Commentary “Whose side is Tucker Carlson on?” asks Dean Obeidallah of CNN—thus reaffirming the popular progressive view that everybody has to pick a side, even in a war between two foreign powers 5,000 miles away where no vital U.S. interests or treaty obligations are involved. This should come as no surprise, however, since it goes naturally with the left’s politicization of everything domestically. We are also expected to take sides on such seemingly non-political and private matters as what we should and should not eat, what should and should not be taught to 5-year-old children or in high school history classes, what kind of car we choose to drive or how to address a gentleman who is pretending to be a lady. Not only must we pick a side in these and other matters, we must pick the right side—which is of course the left side—or risk cancellation and social …