Krauthammered?
By Peter Brimelow
The somewhat unfortunately-named Charles
Krauthammer has just published yet another
column telling the Republicans that they don’t
have to worry about Pat Buchanan. (Washington
Post 7/7/2000 – currently at http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61048-2000Jul6.html)
It’s odd that someone you don’t have to
worry about still requires such extensive
denunciation. But Krauthammer is certainly
telling a lot of Republicans what they want to
hear. This will no doubt make up for the fact
that his record is no good.
I’ve only met Krauthammer once, at a
conference in 1994 organized by John O’Sullivan
in the days when we were both writing for National
Review. (See item above). Krauthammer is
often described as a Canadian (he grew up in
Montreal although he was born in Uruguay) so I
took the opportunity to ask him what he thought
of Quebec separatism. He grandly assured me it
was dead. This was of course the conventional
Canadian establishment view – very much like
the conventional Washington view of Pat Buchanan
today. Krauthammer didn’t ask my opinion, as I
recall, and I didn’t tell him that I had
written a book arguing the direct opposite. (The
Patriot Game; Canada and the Canadian Question
Revisited, 1986. You can get the gist at http://www.vdare.com/canada.htm)
But I did go on to give a presentation based
on my forthcoming immigration book, Alien
Nation. Krauthammer didn’t seem very happy
about it. He didn’t speak to me again but told
O’Sullivan something to the effect that my
arguments needed to be expressed in a different
“language.” Spanish maybe?
The point of this story is that the following
year Parti Quebecois held a referendum in Quebec
on separation and came within an ace of winning.
The shock was devastating. In its wake, numerous
prominent Canadians – for example, Conrad
Black, proprietor of the National Post – finally
began to say the unsayable: Quebec’s
separation is only a matter of time.
Among them was, guess who, Charles
Krauthammer. Even more telling, in the November
3 1995 Washington Post he actually
bemoaned that Canada should break up over “an
issue as relatively trivial as language.”
An issue as relatively trivial as language.
I don’t blame Krauthammer for being wrong
about Quebec. (Well, I do wonder how he can
continue to sound so cocksure about everything).
He was, after all, just reflecting the
conventional wisdom. But he was indeed wrong,
spectacularly, and for a characteristic reason:
he cannot or will not appreciate the reality,
and the utility, of the national community to
the peoples among whom he lives.
It’s a fatal blind spot. To Krauthammer, it
is literally inconceivable that anyone should
question (as he put in on July 7) “the great
post-World War II multilateral institutions
(such as the World Bank
[!!!] and the World Trade
Organization…)” Or immigration, about which
as far as I can see he remains invincibly
ignorant - in any language. I wouldn’t even
trust his opinion on Uruguay.
So, Republicans, don’t be surprised when
you find yourself standing in the cold listening
to Pat Buchanan take the Oath of Office,
accompanied by an honor guard of Arizona
ranchers, native-born computer programmers,
black janitors and assorted patriots. You’ll
be able to read how it was all inevitable (and
probably your fault) in another Washington
Post column by that brilliant Charles
Yankhammer.