The New Republic’s Ben Adler had the patience to trudge through Peggy Noonan’s recent Wall Street Journal column, in which the former Reagan speechwriter described her recent trip to West Virginia. Adler found one section of Noonan’s piece that jumped out.
Three hours into our drive west, a police car drove by, and someone mentioned that was the first one he’d seen since we crossed the state line. Someone else said, approvingly, “Everyone keeps a gun in West Virginia. Crime is low.” Later I would be told it has the lowest violent crime per capita in the United States. It is very nice, when traveling, to see your beliefs and assumptions statistically borne out.
First of all, as the FBI reported, West Virginia does not have the lowest per capita crime rate. Noonan was “told” this and decided the claim was good enough for publication in the Wall Street Journal.
Second, and more importantly, is Adler’s analysis of Noonan’s other point about having one’s beliefs borne out by allegedly accurate data.
This speaks to the way conservatives approach evidence. Rather than looking at the statistics and basing policies on what they see, they make assumptions and cling to beliefs and then look for statistics to support them. This backwards empiricism characterizes everything from supply-side economics to the Bush administration’s selective use of intelligence to make the case for the Iraq war, and, as Noonan has now so helpfully pointed out, apparently crime and gun control, too.
It’s funny, I’ve often assumed Noonan was rather unhinged. After she blamed Mark Felt for genocide in Cambodia, argued during the Schiavo controversy that liberals “seem to have fallen half in love with death,” and suggested that God sent dolphins to rescue Elian Gonzales in 2000, I was told that Noonan was one of the nuttier conservatives to be published in the country.
It is very nice, when reading, to see your beliefs and assumptions borne out in print.