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[X-posted from The Little Professor, with a minor tweak.]
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[X-posted from The Little Professor, with a minor tweak.]
I did not say that Professor Kagan, whom I have never met, suffers from bitterness. I mean that he is a "bitter partisan"--meaning "hard-nosed, convinced." I direct you to Websters' dictionary's second definition of bitter (i.e., after the 1st, "not sweet-tasting")
2 : marked by intensity or severity...b : being relentlessly determined : VEHEMENT <a bitter partisan>
I have known Don for 30 years now; one thing he is not is "bitter". He is an articulate advocate of the centrality of classical civilization to the culture of which we are now part, but with him disagreements about ideas never descended to personal animosities. His graciousness of manner rather frustrated Yalies who wanted their advocacy of multiculturalism to devolve into a personal attack.
Don is a Kennedy liberal who bought into the Reagan foreign policy in the face of the fecklessness of many Democrats after Vietnam.
However, he worked very successfully chairing departments and even team-teaching classes with people with whom he disagreed (Paul Kennedy, e.g.). He also is one of the two best classroom teachers I have seen in my academic career!
Do not consider this an endorsement of Don's Machtpolitik. As a vet who cares deeply for my brothers and sisters in arms, I don't buy into Kagan's zeal for a "muscular foreign policy". Saddam was a rat, but Colin Powell and Bush Sr. recognized the dangers inherent in regime change. They were right; I do not want to see American lives lost enforcing a global Pax Americana.
Donald Kagan has a long history of involvement in "the culture wars" as a bitter right-wing partisan, and more recently as a drumbeater for Amerian miliraqy aqdventurism. Given his prestigious chair and his extreme views, his citation of a book called "Tenured Radicals" contains a certain unconscious irony.