April 24, 2018
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
American Exceptionalism, the South, and the Great Brain Robbery of
Conservatism
No discussion of
Southern conservatism, its history and its relationship to what is termed broadly
the “American conservative movement” would be complete without an examination
of events that have transpired over the past fifty years and the pivotal role
of the powerful intellectual current known as Neoconservatism.
From the 1950s into
the 1980s Southerners who defended the traditions of the South, and even more
so, of the Confederacy, were welcomed as allies and confreres by their Northern
and Western counterparts. William F. Buckley Jr.’s National Review and Dr. Russell Kirk’s Modern Age, perhaps the two leading conservative journals of the
period, welcomed Southerners into the “movement” and onto the pages of those
organs of conservative thought. Kirk
dedicated an entire issue of Modern Age
to the South and its traditions, and explicitly supported its historic defense
of the originalist constitutionalism of the Framers. And throughout the critical
period that saw the enactment of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts,
Buckley’s magazine defended the “Southern position,” arguing forcefully on
constitutional grounds that the proposed legislation would undercut not just
the guaranteed rights of the states but the protected rights of citizens.
Southern authors like
Mel Bradford, Richard Weaver, Clyde Wilson and James J. Kilpatrick lent their intelligence,
skill as writers, and arguments to a defense of the South. Yet by the late
1980s, that “Southern voice” had pretty much been exiled—expelled—from major
establishment conservative journals. Indeed, friendly writers from outside the
South, but who were identified with what became known as the Old Right, that
is, the non-Neoconservative “right,” were also soon purged from the mastheads
of the conservative “mainstream” organs of opinion: noted authors such as Bradford
(from National Review), Sam Francis
(from The Washington Times), Paul
Gottfried (from Modern Age) and
others were soon shown the door.
What had happened?
How had the movement that began with such promise in the 1950s, essentially
with the publication of Kirk’s seminal volume, The Conservative Mind (1953), descended into internecine purges,
excommunications, and the sometimes brutal triumph of those—the
Neoconservatives—who only a few years earlier had militated in the cadres of
the Marxist Left?
To address this
question we need to examine the history of the non-Stalinist Left in the United
States after World War II. And we need to indicate and pinpoint significant
differences between those—the so-called Neocons—who made the pilgrimage from
the Left into the conservative movement, and those more traditional conservatives,
whose basic beliefs and philosophy were at odds with the newcomers.
In this traversal I utilize the
insights of a long list of writers and historians, including the late Richard
Weaver, Russell Kirk and Mel Bradford, and more recently, Paul Gottfried and
Gary Dorrien—plus my own experiences in witnessing what I term “the great brain
robbery of the American conservative movement.” That is, what can
only be described as a subversion and, ultimately, radical transformation of an
older American “conservatism” and pattern of thinking by those who, for lack of
better words, must be called “leftist refugees” from the more globalist
Trotskyite form of Marxism.
Shocked and horrified by the
recrudescence of Stalinist anti-semitism in the post-World War II period and
disillusioned by the abject economic failures of Stalinism and Communism during
the 1960s and 1970s, these “pilgrims away from the Communist Left”—largely but
by no means completely Jewish in origin—moved to the Right and a forthright
anti-Communism. Notable among their number were such personages as Norman
Podhoretz and Irving Kristol, both of whom had sons who figure prominently
amongst the current Neocon intellectual establishment.
At first welcomed by an older
generation of conservatives, and invited to write for conservative publications
and participate in a panoply of conservative activities, they soon began to
occupy positions of leadership and importance—and most significantly, to
transform and modify historic views associated with conservatism to mirror
their own vision. For, in fact, even though shell-shocked by the effects of
Soviet Communism, yet they brought with them in their pilgrimage an overarching
framework and an essential world view that owed much to their previous
militancy on the extreme left. And they brought, equally, their relentless
zeal.
Often well-connected financially, with
deep pockets and the “correct” friends in high places, within a few years the
“Neocons” had pretty much captured and taken control of most of the major
“conservative” organs of opinion, journals, think tanks, and, significantly,
exercised tremendous influence politically in the Republican Party (and to some
degree within the Democratic Party, at least during the presidency of Bill
Clinton).
This transformation—this virtual
takeover—within conservative ranks, so to speak, did not go unopposed. Indeed,
no less than the “father” of the conservative intellectual movement of the
1950s, Russell Kirk, denounced publicly the Neocons in the 1980s. Singling out
the intellectual genealogy of major Neocon writers, Kirk boldly declared
(December 15, 1988): "Not seldom has it seemed as if some
eminent Neoconservatives mistook Tel Aviv for the capital of the United
States." (https://www.heritage.org/political-process/report/the-neoconservatives-endangered-species)
Essentially, the Neoconservatives were
“unpatriotic” in the sense that they placed their zealously globalist values of
equality and liberal democracy ahead of their allegiance to their country, or,
rather, converted their allegiance to their country into a kind of “world
faith” which trumpeted disconnected “ideas” and airy “propositions” over the
concrete history of the American experience, itself. America was the
“exceptional nation,” unlike all others, with a supreme duty to go round the
world and impose those ideas and that vision on other, unenlightened or recalcitrant
nations. To use the words of author Allan Bloom (in his The Closing of the American Mind): “And when we Americans speak
seriously about politics we mean that our principles of freedom and equality
and the rights based on them are rational and everywhere applicable.” We
Americans must engage in “an educational experiment undertaken to force those
who do not accept these principles to do so.” (Quoted in Paul Gottfried, War and Democracy, 2012, p. 110)
Although he won few friends among the newly transformed
conservative establishment, Russell Kirk’s demurrer and the opposition of luminaries
like internationally-recognized historian Paul Gottfried and
author-turned-politician Patrick Buchanan starkly demonstrated the differences
between the Old Right and the increasingly dominant Neocons.
In these so-called “conservative wars” Southern
conservatism, when not sidelined by the Neocon ascendancy, found itself
fighting side-by-side with the dwindling contingent on the Old Right. And that
was logical, for the Old Right had—during the previous decades—treated the
South and Confederacy with sympathy, if not support, while the Neoconservatives
embraced a Neo-Abolitionism on race, liberal democracy, and, above all, equality
that owed more to the nostrums of historic Marxism than to the historic
conservatism that Kirk championed.
The late Mel Bradford, arguably the
finest historian and philosopher produced by the South since Richard Weaver,
also warned, very presciently in the pages of the Modern Age quarterly
(in the Winter issue, 1976) of the incompatibility of the Neocon vision with
the inherited traditions and republican constitutionalism of the Founders and Framers.
In his long essay, “The Heresy of Equality,” [https://www.unz.com/print/ModernAge-1976q1-00062] which was just one
installment in a longstanding debate he had with Dr. Harry Jaffa of the
Claremont Institute, Bradford laid bare the abundant intentions of those who
came together to form an American nation, while giving the lie to the Neocon
narrative that the republic was founded on universalized notions—those
“ideas”—of equality and liberal democracy. Those notions, he pointed out
perceptively, were a hangover from their days and immersion in the globalist
universalism that owed its origin to Marx and Trotsky, and to the Rationalist
“philosophes” of the 18th century, rather than to the legacy of
kinship and blood, an attachment to community and to the land, and a central
religious core that annealed this tradition and continued to make it viable.
What Bradford revealed in his
researches, ultimately distilled in his superb volume, Original
Intentions: On the Making and Ratification of the American Constitution (Athens, GA, 1993) and later confirmed in the massive research of
Colgate University historian Barry Alan Shain (in his The Declaration of
Independence in Historical Context: American State Papers, Petitions,
Proclamations, and Letters of the Delegates to the First National Congresses,
2014) was that our old republic was not founded on abstractions about
“equality” or “democracy,” or some fanatical zeal to “impose our democracy and
equality” on the rest of the world, or that we were “the model for the rest of
the world,” to paraphrase Allan Bloom.
North Carolinian Richard Weaver aptly
described the civilization that came to be created in America, most
particularly and significantly in the Old South, even a century before the
Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, as one based on a “communal
individualism.” By that he meant that those transferred communities from Europe
brought with them a communal conformity which offered certain enumerated
liberties to each of its members, or at least to the heads of households of
families within those communities. There was a degree of autarky that existed;
but in many respects those little communities brought with them inherited mores
and beliefs that they had held in the old country, and those beliefs were based
essentially in ties of blood and attachments to the soil, to the land.
As historian Richard Beale Davis has
demonstrated conclusively in his exhaustive history, Intellectual Life in the Colonial South, 1585-1763 (Knoxville,
1970; 3 vols.), it was in the South where a distinctive communitarian
individualism developed which distinguished it almost from the beginning from
other regions of America. From the earliest landings at Jamestown and the
settlements in South Carolina and Georgia, the Southern colonies developed differently
from
those of New England. Although by no means in conflict with its inherited
British heritage, as were the Puritan settlements and traditions to the north,
the South did over the years very gradually modify its rich Anglo-Celtic
patrimony, adjusting to distance, circumstance, climate, the presence of
Indians, and the mixture of additional folk from other European countries, with
their customs and traditions. The result was quantifiably conservative and
localist.
Professor Davis equally lays to rest the
interpretation of Southern history and character that attributes everything to
the presence of slavery. As Professor Bradford, commenting on Davis, makes
precise:
The South thought and acted in its own way before
the “peculiar institution” was much developed
within its boundaries. Colonial Southerners did not agonize in a fever of conscience over the injustice of the
condition of those Negroes who were in bondage among them. Contrary to popular
misconception, intense moral outrage at slavery was almost unheard of anywhere in the European colonies in the New World
until the late eighteenth century, and was decidedly uncommon then. The South
embraced slavery in its colonial nonage because Negro slavery seemed to fit the
region's needs---and because the region, through the combination of its intellectual inheritance brought over
from the England of the Renaissance with the special conditions of this hemisphere, had reached certain practical conclusions. (Bradford,
“Where We Were Born and Raised: The Southern Conservative Tradition,” National
Humanities Center, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, April 1985,
reprinted in The Reactionary Imperative,
p. 118)
Commenting on the recent tendency to attach an
overriding importance to slavery in the earlier development of Southern culture
and character, Davis adds that "...it is difficult to see that in the
slave colonies any consistent rationale if indeed any at all developed in
defense of the peculiar institution, simply because there was not sufficiently
powerful attack upon it to warrant or require a defense." (Davis, p. 1630)
The development of a natural and blood-and-soil conservatism of the South
predates the furor over slavery.
Let me give a personal, and I think
representative example: my father’s family is of Scottish origin. Actually,
after leaving ancestral homes in Counties Argyll and Ayrshire, then
passing about fifty years in County Antrim in Ulster, they made the
voyage to Philadelphia, arriving in 1716-1717, and settled initially in what is
now Lancaster County, Pennsylvania (as deeds show). Their object was cheap and
good land on which to raise their families; they were already able to practice
their faith in County Antrim, just as they were able to do in Lancaster. And
the same “liberties” they had in the old country they also had in Pennsylvania.
Seeking newer and fresh lands, whole
families picked up in the later 1730s and made the trip southward along the
Great Wagon Road to Augusta County, Virginia, and then, by the 1740s to
Rowan County, North Carolina. And what is truly fascinating is that from
Scotland (in the early 1600s) to Ulster, to Pennsylvania, to Rowan County,
North Carolina, it is the very same families in community, the very same
surnames and forenames that one finds in the deed and estate records. Robert W.
Ramsey, in his path breaking study, Carolina Cradle: Settlement of the
Northwest Carolina Frontier, 1747-1762 (Chapel Hill, 1st edition, 1964), platted the
land grants of those pioneers in Rowan County, and over 90% of the family names
are the same as those we find in Ulster a century earlier and in the parish
registry books of Scotland before that.
And perhaps more striking is that this
pattern continued on for another century and more; collateral members of my
father’s family made the trek to California in 1848-1849, enticed by promises
of gold and new, unploughed lands. There is a community still known as “Catheys
Valley” (near Yosemite Park) where they settled, and as late as the 1950s, the
same old surnames in the telephone directory still predominated.
But not only do we find the
geographical movement of entire families and communities, in the existent
correspondence that we do have there is, almost without exception, no word
about traveling west or crossing the ocean to seek “freedom” or “equality” or
to “create a new nation founded on [globalist and egalitarian] principles.”
Our ancestors were not seeking to establish
a “Shining City on a Hill” like the New England Puritans and their descendants,
or “create a new people,” but rather to preserve and enhance the old. When
those settlers wrote about their experiences, if at all, it was about their
respective families and communities having a better life, about cheaper and
virgin farm lands, and about conserving the inheritance and traditions they
took with them. In other words, the 18th century
philosophy of Rationalism, and the ideas of “equality” and “democracy” that we
are too inclined to attribute to them, don’t really appear on nearly any level.
And this, at base, practical and
communal individualism is reflected in the deliberations preceding the
Declaration and then, even more so, by the Framers in 1787—as both Bradford and
Shain have convincingly shown. The documentary evidence in every form confirms
that. The “right to equality” enshrined in the Declaration is an “equality”
viewed from the Colonies across the Atlantic to the English Parliament, equality as to the “rights of Englishmen,” not
to social or economic revolution in the former colonies.
Those deliberations in Philadelphia
were the product of a community of states, each with their own peculiarities,
their own communities of families, with traditions inherited from Christian
Europe (largely from the British Isles), and the desire to both preserve that
inheritance while co-existing and collaborating with other communities and
states in the creation of the American republic, where those traditions and that
inheritance would be protected and respected, and could prosper as its families
and communities prospered.
And in large part that result was the
product of great Southerners, Virginians and Carolinians. It was a result that
functioned well for eighty years. The legacy of Northern victory in 1865 was
the overthrow of the original republic created by those men, which, in effect,
paved the way for the present-day success of the Neoconservatives and the
triumph of what the late Sam Francis called the managerial state…and what we now call the Deep State.
Given this history and this context,
both the War Between the States and subsequent American history after that
conflict, and with the modern displacement by the Neocons of the traditional (and
Southern) conservatives and their opposition to the growth in government and to
the destruction of those bonds and traditions that characterized the country
for centuries, the results we observe around us do not augur well for the
future. While the hard core cultural and political Marxist Left continues its
rampage through our remaining inherited institutions, those self-erected Neocon
defenders accept at least implicitly, many of the same philosophical premises,
the intellectual framework of argument, and the long range objectives of their
supposed opponents.
Ironically, although they may appear at
times in major disagreement, both the hard core multicultural Left and the
Neocon “Right” share a commitment to the globalist belief in American
“exceptionalism.” In explaining this exceptionalism, they use the same
language—about “equality” and “democracy” and “human rights” and “freedom,” its
uniqueness to the United States, and the desirability to export its benefits.
But, then, the proponents of the dominant Left and of the establishment Neocon
Right will appear variously on Fox or on MSNBC, or in the pages of National
Review or of The Weekly Standard, to furiously deny the
meaning given by their opponents…but all the while using the same linguistic
template and positing goals—in civil rights, foreign policy, etc.—which seem
remarkably similar, but over which they argue incessantly about the “means.”
Thus, in their zealous defense of the
“civil rights” legislation of the 1960s and their advocacy of what they term
“moderate feminism” and “equal rights for women” (now extended to same sex
marriage), the Neocons mirror the ongoing revolution from the Left and accept
generally its overarching premises, even while declaring their fealty to
historic American traditions and historic Western Christianity.
It is a defense—if we can call it
that—that leads to continuous surrender, if not betrayal, to the Revolution and
the subsequent acceptance by those defenders of the latest conquest and advance
by the Left, and their subsequent attempt to justify and rationalize to the
rest of us why the most recent aberration—same sex marriage, or “gender
fluidity”—is actually conservative. Or, that it is critically necessary to
send American boys to die in faraway jungles or deserts to “establish
democracy,” that is, prevent one group of bloodthirsty fanatical Muslims from
killing off another group of bloodthirsty fanatical Muslims—this latter group,
of course, willing to do our bidding economically and politically. And all in
the name of spreading—mostly we should say imposing—global “equality” and
“freedom” and the “fruits of American exceptionalism.”
Neither the leftist Marxist
multiculturalists nor the Neoconservatives reflect the genuine beliefs or
inheritance left to us by those who came to these shores centuries ago. Both
reject the historic conservatism of the South, which embodied that inheritance
and the vision of the Founders.
They offer, instead, the spectacle of
factions fighting over the increasingly putrid spoils of a once great nation
which becomes increasingly weaker and more infected as they assume the roles
similar to that of gaming Centurions at the Crucifixion.
The election of Trump threw them—both
the cultural Left but also the establishment Neoconservatives—off stride, at
least temporarily. And the history of
the past year and a half has been a continuous sequence of their efforts to
either displace the new administration (by the hard Left and some Never
Trumpers) or surround the president and convert him, or at a minimum neuter his
“blood and soil,” America First inclinations (by many of the establishment
Neocon and their GOP minions).
Who wins this battle, who wins this
war, will determine the future of this nation and whether the dominant Deep
State narrative, shared by both the establishment Left AND the establishment
conservatives, will complete its triumph.
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