July 9, 2018
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Five Measures: How Do You Stand on
Our Western Christian Inheritance? Take the Test
Friends,
You can tell a lot about a person by his actions
and how he justifies them. And you can intuit much about how someone thinks on one topic by how he thinks on other, related topics. This surmise is
not true in every case, but, I think it applies in a great majority of
situations. Tell me what a person—a distinguished author, a political or
military leader, a cultural icon—believes, his perspective on this or that
significant historical event, how he acts in a particular situation—and you can
usually gather a valid impression of his worldview and overarching philosophy.
A few years back I created my own set of measures, my own
test, as it were, to determine on which side of immense and fundamentally
unbridgeable divides various writers and authors, politicians, and others come
down on. It seemed to me that we could take, historically, several major
conflicts and wars, that fundamentally shaped not only subsequent history, but
also, indelibly, the consciousness, thinking and cultural outlook of succeeding
generations, and utilize them as markers.
I came up with the following five:
1) The English Civil War, 1642-1651;
2)
The
French Revolution, 1789-1799, also including the Napoleonic Period, 1799-1815;
3)
The
War Between the States, 1861-1865;
4)
The
Communist Revolution, 1917-1920; and
5) The Spanish
Civil War, 1936-1939.
I won’t dwell at length on my reasons for
selecting these conflicts as measures except to say I believe how we think
about them clearly illustrates where a person stands in relation to the
accumulated inheritance—that great continuum—of Western and Christian
tradition. They—each one of them—represent watershed events in the past 500
years of our Western European civilization.
I could have selected—but did not--World War I,
for example, but even though a preponderance of evidence now indicates that the
outcome of that conflict was a disaster for Europe, that much (not all,
certainly) of the blame for its I initiation resides in Paris and in Whitehall
(and not as much in Vienna or Berlin), I recognize that there are yet persons
of intelligence and devotion to the Christian West who differ. So, I do not
include it.
Respond correctly on all five that I list (as I
see it), and you are a staunch defender of that Western European heritage and
most probably have been able, in some fashion, to understand the fundamental
connection those conflicts have in the context of our civilization and our
willingness to defend it.
Obviously, for most self-described
“conservatives,” there are at least two “giveaways” in my list, that is, two of
the five questions they would very likely answer correctly: about the French
Revolution and the Communist Revolution. Most “conservatives,” if queried,
would have certainly opposed them. There are some, nevertheless, who are more
positive about Napoleon, but I aver that it is impossible to understand the “little
Corsican”—that “thief of Europe,” to use William Pitt’s classic appellation—and
his actions outside his relationship to the French Revolution, and his
normalization of much of its result, and, more seriously, the fact that his
tenure unleashed essentially the forces of liberal revolution that would threaten
and undermine Europe for a century.
It becomes harder after that, and, I suggest,
even more critical to a determination. Not that many current “conservative”
writers or politicians are intimately familiar with the history, causes, and
issues surrounding the English Civil War.
Yet, I would assert vigorously that issues debated then were, in microcosm and incipiently, some of the issues we
continue to debate today, and that a
faithful and thinking defender of the continuity of Western tradition must,
necessarily, come down on the side of the Royalists, as opposed to Oliver
Cromwell’s faulty experiment in authoritarian democracy. King Charles I, for
all his mistakes and bad decisions, nevertheless, represented the traditions of
his country and, as he stated at his famous trial, represented “more the people
of England” than the rump “democratic” dictatorship of the Cromwellians and
Roundheads. (There is an excellent, historically-based BBC television series, “By
the Sword Divided,” that showed up in part on American television about twenty
years ago—the segment dedicated to King Charles’ trial is taken verbatim from
the recorded transcript of the process, and fully confirms that view.)
Back in the 1960s, back when William F. Buckley’s
magazine, National Review, and
Russell Kirk’s journal, Modern Age,
were arguably truly conservative, the question concerning the Spanish Civil War
would have, likewise, been a giveaway. Almost all conservatives would have
viewed that conflict in the light of a much larger, universal conflict between
international Communism and those forces opposed to it, and this despite the fact
that the anti-Republican Nationalist forces led by Francisco Franco did receive
some support from Fascist Italy and Hitler’s Germany (while the Soviet Union
not only supported the Republic, but eventually via the Spanish Communist Party
eliminated most of its opposition in Spanish Republican ranks).
But not today; indeed, many of the dominant “conservatives” of 2018—the
Neoconservatives—come down passionately on the side of the socialist Republic,
and, employing the linguistic armor of the Left, they attack the Nationalist,
Catholic and traditionalist forces that fought against the Republic, as
“fascists.” Thus, a few years ago, on the
ostensibly “conservative” NationalReviewOnline,
writer Stephen Schwartz let the cat out of the bag:
“To my last breath, I will defend Trotsky who
alone and pursued from country to country and finally laid low in his own blood
in a hideously hot house in Mexico City, said no to Soviet coddling to
Hitlerism, to the Moscow purges, and to the betrayal of the Spanish Republic,
and who had the capacity to admit that he had been wrong about the imposition
of a single-party state as well as about the fate of the Jewish people. To my
last breath, and without apology. Let the neofascists and Stalinists in their
second childhood make of it what they will.” [see
Paul Gottfried's commentary onTakimag.com, April 17, 2007]
Schwartz’s view can be multiplied tenfold in Neoconservative ranks.
Finally, there is the War Between the States, and
it is here, in this case, where we indeed can separate the true traditionalist
conservatives who comprehend and accept the continuum of Western Christian
civilization, its virtues, and its authority, and those who have, in reality
and to varying degrees, severed themselves from that continuity. It is here
that we can range on one side those who accept and participate in that “great
chain of being”—that fundamentally religious and hierarchical structure of all matter and life,
decreed by God, Himself, and present in our historical consciousness,
and those who do not in varying degrees accept it. For support, in some form,
of the Confederacy becomes that crucial measure that determines not just a
political outlook about states’ rights and the original meaning of the American
Constitution. It also demonstrates a vision of reality and of our existence as
human beings created by and subservient
to God as part of an organic whole, a Creation which must continually be
protected and defended against those who would seek to puncture it, or distort its meaning, if not, eventually,
to subvert or destroy it.
Certainly, there are those of good will, and let
us call it “invincible ignorance,” who have been educated to think that the
primary issue in 1861 was slavery, and that Abraham Lincoln was simply reacting
to those “rebels” who wished to destroy “the sacred bonds” of Union, while
advancing the great humanitarian cause of “freedom.” So much for the caliber
and character of our contemporary educational system, not to mention
Hollywood’s ideologically tendentious (and mostly successful) attempts to
influence us.
Yet, that mythology surrounding the Southern
Iliad of 1861-1865 will not stand serious cross-examination.
Consider these popular myths and shibboleths:
“The War was about slavery!” Not really
accurate: the war aims cited repeatedly by Lincoln and Northern publicists consistently
during the years 1861-1863, even afterwards, were that the War was to “preserve
the Union.” Indeed, if abolition of slavery had been declared as the principle
war aim in 1861, most likely a great majority of Union political leaders, not
to mention Union soldiers, would have recoiled, and the Northern war effort
would most likely have collapsed. It was difficult enough to gain wide support
in the North, as it was. Remember, Lincoln was elected with less than 40% of
the vote in 1860, and barely gained pluralities in most Northern states.
“Lincoln freed the slaves!” Not so;
Lincoln freed not one slave. His Emancipation Proclamation, issued first on
September 22, 1862 and finalized on January 1, 1863, supposedly “freeing the
slaves,” only applied to those areas not under Union military control or
occupation, that is, territory of the independent Southern states. It did not apply to the “slave states” within
the Union or controlled by the Union military, including Delaware, Maryland,
Kentucky, and Missouri. Thus, Lincoln’s proclamation “freed” slaves where his
action had no effect, but left it
untouched where he could have freed
them. Not only that, exactly one month
prior to his initial proclamation he had been interviewed by Horace
Greeley, editor of The New York Tribune,
where he forthrightly stated: “If I could
save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it… What I do about
Slavery and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save this
Union….” [August 22, 1861] The amendments to end slavery came after the
conclusion of the war and after the death of Lincoln.
And most recently this charge: “Robert
E. Lee and other Confederate military leaders who were in the US Army committed
treason by violating their oaths to defend the Union, and Confederate leaders
were in rebellion against the legitimately elected government of the United
States.” Somehow critics forget
to mention that Lee and the other Confederate leaders resigned their
commissions in the United States Army and from Congress prior to enlisting in the defense of their home states and in the
ranks of the Confederate Army, or assuming political positions in the new
Confederate government. They did not violate their oaths; their states had
formally left the union, and, thus, the claims of the Federal government in
Washington had ceased to have authority over them.
Nevertheless, this accusation has become the
ultimate weapon of choice for today’s fierce opponents of the various monuments
that honor Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, P. G. T. Beauregard, Jefferson
Davis, and other Confederate military and political leaders, and for the belief
that they should be taken down. And most especially, it is spewed forth as
unassailable gospel by many Neoconservative writers, publicists, pundits, and
their less distinguished camp followers in the elites of the Republican Party.
Now,
let me ask: how did you do on this test?
The results may reveal how you stand in relationship to our inherited
Western and Christian heritage.
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