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Thread ID: 3589 | Posts: 2 | Started: 2002-11-19
2002-11-19 07:48 | User Profile
[url=http://www.vdare.com/gottfried/jonah.htm]Jonah, We Hardly Knew Ye![/url]
by Paul Gottfried
Did articles of mine send out A certain adolescent the girly-boys fired?
I couldnââ¬â¢t help guiltily paraphrasing the Irish nationalist poet W.B. Yeatââ¬â¢s broodings on the 1916 Easter Rising when I read the news that Jonah Goldberg had been fired as online editor of what VDARE.COM has been amusing itself by calling the Goldberg Review.
His oh-so-smooth masters arenââ¬â¢t saying that, of course. But they wouldnââ¬â¢t, would they?
Hereââ¬â¢s the clue: Jonah is to be a so-called ââ¬ÅEditor-At-Large.ââ¬Â The only two other National Review ââ¬ÅEditors-At-Largeââ¬Â are William F. Buckley, who is senile, and former editor John Oââ¬â¢Sullivan - who indisputably was fired, again amid smooth assurances to the contrary.
Itââ¬â¢s long been clear you have to do something really heinous to be fired at National Review i.e. ruffle WFBââ¬â¢s vanity. But surely the Great Man couldnââ¬â¢t be jealous just because we jokingly renamed his magazine after its ââ¬â well, not exactly brightest, letââ¬â¢s say brashest ââ¬â new star?
Could he?
Goldberg may be dead/ out. But the phenomenon he epitomized lives on. Iââ¬â¢ve called it ââ¬ÅGoldbergismââ¬Â ââ¬â the transformation of historic conservative movement into the right wing of the permanent government party, sharing its ideology of therapeutic managerial liberalism.
For example, for the sake of understanding the contemporary ââ¬Åconservative movement,ââ¬Â I read very carefully the online version of the statement after the midterm election by ââ¬ÅNR Editorsââ¬Â that appears in the November 25 issue of National Review. And I came away, like even the neoconservative publicist David Frum, who appears to have been hired by NR in the interests of diversity, struck by the restrained not to say pathetic character of the new ââ¬Åconservativeââ¬Â wish list.
Thus the ââ¬Åfirst priority for Republicansââ¬Â was ââ¬Åto ensure that Bush has the ability to fire and reassign people in anti-terrorism agenciesââ¬Â and that ââ¬Ånational securityââ¬Â should ââ¬Åtrump the unionsââ¬â¢ demands.ââ¬Â Beyond that, it was thin pickings indeed. Unless there was something I missed, all that ââ¬Åconservativesââ¬Â are supposed push Republicans to do is ââ¬Åpave the way for a reform of social security based on private investment,ââ¬Â that is, introduce into the government plan some private investment aspect, and to link ââ¬Åprescription drugs subsidies [if possible] to a reform of Medicare.ââ¬Â
Needless to say, nothing as deeply divisive or as rightwing as moving against affirmative action and ââ¬Åbilingualââ¬Â education, or ending the continued invasion across our southern border is allowed to enter the picture. National Question issues are not ones that conservatives should even be tempted to raise ââ¬â and this after electing an administration that ââ¬ÅNR Editorsââ¬Â claim, in some generic or structural sense, is ââ¬Åconservative.ââ¬Â
What ââ¬ÅNR Editorsââ¬Â really want the Bush administration to do, of course, is to create an American empire- but under a different name.
As usual, poor Goldberg has put it best, or most characteristically. In a recent rambling commentary [September 24], he browbeat certain bad guys for ââ¬Ånot getting Americaââ¬Â and set out to explain when empires are not empires. His tries to make the point that the U.S. only looks and smells like an overreaching empire to those who ââ¬Ådonââ¬â¢t believe in freedom and democracy and free marketsââ¬Â or who have trouble grasping that the U.S., when given the ââ¬Åmoral choiceââ¬Â and ââ¬Åpowerââ¬Â to be an empire, ââ¬Åhas chosen not to be one.ââ¬Â He ends with the typically childish phrase ââ¬ÅHopefully, weââ¬â¢ll teach it how to pass the same test.ââ¬Â Thatââ¬â¢s a reference to a new Iran.
Iran, not Iraq. It seems ââ¬Åweââ¬Â are going be teaching Iran next.
But it is altogether possible to believe in ordered freedom and in our original constitutional framework, as all paleoconservatives do, and nonetheless believe that the U.S. is becoming an empire. In my After Liberalism, which fortunately Jonah will now have time to read, he will encounter the argument that not all empires are driven by ââ¬Åmaterial gain.ââ¬Â Indeed, I wish American imperialism could be adequately explained by the machinations of oil investors. But it is political players, e.g. the Zionist global democrats at National Review and New Republic, who are its cutting edge. (I may say I write this as a supporter of Israel).
In my view, and in that of foreign policy analysts Walter McDougall and James Kurth, it may be too late to undo American imperialism. It is a fact of international life that has resulted from the history of the last hundred years. What remains to be addressed is how we deal with the superabundance of our power ââ¬â prudentially, or like zealots driven by ideological fixations and domestic ethnic politics.
Another consideration that must be addressed: what does imperialism do to the constitutional design of our country? Murray Rothbard and Robert Higgs were both right to stress a general incompatibility between limited constitutional government and expanding empires. Imperial crusades make it harder to counteract consolidated managerial government. They push forward the cumulative process by which a once self-restrained regime, based on checks and balances, is turned into a unified engine of foreign expansion.
The American statesman who made this argument best in the twentieth century was Robert Taft. Unlike Goldberg, Taft never described himself as a ââ¬Åconservative.ââ¬Â But if Goldberg and his social democratic globalist companions are ââ¬Åconservatives,ââ¬Â then perhaps I too am not a conservative.
In his Blog scribbling (October 2), Jonah noted of me that ââ¬ÅElizabethtown Collegeââ¬â¢s Harvey Mansfield he ainââ¬â¢t.ââ¬Â
I can see that Jonah wouldnââ¬â¢t like Elizabethtown College, where I teach. Itââ¬â¢s a small, private, liberal arts school, originally founded by Protestants, out here in darkest America. I am here because, in what is literally a footnote to conservative history in my book The Conservative Movement, I was denied a graduate professorship at Catholic University of America by neo-conservative lobbying. Of course, this was thirteen years ago ââ¬â earlier than anything Jonah can be expected to know about.
Jonah cites Mansfield because heââ¬â¢s been told heââ¬â¢s OK with the neocons - and because heââ¬â¢s at Harvard. Mansfieldââ¬â¢s father and namesake was a liberal political scientist at Columbia University. My own father, by contrast, was the first, and to my knowledge only, Jewish fire commissioner of Bridgeport, Connecticut.
And this is one further reason that Goldberg and his pals are drawn to the guy I ââ¬Åainââ¬â¢t.ââ¬Â Theyââ¬â¢re snobs pretending to be ââ¬Ådemocrats.ââ¬Â
Goldbergism is ultimately about fawning on the powerful. Why else would anyone write about politics?
Too bad for Jonah that the powerful can still get jealous.
*Paul Gottfried is Professor of Humanities at Elizabethtown College, PA. He is the author of After Liberalism, Carl Schmitt: Politics and Theory, and Multiculturalism And The Politics of Guilt: Toward A Secular Theocracy.
November 18, 2002*
2002-11-19 08:08 | User Profile
Hmmm...maybe because Mr. Goldberg cited a columnist for VDARE? (Who knows, maybe Brimelow's site is verboten at NRO, too...LOL!)
I love a good conspiracy theory...