Confusions of a Conservative
by
David Gordon
This review
of Garry Wills’s Confessions
of a Conservative was first published in Inquiry for
September 10, 1979.
Who else but
Garry Wills would include in the same book a penetrating analysis
of Saint Augustine’s view of justice and a tasteless defamation
of Albert Jay Nock? Lack of discrimination and confusion of thought
are the only constants in this meandering attempt to elaborate an
allegedly conservative political philosophy that will justify the
author’s idiosyncrasies. Wills suggests that the purpose of the
state is not to enforce justice but to postpone conflict "in
the name of common good things held." His ideal, what he terms
the "convenient" state, "exists to hold people together
in peace, not to enunciate ‘raw justice.’" The state, he contends,
cannot be founded on reason, since any attempt to do so represents
a kind of masked theocracy. How did we get from justice to reason?
And what is "theocratic" about, say, the society based
on reason discussed in Nozick’s Anarchy,
State and Utopia?
Wills’s failure
to consider questions like these means in itself only that his theory
is insufficiently elaborated, but he soon falls into outright contradiction.
He favors preferential hiring of blacks on the ground that "conservatives
are bound to the concept of ‘historic guilt’ for racial wrongs."
Even granting that reverse discrimination is a case of implementing
justice, what happened to his belief that the state is not founded
to preserve justice? On the next page, Wills repents his mid-sixties
opposition to civil disobedience: Apparently violence by some blacks
is compatible with "holding the people together in peace."
Another chapter defends elitist "do-gooders," whom others
condemn as busybodies: Without such "prophetic" figures,
how could radical reform measures get started? The convenient state
goes out the window as soon as the status quo does not suit Wills’s
pet causes.
Even when Wills
is right he finds it impossible to avoid muddle. In the course of
an argument that American elections do not settle major issues,
he states that "our nation is never more united than at the
close of an election," forgetting his own discussion of the
election of 1860 in the previous chapter. Vastly exaggerating the
practical importance of Condorcet’s paradox of voting (which shows
that voting does not always result in a clear social preference),
he mars his interesting discussion of the limits of democracy by
offering a mélange of poorly digested welfare economics. He manages
to quote Kenneth Arrow without once mentioning the Impossibility
Theorem, a much stronger version of Condorcet’s paradox.
Wills uses
the idea of the convenient state (when the prophets are on furlough)
to support a "conservative" position like that of Arthur
Schlesinger, Jr., in The
Vital Center: What are to be conserved are the social gains
of the welfare state. Everyone must undergo twelve years of public
education and contribute to social security; and federally mandated
safety requirements are a step in the right direction. Characteristically,
Wills offers no argument for public provision of these services.
The need to serve certain interests is simply posited. This may
seem an odd version of conservatism, but what can one expect from
someone who avows himself a Chestertonian distributist but thinks
that the widespread holding of property is nowadays both unnecessary
and impossible? This is as sensible as being an admirer of Shakespeare,
except for the plays.
In his long
memoir of his years at National Review, Wills’s reporting
of the opinions of others leaves a great deal to be desired. If
"Alfred Kohler of the China lobby" instead of Alfred Kohlberg
is dismissed as a slip, what is one to think of his imputing belief
in unfettered capitalism to Russell Kirk? In A
Program for Conservatives, Kirk – whom by the way Wills
delicately terms a "sap" – explained in detail his preference
for the moderate welfare state of Wilhelm Roepke over the "Manchesterism"
of Ludwig von Mises. Murray Rothbard, an outspoken critic of the
single-tax movement, appears here as a "latter-day [Henry]
Georgist." Leo Strauss did not believe that "history is
one long conversation in univocal terms," and the claim that
Eric Voegelin supports "theocratic politics" is at least
debatable, and requires some evidence. When I called Wills’s observation
to his attention, Voegelin stated that it was nonsense.
The pièce
de résistance, however, is surely the following, about
Nock’s old magazine, The Freeman: "I find it hard to
see what impressed so many people in the twenties. Nock was only
exaggerating a little when he said in his Memoirs,
‘We produced what was quite generally acknowledged to be the
best paper published in our language.'" If not formally contradictory,
the two statements are at least glaringly inconcinnous, to use one
of Wills’s favorite words.
November
18,
2005
Copyright ©
2005 LewRockwell.com
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