August 23, 2007
Buy Making Sense Of The American
Right!
By Paul Gottfried
Readers of
VDARE.COM are urged to do what I
recently asked of devotees of
Lew Rockwell’s website: Go out and buy my book, Conservatism in America: Making Sense of the American Right
!
Here’s what
VDARE.COM editor
Peter Brimelow said in his eloquent blurb:
"This
study of the development and
moral collapse of the postwar American Right is
treated with vast historical knowledge that goes beyond
Paul Gottfried's stated scope. Although its subject has
been examined in a spate of books in recent years,
including in two of Gottfried's earlier surveys, this
new work brings an informed critical perspective to a
major American political movement. A must read for
students of American conservatism."
There is no way
that the combined liberal-Neocon
Establishment media will acknowledge my work. Put
bluntly: since the members of the media have in many
cases deliberately hidden the revelations about the
evolution of
the American conservative movement that my monograph
offers, they would have absolutely no interest in
publicizing the truth.
My work examines
one by one the regnant fallacies about the group of
self-described conservatives who founded National
Review in
the mid-1950s and about how their activities
culminated in the present, largely
neoconservative-dominated
establishment Right. I set out to show that much of
the story about how it got from A to Z has been twisted
to fit particular agendas. I
also note the magnitude of the misrepresentations in
the recent
tributes to W.F. Buckley served up by
E.J. Dionne and
Jonah Goldberg (and
at an earlier date by Suzanne Garment , who said in
the Wall Street Journal that Buckley had
"pried conservatism loose from the fingers of its more
demented followers"—There's Nothing Like a Libel
Trial For an Education, October 11, 1985). I provide
a long answer to the question of why certain factual
distortions arose and why they have continued to be
propagated. One factor that I would never exclude: these
misrepresentations are deliberate and intended to
strengthen an already existing configuration of
journalistic power.
One key experience
drove me into writing books about the changing American
Right: witnessing the rapid and total way in which the
neoconservatives came to dominate the Establishment
Right in the 1980s. In the first edition of The American Conservative Movement
,
which
I coauthored with Tom Fleming in 1986, we suggested that
older
“Movement Conservatives”
had been simply naïve when they had
allowed Kristol, Podhoretz and their minions to come in
and
take over the
house that Buckley had built. I now think this was
excessively charitable. One should never underestimate
human greed and opportunism. Both were on display when
the neoconservatives were actively encouraged
to take over "conservative" foundations and
journals from the 1980s on.
For me the most
personally upsetting incident in this takeover, and it
sticks in my mind far more than the dirt the neocons
have done to me professionally, was watching the way in
which the Conservative Movement hacks
changed their minds about
M.E. Bradford, the Southern literary scholar who had
been earmarked for the position of NEH Director under
Ronald Reagan.
As soon as their
new neoconservative masters had begun to
throw dirt on Bradford as a Southern racist and
anti-Lincoln demagogue, using their connections to the
liberal media to do so, the Movement Conservatives I
encountered in DC hastened to express newly-discovered
reservations about "our friend Mel." He no longer
seemed to be quite the right person for the job. And in
any case the neocon pick,
Bill Bennett, even though he had previously been a
liberal Democrat, looked more likely to obtain
senatorial confirmation. Both Buckley and the head of
the Heritage Foundation visited President Reagan in
order to express their agreement with
this judgment. In the process, they turned on a
trusting friend of many years. (This episode is
discussed with approval in
Mark Gerson’s laudatory The Neoconservative Vision
.
It reminds me of an
act by the philosopher
Martin Heidegger that I have always found profoundly
contemptible. In 1933, Heidegger accepted a position as
Rector of the University of Freiburg from the Third
Reich. He thereupon suspended the library privileges
of his own teacher and former colleague at Freiburg, the
great phenomenologist
Edmund Husserl, who was a Lutheran of Jewish
ancestry. I personally despise those who seek to
ingratiate themselves with a tyrant by turning on
friends and masters.
The postwar
conservative movement, especially in the 1980s,
furnishes many such revolting examples. And those who
have supplied them, unlike Heidegger, have been neither
philosophical geniuses nor residents of a
totalitarian state.
Anyone who knows me
has heard me ask why the media never seems to notice the
presence of perhaps millions of
Americans on the right, who could be described as
“Taft Republicans”. Why do the New York Times,
Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and
almost the entire MSM as if there were nothing
noteworthy, except for a few isolated psychopaths,
standing to the right of
Karl Rove,
Bill Kristol, and the post-purge NR
editorial board?
And why, even at a
time when the liberal news media has begun to
pounce on W and his dying administration, does it
continues to feature neoconservative columnists in the
national press and
on TV talk programs—honors that it would never
conceivably extend to paleoconservatives or
paleolibertarians, even though they fully share the
Left’s distaste for the war in Iraq.
Yes, I do argue
that this is all an attempt to create and perpetuate a
controlled political conversation. Certain issues are
never raised or, if they do intrude themselves, the way
immigration recently has, can be shoved on to the
backburner.
I also try to
demonstrate why the post-World War Two Conservative
Movement was suited to play this role, as soon as its
preoccupation with Communist dangers became obsolete in
the course of human events. In fact, the project of
defining an "American conservatism" became, as my
late friend Sam Francis liked to stress, a diversion
from the pursuit of building an American Right. The
“Conservative Movement” headquartered in New York
and Washington became overly concerned with getting on
well with the media establishment. And, consisting for
the most part of journalists and fundraisers, it worked
not to give offense to those who might contribute to its
material and social success.
Yet an older Right
already existed, in a peculiarly American form. It
was the small-town, predominantly Protestant opposition
to the expanding centralized administration that the
Buckleyites replaced—and displaced from conventional
historiography.
These
transformations had the cumulative effect of driving the
Conservative Movement steadily leftward, a point that I
take pains to illustrate. So, quite naturally, the
liberal media happily agreed. It joined in the efforts
to recreate the relevant history. The more "moderate
conservatives" were presented as
brainier and as less xenophobic than their
predecessors. At the same time, we learn from authorized
accounts, Mr. Buckley had been working wisely and
humanely toward the building of a more inclusive
conservative tent since he cobbled together the new
American conservatism of the post-World War Two era.
My book makes
abundantly clear that none of this bears the slightest
resemblance to ascertainable facts. I also suggest that
the truth about my theme is so readily available that
movement conservatives must be profoundly dumb or
obsessively opportunistic not to notice changing party
lines and periodic reconstructions about their
movement’s past.
But there is reason
for optimism. Americans who identify themselves with the
Right do not always act according to the script prepared
by the
Weekly Standard
or the
Wall Street Journal
Editorial Page.
Such a surprise
happened most recently, and dramatically, with the
derailing of the
Bush-neocon Amnesty/Immigration Surge Bill. Senate
Republicans, strongly pressured by their constituents,
voted against the bill, although it enjoyed the support
of MSM-favored presidential candidate John McCain, and
President Bush, and the leading media outlets. Even
Jonah (“Hopalong”)
Goldberg, a symbol and a symptom of National Review’s
decline, felt forced to publish a column in the Los
Angeles Times [The
wealth between our ears, July 3, 2007]
suggesting that the U.S. might actually have the right
(wow!) to determine its national culture.
Get my book! Unless
you’re
David Frum or
Bill Kristol, you won’t be disappointed by the
airing of dirty linen.
Paul Gottfried
(email him)
is Professor of Humanities at Elizabethtown
College, PA. He is the author of
After Liberalism,
Multiculturalism and the
Politics of Guilt
and
The Strange Death of
Marxism.