July 22, 2004
Where The Real New Right Is—And Isn't
By Sam Francis
Ideas Have Consequences is the title of a 1948
book by conservative thinker Richard Weaver that in
recent years has become a
kind of slogan for movement conservatives trying to
convince themselves and their
financial angels that their beliefs have triumphed
at last.
The lesson we learn from a recent
New York Times article on the
"post-Buckley" right is that Professor Weaver
was quite wrong: Ideas—his, at least—have no
consequences.
That has to be the conclusion of
anyone familiar with the ideas Weaver and similar
conservative heavies emitted in the years after
World War II down through the 1970s. The survival of
these thinkers' and writers' legacy has been open to
doubt ever since the
neoconservatives arrived to share the benefits of
their wisdom with real conservatives, but today, when
even the elder neocons are fading, the situation is
bleaker still.
"Conservative is a word that is
almost meaningless these days," one young rightist,
Caleb Stegall, interviewed by the Times, announces. He's
entirely correct, but to judge from the article, he and
his comrades are helping to keep it that way. Mr.
Stegall is part of a new web site called
newpantagruel.com, which the Times describes
as "conservative but irreverent" (I guess the two
don't usually mix) and "about religion and politics."
Later we learn from Mr. Stegall that "If I could
sum up what we stand for in one word, it would be
sustainability." [Young
Right Tries to Define Post-Buckley Future, By
David D. Kirkpatrick, July 17, 2004]
Huh?
The Times feels the need to
clarify that "he meant theologically conservative
views on sustaining family life, as well as typically
liberal views on sustaining the environment and local
communities and helping the poor."
Noble causes all, no doubt, but
exactly why they are conservative is never clear.
Yet another
post-Buckleyite pops up at the Weekly Standard,
the official voice of
Bill Kristol and the
neocons. Eric Cohen, at the hoary age of 26, is not
only a
Standard contributor
but, among other achievements, also "director of the
biotechnology and American democracy program at the
Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington,"
an establishment neocon outfit that has been around for
years.
Mr. Cohen's deathless contribution
to post-Buckleyism is that "conservatives needed to
accept an active role for government in dealing with
advancing technology, whether in the form of terrorists'
weapons abroad [we tried that, if you recall] or
attempts to change the
nature of life at home."
Mr. Stegall then assured the
Times "he shared Mr. Cohen's support for
government social programs, but for
religious reasons."
One idea of real conservatism is
that post-New
Deal government was far too big and needed to be
reduced. That idea seems to have been dropped into File
13 by the
post-Buckley geniuses. No consequences there.
The article continues, discovering
unsung
young post-Buckleyites thither and yon, and
virtually nowhere does a single one offer any idea that
bears much resemblance to what has been called
"conservatism" in this country for the last 50
years.
Only
Daniel McCarthy of the American Conservative
utters anything like such a brainstorm.
Calling for a return to the
"so-called isolationist and noninterventionist right,"
Mr. McCarthy affirms forthrightly, "America is a
nation state. It is not meant to be a sort of world
government in embryo, not meant to be a last provider of
justice or security for the entire world."
As for the war in Iraq, only Mr.
McCarthy openly expresses opposition to it. Mr. Cohen,
as you might for some reason guess, is all for the war
and is among those who "argue that the United States
may need to become more active, not less."
Nor do the post-Buckleyites seem to
have much to say about the "culture war," nor
most any other real problem that confronts the real
world today and which most pre-Buckley conservatives
have traced to
liberalism and pseudo-conservatism: cultural
collapse, mass immigration,
racial revolution, the war on the
middle class, the future of the nation state, and
the emergence of democratic totalitarianism in our own
societies.
The Times of course is
delighted to uncover a crowd of "conservatives"
who offer no threat whatsoever to the dominant
liberalism it regurgitates in its pages every day, but
if it wanted to find them, there's a real
post-Buckley—we might even say a post-conservative—right
out there.
What the real new right is talking
about is not making government bigger or cryptic
catchwords like "sustainability" but the problems
the Times' favorite conservatives won't mention.
You can find them not only in the
American Conservative but also at
Chronicles, the
Occidental Quarterly,
American Renaissance, the
Citizens Informer,
Middle American News, and
Vdare.com.
Not all their writers and editors
agree with each other, and neither the Times nor
the post-Buckley kids it's pushing would care for them,
but the ideas you find there might actually some day
have some consequences.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here
for Sam Francis' website. Click
here to order his monograph,
Ethnopolitics: Immigration, Race, and the American
Political Future.
His review essay on Who Are We
appears in the
current issue of
Chronicles Magazine.