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National Review Isn’t Right
http://www.lewrockwell.com/dmccarthy/dmccarthy47.html
by Daniel McCarthy



A few weeks ago on this very site Jeffrey Tucker wrote what a lot of us
have long known to be true but didn’t want to admit: that conservatism’s
problems predate the rise of neoconservatism by about two decades, or
maybe even more – after all, before there was Bill Buckley and National
Review there was Germany’s Bismarck and Britain’s hapless Tories. They
were conservatives too, and that’s what they called themselves, unlike
America’s traditional anti-statists who generally refused the label. The late
Frank Chodorov was known to threaten anyone who called him a
conservative with a punch in the nose.

One must not speak ill of the dead, but it is worth saying that not
everyone who calls himself a conservative is one, and not everyone who
doesn’t isn’t. This isn’t unreasonable: most so- called liberals aren’t liberal,
and nowadays there are "libertarians" who don’t give a damn about liberty.
Once any political designation has become popular among anti-statists it’s
only a matter of time before the other side tries to steal it, and usually
succeeds. If it were just the name it wouldn’t matter, but along with the
word itself come institutions, misguided individuals, and even whole
movements. Once upon a time The Nation magazine really was liberal, in
the classical sense, under editors like E.L. Godkin and Oswald Garrison
Villard. But the socialists who co-opted the liberal name and implausibly
claimed the liberal tradition for their own also took over The Nation.
That’s the way it works.

That’s the way it worked with conservatism too, albeit with a twist.
National Review, unlike The Nation, was never co- opted. Instead it had
been designed from day one as a vehicle though which to redefine the
American Right, and to this day that continues to be its mission. That’s
why at the same time that a shooting war got under way in Iraq, National
Review launched an assault of a different kind closer to home, against the
war’s critics on the Right. For months and even years, National Review had
ignored the anti-war Right, but with LewRockwell.com’s readership
surpassing that of National Review Online and dwarfing that of the print
edition of National Review – and with a battalion of other "unapproved"
conservatives rising up, from the American Conservative to VDARE – Bill
Buckley’s magazine could no longer afford to remain silent. The gang at
National Review had to act, or else National Review would not be the
"flagship" of the American Right for very much longer.

>From the very beginning National Review was an imposture – and even back
then a lot of conservative knew it, as some of the Goldwaterites and pre-
Goldwaterites can attest – but as long as the magazine was the only game
in town and by far the best known "conservative" outlet it could get away
with the fraud. But the Internet made that impossible; now anyone who
looks for it can find real conservatism on the web, and given the choice
between the real thing and what National Review is selling... well, the
numbers speak for themselves.

LewRockwell.com is conservative and National Review isn’t because if
conservatism is to mean anything other than mindless defense of the status
quo, it has to mean something like this:



...a conservative is a realist, who believes that there is a structure of
reality independent of his own will and desire. He believes that there is a
creation which was here before him, which exists now not by just his
sufferance, and which will be here after he’s gone. This structure consists
not merely of the great physical world but also of many laws, principles,
and regulations which control human behavior. Though this reality is
independent of the individual, it is not hostile to him. It is in fact amenable
by him in many ways, but it cannot be changed radically and arbitrarily.
This is the cardinal point. The conservative holds that man in this world
cannot make his will his law without any regard to limits and to the fixed
nature of things.

The words (and the italics) belong to Richard M. Weaver, and are taken
from his essay "Conservatism and Libertarianism: The Common Ground," as
reproduced in In Defense of Tradition: the Collected Shorter Writings of
Richard M. Weaver, 1929–1963. Lest there be any doubt, Weaver specifies
in the same essay what some of those "laws, principles and regulations
which control human behavior" are: "There is a concept expressed by
some economists today in the word ‘praxeology.’ Praxeology, briefly
defined, is the science of how things work because of their essential
natures."

You won’t find any mention of praxeology at National Review Online, but
you most certainly will at LewRockwell.com. Praxeological laws are only
one kind of law, however, and only one facet of reality. Unfortunately
National Review Online is no better at discussing any other kind of natural
law in a systematic fashion. If Weaver’s definition of conservatism is
correct or at least within the right ballpark, how can anyone really be a
conservative who takes no interest in understanding the "structure of
reality" and its "laws, principles and regulations?" Conservatives from
Edmund Burke to Russell Kirk and beyond have been theory-averse, but
not because they did not believe in systematic thought (whether they
were systematic thinkers themselves is a different question). It was
ideology of which Burke and Kirk were skeptical, ideology meaning to them
an artificial rational order that one desires to impose on reality, rather
than accepting and understanding reality for itself. Ideology in this sense is
the natural law equivalent of Lysenkoism.

LewRockwell.com not only addresses conservative theory better than the
putative "flagship" of the Right, however, but also the specific
instantiations of the theory in culture, traditions and institutions. An
unmistakable characteristic of LRC and of the "paleoconservatives" is an
appreciation for specific regions of the United States, especially the
South. A film like Gods and Generals is important to the "paleo-Right" not
just as a historical curiosity, but as a work that tells us something about an
embodied reality, an intersection of principle – in this case the South’s
fight for independence – and events. The "paleo" concern with specific
cultures, and most especially one’s own culture, is partly emotional but
not just emotional – it isn’t nostalgia. It’s both a feeling and an awareness
of how the social world in which we live derives from and represents the
underlying natural order; how a given place and time specifically express
the nature of man and the laws that govern him. As for David Frum and
National Review, on the other hand, the closest they ever come to an
understanding of place is their talk about the "red" and "blue" zones of the
country.

One place that the National Review gang certainly doesn’t understand is
America; its character and traditions are alien to them. Ask yourself: who
is the more plausible heir of the Spirit of '76, National Review or
LewRockwell.com? The roots of  National Review’s pseudo-conservatism
extend back no more than fifty years, to National Review’s own founding
and the beginning of William F. Buckley’s career as a writer not long
before that. The roots of LewRockwell.com’s conservatism, on the other
hand, can be found in H.L. Mencken and Albert Jay Nock, and beyond
them all the way back to the Anti-Federalists and the Founding Fathers.
George Washington’s farewell address, with its appeal for free trade and
admonitions against interventionism abroad, reads more like something off
of this site than something that might be found in the pages of National
Review.

So foreign is National Review’s brand of statist "conservatism" to these
shores that the magazine has had to import a very large number of its
writers from abroad. Hence the spectacle of a Canadian like David Frum,
who just got his US citizenship papers from a federal bureaucrat, calling
Lew Rockwell and others on the anti-war American Right "unpatriotic."
Does he mean that they’re not loyal enough to Canada? Lately National
Review-style conservatives have taken to chattering about "transnational
progressivism." But what about transnational conservatism? The March 24,
2003, issue of National Review carried the most un-American cover story
imaginable: it was called – you couldn’t make this up if you tried – "The
Empire of Freedom" and proposed resurrecting the British Empire under
the rubric of an "Anglosphere," an empire no doubt to be lead by an elite
coterie of transnationalists much like those affiliated with National Review.

National Review’s line on immigration is particularly telling – debate the
minutiae, but never question in principle the propriety of repopulating the
country in order to change its character. After all, that’s what National
Review has done to the American Right. Peter Brimelow is the exception
that proves the rule. Born in Lancashire, he became an American citizen
and has since fought to preserve the character of the place to which he
has given his loyalty. Naturally enough he’s persona non grata at National
Review these days, and has had his views denounced by Jonah Goldberg –
at the time National Review Online’s editor and designated hatchet man –
as "narrow and nasty."

What National Review has been trying to create is not even genuine British
conservatism. A high Tory like Peregrine Worsthorne does not want to see
his land reduced to the status of a cultural and military satellite of the
United States. National Review’s transnational conservatism is actually the
worst of both worlds: the paternalism and statism of the British Right
wedded to some of the more crass and barbaric tendencies within the
American character. The amalgam might be called "managerial philistinism."
It’s the antithesis of civilization.

David Frum and his colleagues are so shrill about attacking the patriotism of
others because they know they have no patriotism themselves; their
loyalty is to an ideology. Real patriotism has to accept a land for what it is,
warts and all, and can rest secure in the knowledge that someone like
Alexander Cockburn may be a man of the Left, but he’s characteristically a
man of the American Left, as are many of those who get denounced by
neoconservatives as un-American. Men like Cockburn and Gore Vidal are
more American – and because of their relationship to the American
character, also more conservative – than David Frum will ever be. To say
this is not to play the nationalist or "nativist" – America and the American
Right need people like Brimelow and Taki Theodoracopulos who adopt
America’s traditions – it’s just to appeal for truth in advertising. National
Review ought be called the Transnational Review and should not call its
imperialistic ideology "conservatism."

There’s nothing remotely conservative about that ideology, least of all its
militarism. Someone who was in a position to know was the sociologist
Robert Nisbet, one of the leading lights of the conservative renascence in
America in the 1950s and a man who literally wrote the book – or a book at
least – on conservatism, Conservatism: Dream and Reality. Nisbet, who
unlike the chicken-hawks at National Review actually served in the military
and even saw combat in the Pacific Theatre of World War II, had this to say
about conservatism and militarism:



"...in America throughout the twentieth century, and including four
substantial wars abroad, conservatives had been steadfastly the voices of
non-inflationary military budgets, and of an emphasis on trade in the world
instead of American nationalism. In the two World Wars, in Korea, and it
Viet Nam, the leaders of American entry into war were such renowned
liberal-progressives as Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman
and John F. Kennedy. In all four episodes conservatives, both in the
national government and in the rank and file, were largely hostile to
intervention; were isolationists indeed."

National Review tends to be rather coy about the origins of its ideology
but someone whose views are practically identical to the gang at NR has
been quite explicit – Max Boot, formerly of the Wall Street Journal, who in
an extraordinary article entitled "What is a ‘Neocon?’" suggested that he
would prefer to be called a "Hard Wilsonian," meaning that he "embrace[s]
Woodrow Wilson’s championing of American ideals but reject[s] his
reliance of international organizations and treaties to accomplish our
objectives," preferring instead to use direct military force. This ideology,
espoused as it is by so many cowards who refuse to do any fighting
themselves, cannot really be called "hard," but it is Wilsonian. It certainly
isn’t conservative. In fact, it’s frankly revolutionary, as one  National
Review ideologue gloats. There’s a bit of Napoleon here and more than a
bit of Jacobinism; the cause of National Review today is the very cause
against which Edmund Burke once stood. Nisbet, a real Burkean, wrote in
Conservatism: Dream and Reality that "Reagan’s passion for crusades,
military and moral, is scarcely American-conservative. The neoconservative,
neo-Wilsonian crusade for "democracy" is both military and moral.

(It’s worth remarking in passing: yes, Nisbet was a conservative who wasn’t
afraid to criticize Ronald Reagan. One more sign of the corruption of
National Review-style conservatism is its fawning over Reagan and, even
more, George W. Bush, a phenomenon which bears some resemblance to
the old Cult of Personality surrounding Stalin in the Soviet Union. It’s hard
to conclude that President Bush is anything other than a mediocrity unless
you look at the world through a lens of ideology. The emperor is wearing
no clothes.)

Was there ever a time when National Review was conservative? Certainly
conservatives were once published in its pages, especially in the early
years when National Review was seeking to establish itself as the voice of
the American Right and American conservatives were in desperate need of
a journal. But once National Review had counterfeited its credentials it
soon began to purge anyone on the Right who disagreed with its line, from
the John Birch Society to Murray Rothbard, and later Joseph Sobran. From
the beginning, however, National Review was chiefly concerned with
foreign policy, and espoused a militarism thoroughly unlike anything that
had previously existed on the American Right. Over time the magazine’s
positions on other issues have changed, but where war and the warfare
State were concerned it remained constant. It has tolerated dissent from
its line elsewhere, but when it comes to war National Review likes to
excommunicate the perceived heretics; that’s what it did with Murray
Rothbard during Vietnam, and it’s what the magazine is trying to do now to
anti-war conservatives. Whether or not the magazine was set up by the
CIA, it has always put "national security," as defined by the federal
government, above the conservative traditions of America. Having
slandered most of its rivals on the Right as kooks or anti-Semites, National
Review can now afford to be more open about its imperial agenda. But this
has come to pass at the very same time that the real Right, the anti-statist
conservative and libertarian Right, has re-emerged with new venues, both
on the Internet and on newsstands. This is very frightening for National
Review and its brand of ersatz conservative; David Frum’s hit-piece was an
indication of how much they fear the antiwar, anti-state Right. And so
they should, because our tradition is very firmly rooted in this country,
and is not about to be supplanted.

March 14, 2003

Daniel McCarthy [send him mail] is a graduate student in classics at
Washington University in St. Louis.

Copyright © 2003 LewRockwell.com
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have to stand on their own merits.
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