers of war or honor killings, wife-beating or ethnic cleansing?

In the past weeks, I've heard any number of people ask whether Katie Couric has the gravitas -- that's Latin for baritone -- to be a solo network news anchor. And whether Hillary Clinton has the cojones -- that's Spanish for, never mind -- to be president.

ADVERTISEMENT

There's something to be learned in the Bush debacle. Beware the call of the old manliness. Beware the man who ramps up the danger and offers himself as hero and security blanket. And beware the leader whose unwavering, unflappable, unnuanced and unjustified confidence in the face of risk becomes our disaster.

Ellen Goodman's e-mail address is ellengoodman@globe.com .

What To Read Next
Get Local

ADVERTISEMENT