The End Of Nothing

Guest Post by The Zman

Something that was quite clear at the end of the Cold War was that the Republican Party, without the Soviets as an enemy, was just a collection of unrelated groups. What held the GOP together, was a general opposition to communism. It was, at the simplest form, the party of patriotism, the weak form of nationalism that used to be the core of the American creed. That patriotism was, in large part, kept alive by the Cold War. The Soviet menace was a daily reminder that we had to stick together to defend our liberty.

What kept the GOP together, to a much greater degree, is what gave coherence to the Buckley Right. The thing that fused the various tribes on the Right together was external to all of them. They feared Soviet communism. To traditionalists and social conservatives, the godless materialism of communism was monstrous. To the libertarian capitalists, it was communist central planning. To the internationalists and expansionists, Soviet domination was the great menace they feared.

Once the Cold War ended, it was no longer obvious as to why the Republicans or conservatives should hang together, other than habit. The GOP first tried to recast itself as technocratic reformers, promising to make government more efficient. That was the general thrust of Gingrich-style politics. It was just a green eye-shade version of what came from the Democratic Leadership Council. Instead of pitching themselves as “new democrats” they would pitch themselves as “new republicans.”

This had an appeal to certain parts of the Buckley coalition as well. The libertarian wing was loaded with technocrats eager to try their hand at social planning. The Jack Kemp wing was sure that some tinkering in the tax and regulatory code would bring an era of boundless prosperity. Second generation neocons were eager to apply this same logic to international affairs. The Freedom Agenda was, when you think about, urban planning applied to the Middle East in order to save Israel.

All of this technocratic obscurantism concealed a fundamental truth about American conservatism, at least as far as the Buckley version of it. It was never a movement based in a core philosophy. It was just a buffet of rhetoric and policy positions borrowed from movements rejected by the Left. For example, if the Left had retained its Christian roots and enforced that morality, Evangelicals would be on the Left. Most are indifferent to economics. Their interest in foreign policy begins and ends with Israel.

No doubt, Christian readers would take exception to this, because they have been conditioned to believe Christianity is a right-wing phenomenon. That’s a carryover from the Cold War where the Left was identified with godless materialism. In America, the Left has its roots in Christianity. The 19th century reformers were all explicitly Christian and working from Christian morality. Go back and read the writings of abolitionists and it is clear they saw their movement as a Christian movement.

Similarly, the neocons have no obvious fit on the Right. Their worldview is the philosophy of Athens, while paleo-conservationism is the philosophy of Sparta. Conquering the world in order to make it safe for democracy was always on the American Left. It is what motivated the Wilsonian reformers and the New Deal radicals. It is what led Kennedy and Johnson to commit to a land war in Asia. The neocons were always a liberal tribe looking for a political home, not a philosophical one.

This reality of the American Right, that it is just a collection of misfit toys, was made plain in the reaction to Tucker Carlson great speech. If what he said was truly at odds with the core philosophy of the Right, the response would have reflected that. Instead, it was a grab bag of policy complaints (examples: here, here, here and here) The carrying on about Carlson questioning the sanctity of global capitalism strongly suggests these people don’t know why they believe what they believe. They’re just repeating lines from a hymnal.

Of course, this is not a revelation. It was obvious for a long time, but, again, it was papered over by the technocratic obscurantism of the libertarian wing and the Jewish liberation theology of the neocons. The Mitt Romney campaign of 2012 was like watching a robot read the lines of a rule book. No one could think of a reason why Mitt Romney should be president or why his party even existed. His campaign was a collection of slogans recycled from old copies of National Review.

That’s the reality of Buckley conservatism. It was always just a catechism of convenience that gave disparate groups a set of rules so they could work in concert. Over time, it became a racket and repeating those lines correctly became the secret handshake of those working in Conservative Inc.. As an organizing philosophy, it offers nothing, because it promises to do nothing. It’s just a list of reasons why a group of strangers with nothing in common should vote for more of the same.

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11 Comments
Captain Willard
Captain Willard
January 12, 2019 6:53 pm

My God, somehow he is able to stumble around blindly and still end up in the right place. He clearly doesn’t understand libertarianism, the origins of the Buckley Right, the difference between the Jack Kemp/ Club for Growth neocons and the foreign policy Neocons or even the origins of the Neocons (he seems shocked to discover they were disaffected Jewish leftist hawks). It’s like he slept through the 80s and 90s.

But amazingly enough, like a drunk staggering home, he finds his keys and unlocks the correct apartment door. He is exactly right that today’s GOP has a bunch of factions with little if any commonality of interest.

Yet he leaves out the most important point: a cabal of the globalist left and the corporate right is firmly in control. It’s the secret uniparty of the Deep State. The traditional party apparatuses are just camouflage for Deep State rule so as to confuse us.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Captain Willard
January 12, 2019 8:41 pm

I think Zman is younger than you imagine. He is well read on American politics, but he writes about anything prior to the 90’s in a textbook manner because he didn’t experience that time period as an adult. Just guessing.

Still a succinct and fairly accurate account of the Republican Party. What he never referenced was the ethnic makeup of the party- which prior to flooding of America after the Reagan Amnesty- was a given. The Republicans drank the same multi-cultural Kool-Aid as their opponents, only without the cynicism.

You see how that worked out for them.

EL Coyote the Brown Gringo
EL Coyote the Brown Gringo
  hardscrabble farmer
January 12, 2019 9:38 pm

I had noticed that same problem with a few things he wrote that sounded uninformed. This piece in particular sounds like you want to say, huh? He is making way too much of Buckley and casting the current politically charged atmosphere back to a time when life was less politicized.

Unstable
Unstable
January 12, 2019 8:01 pm

It [American conservatism] was never a movement based in a core philosophy.

It’s almost as if Fractional Reserve Banking (i.e. money out of thin air) negated the need for antiquated conceptions such as self-reliance, fiscal responsibility, honesty, law and order. In for a penny. In for a pound. All that’s corrupted, goes ’round and ’round.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 12, 2019 9:22 pm

Good article by Zman. I’m old enough to remember the ’70’s especially since my old man was a Firing Line geek. I have a friend who’s a Republican and totally not red-pilled. He sends me articles that he thinks I’ll agree with – about the dangers of the Assad “regime”, tax cuts, yada yada. I should ask if he knows where the last remaining establishment republicans are hiding out – so I can kill them. The problem for Zman is that there aren’t enough ethno-nationalists to constitute an opposition party compared to the free-shitters.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
January 12, 2019 9:27 pm

So many words without making it clear that the Rockefeller-Bush NWO Republicans (RINOs and NeoCons) are trying to destroy Trump, God and the Constitution.

TC
TC
January 12, 2019 10:05 pm

Modern Capitalism is just Judaism for libertarians.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
January 13, 2019 7:33 am

I think the word “Libertarian” has been grossly misused here.

Bilco
Bilco
January 13, 2019 8:09 am

They were so concerned about Communism in the front yard.They forgot to watch the back yard. Now it’s in the house.

middle-aged mad gnome
middle-aged mad gnome
January 13, 2019 8:11 am

“The Soviet menace was a daily reminder that we had to stick together to defend our liberty.”

We still get daily reminders that our liberties are becoming extinct. The difference is that the enemy is now obviously internal not external. That makes this conflict a lot more difficult and painful. The result is mass cognitive dissonance. Consequently, many simply refuse to see. Others redefine liberty. And most choose not to see at all. Half appear to be choosing the wrong side. Classic human psychology.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
  middle-aged mad gnome
January 14, 2019 12:18 am

Classic Rice Communist stupidity.