What's left of the old right.[Reclaiming the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement, Justin Raimondo, ISI ISI International Sensitivity Index, see there Books, 369 pages] Human Events, the periodical that takes credit for "leading the conservative movement since 1944," has indeed captured the spirit of conservatism since its inception. Felix Morley, opponent of political centralism cen·tral·ism n. Concentration of power and authority in a central organization, as in a political system. cen tral·ist n. and foreign war, co-founded the publication; six
years later he broke with it over the Cold War. Today, he wouldn't
recognize it.
Now the paper generally offers undying loyalty to American aggression, the GOP, and the official Right's talking points. It features shrill partisan commentators such as Ann Coulter and knee-jerk attacks on all things Democratic or "Islamist." At the same time, however, Human Eventsalso publishes Pat Buchanan, dissenter from Bush's (and McCain's) foreign and domestic policies and critic of U.S. wars going back to the 19th century. This dissonance reflects the central paradox of conservatism today--the tension of supporting both traditional limited government and the expansionary ex·pan·sion·ar·y adj. Tending toward or causing expansion: the empire's expansionary policies in Asia. warfare state. To strengthen one's grasp on the struggle within modern conservatism, I recommend Justin Raimondo's Reclaiming the American Right, first published in 1993 and now reprinted with a new introduction by George W. Carey and critical essays by Scott P. Richert and David Gordon. As Raimondo tells it, the American Right was hijacked shortly after it was formed. The Old Right "was that loose grouping of intellectuals, writers, publicists, and politicians who vocally opposed the New Deal and bitterly resisted U.S. entry into World War II." It comprised Hoover Republicans, disaffected progressive Democrats, individualists, and Middle American populists who wanted freedom and peace. Its members survived and opposed the early Cold War before being crowded out by the New Right. The antagonists here are big-government conservatives, from William F. Buckley Jr. to the neocons. Raimondo examines several waves of destructive infiltration into the Right by leftists. James Burnham, who broke with Trotsky over support for the Soviet Union, personified the first coup. He abandoned the dialectical materialism that saw communism as inevitable and, in his famous The Managerial Revolution (1941), he described a "new ruling elite ... made up of administrators, technicians, scientists, bureaucrats, and the myriad middlemen who have taken the means of production Means Of Production is a compilation of Aim's early 12" and EP releases, recorded between 1995 and 1998. Track listing
n. 1. A spring that is the source or head of a stream. 2. A chief and copious source; an originator: "the intellectual fountainhead of the black conservatives" of American conservatism." The second round of infiltrators was led by Max Shachtman from the Trotskyite Workers Party. Shachtman believed that "Stalinism had become the barbarism predicted by Trotsky" and that "there was no ... alternative to the totalitarian brutality of the Kremlin except the imperfect but democratic United States." Eventually, the Shachtmanite "conception of Stalinism ... as the 'mortal enemy of Socialism' ... became the ideological cornerstone of anticommunist leftism left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left in the late 1950s." The anti-Stalin Left blended in with conservatives, accepted propaganda financing from the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). , and embraced the Cold War--often in the name of socialism. The Right became home to ever more ex-Communists, Trotskyites, social democrats, and a myriad of pro-war liberals. Neoconservatism neoconservatism U.S. political movement. It originated in the 1960s among conservatives and some liberals who were repelled by or disillusioned with what they viewed as the political and cultural trends of the time, including leftist political radicalism, lack of respect for rose in intellectual influence. It is tempting, therefore, for anti-interventionist rightists to decry the hawks among them as imposters and perpetual war as a leftist left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left program smuggled in by socialists with no claim to true American conservatism. But such a thesis oversimplifies. Much of the World War I opposition came from the Left, as did many of our Old Right heroes. In a terrific chapter on John T. Flynn John Thomas Flynn (October 25, 1882-1964) was a U.S. journalist. He was born in Bladensburg, Maryland in 1882. Although he graduated from Georgetown Law School, he choose a career in journalism. , Raimondo explains that this 1930s muckraking muck·rake intr.v. muck·raked, muck·rak·ing, muck·rakes To search for and expose misconduct in public life. [From the man with the muckrake, journalist was a "conventional liberal, whose views were not out of place in that bastion of liberal orthodoxy, The New Republic." And what was a liberal back then? "Flynn supported the Democratic Party platform of 1932, which called for an end to the extravagant spending of the Republicans, a balanced budget, and the abolition of the new government bureaus and commissions." It also opposed fiat money, alcohol prohibition, high tariffs, and belligerence bel·lig·er·ence n. A hostile or warlike attitude, nature, or inclination; belligerency. belligerence Noun the act or quality of being belligerent or warlike belligerence abroad. "But Flynn was soon disillusioned," writes Raimondo. "During the first hundred days of his administration, Roosevelt racked up a deficit larger than the one it took Hoover two years to produce." Flynn was "particularly horrified hor·ri·fy tr.v. hor·ri·fied, hor·ri·fy·ing, hor·ri·fies 1. To cause to feel horror. See Synonyms at dismay. 2. To cause unpleasant surprise to; shock. " by FDR's National Recovery Administration, which was largely modeled on Mussolini's corporatism. He called it "probably the gravest attack upon the whole principle of democratic society in our political history." The New Deal radicalized Flynn against the central state as his liberal colleagues swooned over FDR's corporatism. Raimondo explains, "The entry of the United States into World War II completed the transformation of Flynn from a disenchanted dis·en·chant tr.v. dis·en·chant·ed, dis·en·chant·ing, dis·en·chants To free from illusion or false belief; undeceive. [Obsolete French desenchanter, from Old French, liberal to a proto-libertarian advocate of laissez-faire and non-intervention." Other Old Right stalwarts came from the Left. Rose Wilder Lane Rose Wilder Lane (December 5, 1886, De Smet, Dakota Territory – October 30, 1968, Danbury, Connecticut) was an American journalist, travel writer, novelist, and political theorist. was a communist sympathizer, but "quite unlike her opposite numbers in the Future Neocons of America contingent," she turned against socialism and came "to challenge the central premise of statism stat·ism n. The practice or doctrine of giving a centralized government control over economic planning and policy. stat ist adj. ." H.L. Mencken was not a conservative but a radical. There
is nothing rightwing about his shockingly irreverent Notes on Democracy,
which lambastes nationalism, small towns, creationism creationism or creation science, belief in the biblical account of the creation of the world as described in Genesis, a characteristic especially of fundamentalist Protestantism (see fundamentalism). , religion,
prohibition, World War I, and puritanical busybodies. As for Albert Jay
Nock Albert Jay Nock (October 13, 1870 or 1872 - August 19, 1945) was an influential American libertarian author, educational theorist, and social critic of the early and middle 20th century. , today's conservatives might see his views on family,
landownership, and police as "Cultural Marxism." And the
anarchistic an·ar·chism n. 1. The theory or doctrine that all forms of government are oppressive and undesirable and should be abolished. 2. Active resistance and terrorism against the state, as used by some anarchists. 3. Frank Chodorov warned that anyone who called him a conservative would "get a punch in the nose." On the other hand, the Old Right was thoroughly anti-egalitarian, traditionalist, anti-internationalist, and anti-modernist. Raimondo's hero Garet Garrett, for example, upheld Americanism and nationalist freedom. The great Colonel McCormick was no leftist, nor were Robert Taft or Howard Buffet, leaders of the GOP's anti-Eisenhower wing. As the Old Right lost the day, however, opponents of war and statism looked elsewhere. The intellectual leader of modern libertarianism, Murray N. Roth-bard, split from the Right during the Cold War, sought alliances with the New Left, and worked to, in Raimondo's words, "reorient Re`o´ri`ent a. 1. Rising again. The life reorient out of dust. - Tennyson. Verb 1. libertarian thought away from the pessimism of the [Old Right] Remnant by harking back to the optimism of nineteenth-century liberalism." Rothbard's outlook transcended Left and Right. On foreign policy, he argued that all modern war, by expanding the state and killing the innocent, failed the libertarian test. This went much further than the America First position, which relied on nationalism to curb warmongering war·mon·ger n. One who advocates or attempts to stir up war. war mon .
By the 1990s, when Raimondo wrote Reclaiming the American Right, the Cold War was over and he and Rothbard sensed new opportunities rightward: "Some conservatives looked for new enemies to conquer. But others were reminded of the original concept of the Right's anticommunist crusade as a temporary expedient, an extended but necessary diversion from the main task of building a free society." Seeing libertarians abandon principle--some backed Operation Desert Storm--and Buchananites echoing America First, Rothbard, Raimondo, and others spied the possibility of a new Old Right alliance of libertarians and conservatives against the welfare/warfare state. That decade gave reassurance to such hopes. When Bill Clinton pursued an illegal war on Serbia and sought unconstitutional police powers, Republicans objected. In 2000, George W. Bush called for a more "humble foreign policy." Then 9/11 happened. Almost all right-wingers reverted to Cold War-style support for the total state in the name of national security. But a conservative remnant has survived with its sanity. Raimondo maintains his affinity with that minority, while encouraging coalitions with the Left against the unlimited war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism. The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism . In this magazine in 2004, he endorsed Ralph Nader as the Old Right choice. For some libertarians, however, a fusion with conservatism has become impossible. Today, one of the modern Right's fiercest critics is Lew Rockwell, Rothbard's student and colleague, a proponent of paleo alliances in the 1990s, a friend of bourgeois values and the Old Right. Last month, Rockwell spoke at Ron Paul's Rally for the Republic in Minneapolis. "I for one no longer believe that Bush has betrayed conservatives," he said. "In fact, he has fulfilled conservatism, by completing the redefinition ... that began many decades ago with Bill Buckley.... What does conservatism today stand for? It stands for war. It stands for power. It stands for spying, jailing without trial, torture, counterfeiting without limit, and lying from morning to night." By contrast, Scott Richert's essay at the end of this edition draws a distinction between conservatism's defense of liberty and the "(abstract) libertarian ideal of nonaggression non·ag·gres·sion n. Lack of intention to show aggression against a foreign government or nation. nonaggression Noun the policy of not attacking other countries Noun 1. ." For Richert, the trouble with neoconservatism "is not that the wrong ideology won, but that ideology won at all." True conservatism is grounded in Russell Kirk's "permanent things," not abstractions: "Rather than attempting to 'reconcile liberty and tradition,' we need to recover the traditional roots of liberty and recognize that liberty without tradition cannot long survive." This difference in emphasis will always separate libertarians from paleoconservatives, even as we all celebrate the generation that opposed FDR and Truman. But which movement today best embodies the Old Right spirit? Ron Paul's coalition is, like the Old Right, loose, populist, independent, traditionalist, and radical--the "realignment" in politics that was Colonel McCormick's dream. In the end, however, Paul's campaign was more libertarian than conservative, appealing more to Democratic and independent voters than to Republicans. Modern conservatives would have despised the Old Right. Indeed, in November 2004, Sean Hannity denounced McCormick for publishing classified information in the Chicago Tribune. In January 2005, Rush Limbaugh loudly accused left-liberals of abandoning the resolute interventionism in·ter·ven·tion·ism n. The policy or practice of intervening, especially: a. The policy of intervening in the affairs of another sovereign state. b. of FDR and Truman. Regnery Publishing, which used to bring out criticisms of World War II, today prints books defending Japanese internment. Conservatism today is not too ideological or insufficiently traditional. Rather, it is ideologically devoted to the wrong traditions. It sees the U.S. empire, the police state, the Republican Party, and other right-wing symbols as proxies for freedom, as institutions worth more than liberty. It has adopted coercive nationalism and utilitarian collectivism and cast away the traditions of constitutionalism con·sti·tu·tion·al·ism n. 1. Government in which power is distributed and limited by a system of laws that must be obeyed by the rulers. 2. a. A constitutional system of government. b. , freedom, and natural law on which bourgeois values depend. At the same time, libertarians often neglect their own radical history. Far too many have backed Bush's war. Both libertarians and paleocons would profit from reading Raimondo . We are not the same We Are Not The Same is an EP released by Good Shoes in March 2006. Track listing
Anthony Gregory is research analyst at the Independent Institute, a columnist at LewRockwell.com, and adviser for FFF (FreeForm Fabrication) See rapid manufacturing and 3D printing. .org. Visit him at AnthonyGregory.com. |
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