KITTY KELLEY BOOK CLUB
âThe Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixtiesâ SOLID WRITING AND RESEARCH ASIDE, THIS JEREMIAD ABOUT OUR CHANGING NATIONAL LANDSCAPE REVEALS THE AUTHORâS BITTERNESS R EVIEWE D BY KIT T Y K E LLE Y In the 18th century, the Age of Enlightenment illuminated the world of ideas throughout Europe, stretching as far as America, where Thomas Jefferson adopted some of its ideals when writing the Declaration of Independence. Perhaps Christopher Caldwell aspired to achieve similar status by calling his book âThe Age of Entitlement.â In it, he explores the last five decades of a U.S. cultural upheaval, spurred, he claims, by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and
the Voting Rights Act of 1965, legislation he sees as âa model for overthrowing every tradition of American life.â Caldwellâs revolution starts with the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963, the event that propelled JFKâs successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, to initiate civil rights legislation. â[This] ideology, especially when it hardened into a body of legislation, became, most unexpectedly, the model for an entire new system of constantly churning political reform,â he writes. With facile writing and impressive research, Caldwell examines his premise in detail, hitting the eraâs hot-button issues: abortion, affirmative action, busing, Robert Bork, Gloria Steinem, womenâs rights and gay marriage. He divides his book into seven sections: race, sex, war, debt, diversity, winners (African Americans, women and gays) and losers (white men). Each of these sections contains bite-size subsections arguing aspects of Caldwellâs premise that âcivil rights had been sold to the American publicâ under false pretenses, causing incalculable wreckage to society. He writes: âThe new system for overthrowing the traditions that hindered black people became the model for overthrowing every tradition in American life, starting with the roles of men and women.â As a conservative, white, male graduate of Harvard, Caldwell writes to the right, occasionally to the left and sometimes swerves center as he cites lawsuit after
lawsuit to make his points, one of which actually suggests that maybe Southern segregationists were correct all along. His book, which relies on much of the conservative journalism heâs published in the Financial Times, the National Review and the Weekly Standard, reads like the lamentation of an anguished man who sees his world slowly crumbling beneath him. Not all conservatives will applaud, particularly those who marched in the Reagan revolution. Caldwell lambasts Ronald Reagan on the issue of âmass immigration,â which, he maintains, âstands perhaps as [the presidentâs] emblematic failure. Reagan threw open the floodgates to international immigration while stirringly proclaiming a determination to slam them shut. Almost all of Reaganism was like that.â What Caldwell grieves, progressives might celebrate, even the messiness of change and the discomfort of adjustment. He rails against political correctness, considers it an affront to have to call black people African Americans and resents the federal holiday dedicated to Martin Luther King Jr. He lambasts his alma mater for ruling in 2016 that professors presiding over Harvardâs undergraduate houses be called âfaculty deansâ rather than âhouse masters,â sarcastically wondering if âkids would be unable to distinguish their house master from a slave-driving antebellum overseer.â Strange that a skilled writer like Caldwell, who lives by the power of words, canât acknowledge the degree of civility Harvard conferred with its small change. The author becomes particularly overheated when he claims that, by embracing political correctness, Americans have âinadvertently voted themselves a second constitution,â and that this second
constitution, with its P.C. laws â ânurtured by elites in all walks of lifeâ â is what currently prevails. He ridicules diversity as if itâs nothing more than a Mercedes-Benz, âa marker of money, class and power.â He even chides CNN founder Ted Turner for ordering his companyâs personnel to refer to things outside the U.S. as âinternationalâ rather than âforeign,â ignoring that âinternationalâ suggests a broader, more cosmopolitan embrace than âforeign,â which conjures all things strange, unfamiliar and alien. (That last sentence probably consigns me to the P.C. circle of hell.) While much of this provocative book â with its conservative critique of the last 55 years in America â is interesting, it never rises above the authorâs anger or overcomes his fury with the people of color, women and gays, whoâve challenged the system and won the changes that have rattled Caldwellâs world. He vents his spleen at a society that is not standing still, remaining soldered to tradition, but is instead, in his view, descending into chaos and leaving white men grasping the shreds of what once was. More polemic than panacea, âThe Age of Entitlementâ is one manâs screed against change. As such, it offers no soothing balm to the gloom it delivers. Georgetown resident Kitty Kelley has written several numberone New York Times best-sellers, including âThe Family: The Real Story Behind the Bush Dynasty.â Her most recent books include âCapturing Camelot: Stanley Tretickâs Iconic Images of the Kennedysâ and âLet Freedom Ring: Stanley Tretickâs Iconic Images of the March on Washington.â
GALA GUIDE FEBRUARY 26
MARCH 10
Carol and John Boochever and Olga and Scott Jaeckel are chairing the Leadership Changing Lives gala to support Teach For America leaders, whose efforts pave the way for educational equity for all children. Ritz-Carlton. Email Cierra Hinton at cierra. hinton@teachforamerica.org.
The chairs of the gala are Hillary and Tom Baltimore and Erika and A. Scott Bolden. N Street Village is a nonprofit that empowers homeless and low-income women to claim their highest quality of life through shelter and a variety of programming. Marriott Marquis. Contact Stuart Allen at sallen@ nstreetvillage.org or 202-939-2085.
TEACH FOR AMERICA GALA
MARCH 7
CHILDRENâS NATIONALâS A VINTAGE AFFAIR The Board of Visitors of Childrenâs National Health System will host this opportunity for wine lovers to taste fine wines and enjoy elegant cuisine while bidding on fine wines and experiences. Proceeds support the boardâs annual grants and major gifts programs. Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium. Contact Kathie Williams at kwilliams@ boardofvisitors.com or 202-660-1428.
N STREET VILLAGE GALA
MARCH 11
VITAL VOICES GLOBAL LEADERSHIP AWARDS The awards program honors women leaders standing on the frontlines of change, building and amplifying local solutions to global issues. Kennedy Center. Email mariadavis@ vitalvoices.org.
MARCH 12
LATINO STUDENT FUND GALA The evening begins with cocktails, Latin music and a silent auction, followed by
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dinner and a live auction. LSF provides opportunities for underserved students of Hispanic descent in pre-K to 12th grade to get a strong academic foundation. Washington National Cathedral. Visit latinostudentfund. org.
MARCH 15
DAFFODILS & DIAMONDS LUNCHEON The 39th Daffodils & Diamonds event â a fashion show provided by Lord + Taylor and a luncheon emceed by WJLA-TV Anchor Alison Starling â supports the National Foundation for Cancer Research, focusing specifically on breast and ovarian cancers. Columbia Country Club. Visit nfcr.org.
LEVINEâS GALA The evening begins with cocktails and includes a performance and a seated dinner. Proceeds support Levine Musicâs outreach program and scholarship fund, which last year provided more than $500,000 worth of music instruction to more than 650 children. Arena Stage. Visit levinemusic.org.
MARCH 28
SIBLEY CELEBRATION OF HOPE AND PROGRESS Sibley Memorial Hospital relies on the support of the community to maintain a standard of excellence in public health services, including cancer research, maternal services and joint replacement care. Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium. Contact Kristen Pruski at kpruski@jhmi.edu or 202-6606814.
CYSTIC FIBROSIS BREWERâS BALL The event will benefit the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, which funds research and drug development, promotes individualized treatments and ensures access to high-quality specialized care. National Building Museum. Contact Chelsea Director at director@cff.org or 301-657-8444.