Social Conservatives, Neoconservatives,
Paleoconservatives - and National Conservatives
(a.k.a. Patriots)
By Peter Brimelow
Canada has notoriously invented many modern
political diseases http://www.vdare.com/war_against_nation_state.htm.
But it may also be inventing the cures. A young
Canadian neoconservative, Michael Taube, has
just published an essay on North American
conservative factions (Calgary Herald,
August 26) that is notable both for its
strengths and for its weakness. Taube has to
explain the conservative scene to
ideologically-deprived Canadian readers, so the
clarity of his analysis blazes a useful trail
for Americans. Some details are debatable, of
course. But more interesting are the glaring
omissions, which are indicative of areas of
crisis - and opportunity - in American
conservative discourse.
Four points to note:
1. Taube refers repeatedly to Stockwell Day,
leader of the new Canadian Alliance party, now
the Official Opposition [largest opposition
party] in Canada's Federal Parliament. Moral for
Americans: Third Parties can succeed, with
patience, in the right conditions. The
Alliance's predecessor, the Reform Party, first
appeared in the 1988 federal election amid even
more ridicule than its U.S. namesake today. It
got only single-digit percentages of the vote.
But in the next (1993) election, it completely
displaced its rival, the Progressive
Conservative Party. The PCs were one of the
longest-established democratic parties in the
world, arguably older than the GOP. But they had
spurned their base and gone whoring after alien
voters from another language bloc. Sound
familiar?
2. Taube identifies and approves of:
neoconservatives (using the classic definition,
liberals mugged by reality, a useful distinction
in Canada where the term is often used to
describe any conservative not actually dead);
social conservatives (a hot phenomenon in
Canada, where the secular media elite in Toronto
is alarmed by Day's Prairie bible-belt type
Protestantism, as Taube to his credit is
not). He identifies and disapproves of:
paleoconservatives, the group associated with
Thomas Fleming's Chronicles
Magazine which has revived the
isolationist, nationalist, small-government
tradition of the Old Right. Taube argues that
this group is protectionist and anti-free
market, although he acknowledges the existence
of paleolibertarians, led by Lew Rockwell and
the Von Mises Institute http://www.mises.org/.
In all this, Taube is precisely reflecting the
Beltway Right consensus and indeed the Bush
campaign, with its parade of caged
conservatives.
3. Taube, who is Jewish himself, mentions but
does not really emphasize that the
neoconservatives are, anomalously given the
overwhelming attachment of American Jews to the
political Left, a predominantly Jewish faction.
American journalists are extremely reluctant to
discuss this obvious fact. Yet it has played an
undeniable role in the crack-up [™ R. Emmett
Tyrrell] of the American conservative movement.
Neoconservative leaders have invested enormous
energy in accusing conservatives like Joe Sobran
and Pat Buchanan of anti-Semitism and in
attempting to anathematize them. And, although
less widely remarked, some neoconservatives are
themselves plainly motivated by intense
anti-WASP ethnic animus in their approach to
immigration policy: see http://www.vdare.com/debate_in_commentary.htm
4. Taube essentially ignores immigration, the
elephant in the living room of contemporary
North American conservatism. In both the U.S.
and Canada, mass immigration from
non-traditional sources is a government policy
enacted in the 1960s. Immigration is a new
political issue, coming to the fore after the
end of the Cold War that shaped the previous
generation's thinking. Yet its impact is
fundamental. In effect, Washington and Ottawa
are dissolving their old Peoples and electing
new ones.
Current mass immigration policy has raised
what we at VDARE call The National Question:
whether the U.S. (and Canada, and the great
nations of the West) can survive as
nation-states, the political expression of
specific peoples. The issue is creating a new
conservative faction: national conservatives,
who are aware of the threats posed by
immigration, multiculturalism,
"bilingualism" (i.e. foreign language
maintenance) to the fabric of the American
nation. Maybe this faction should just be called
"nationalists." Or maybe
"patriots."
Neoconservatives show some signs of genuine
division on the immigration issue. Some (David
Frum) have been distinctly sensible. Others
(John Podhoretz) have displayed a hostility to
the concept of a specific national community
indistinguishable from that of Jewish liberals http://www.vdare.com/firing.htm.
On balance, though, the neoconservative
influence on the immigration debate must be
judged negative. They have not merely recoiled
from rational arguments for reform; they have
also too often reacted with uncollegial
violence. Neocon agitation was a major reason
the Republican leadership flubbed its most
recent chance for immigration reform, the 1995-6
Smith-Simpson bill, with the result that it now
finds itself even further down the demographic
hole. The disaster of Pickett’s Charge has
been described as the price the South paid for
Robert E. Lee. The disaster of post-1965
immigration may the price the American
conservative movement has paid for the
neoconservatives.
I'm worried about Michael Taube’s attitude
to immigration, based on fragmentary evidence.
(e.g. "Modern social conservatives believe
in an inclusive society based on Judeo-Christian
values." Say what? Sez who?) But you have
to know the appalling condition of Canadian
debate to realize how far he has come.
Michael Taube's
Calgary Herald article
September 3, 2000