Reading Ron
Paul’s magnificent dissent from House Resolution 676 and its
intended celebration of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 shows the
kind of reeducation (in the good sense) that we on the non-Left
have to undertake to combat the managerial therapeutic regime.
Contrary to the recent happy talk from paleos, the neocon establishment
is not collapsing; nor are the liberal media running to replace
customary neocon discussion partners with those on the right who
share their opposition to the Iraqi adventure. The liberals and
the neocons are bound together in their dedication to social engineering,
the politics of entitlement, and the welfare state. Ron Paul and
Tom DiLorenzo will not likely soon replace David Brooks at the
New York Times. And even were we ten years younger, it
is doubtful that Harvard or Berkeley would offer Claes Ryn or
me a chair in political theory, no matter how many books we produced,
on the basis of our misgivings about American imperialism. Agreeing
with the left on the folly of the foreign policy advocated by
Wolfowitz and Krauthammer will not suffice to change the real
Right’s status. What must be done, to borrow Lenin’s lapidary
phrase, is counter the sheer mendacity of the prevalent liberal-neocon
interpretation of recent American history. Like Congressman Paul,
we have to call attention to the misrepresented bad turns that
we have taken in government and to the equal complicity of both
national parties in the process discussed.
Let us not
forget that the Republican Party contributed the political numbers
to pass the act now being celebrated. Over 90% of the Republicans
then in Congress, but far, far fewer Democrats, supported the
Civil Rights bill. The reward that Jack KempRepublicans
earned for such contortions in reaching-out as affirmative action,
the Civil Rights Act, and signing on to the MLK adoration bill
has been the burning hatred of black voters and black politicians.
The black minority persists in identifying Republicans with the
Ku Klux Klan, a tendency that grows more obvious the more often
and the more loudly the GOP tries to atone for not having reached
out far enough. Never has poetic justice been more fully deserved!
Another
point that needs making is that lies about the recent past can
be harmful. It is one thing to confuse the course of events in
the Persian Wars or the location of the battle where the Thebans
ended Sparta’s hegemony over Greece. Altogether different is to
imagine that a "civil rights" act passed in 1964 established
"freedom" for all American citizens, when its long-range
impact was entirely different. Congressman Paul is correct to
let us know that there was no incompatibility between the Civil
Rights Act and the ensuing reign of judicial and administrative
activists. One set the stage for the other. The creation of a
far-reaching federal agency to judge discriminatory intentions
led seamlessly into quotas and "recruitment," and the
fact that women were included among the objects of discrimination
made it possible for the feds and their myrmidons at the state-level
to extend their surveillance beyond black-white relations.
Note
that Fox talking-head Sean Hannity, in his latest bestseller Let
Freedom Ring, glories in the fact that American Republicans
were instrumental in giving Americans both the 1964 Civil Rights
Act and a proper appreciation of the moral genius of Martin Luther
King. In Hannity’s simplistic mind, Republican equals "conservative,"
which can also translate as "neoconservative." The question
posed by Congressman Paul, who represents the classical liberal
constitutionalist tradition of Robert Taft, is whether Americans
should be celebrating the hemorrhaging of constitutional liberties
or the opportunity for reckless intervention by the federal bureaucracy
in social and commercial relations. Paul is speaking as a true
classical liberal in contrast to Mr. Hannity, who seems
to confuse "conservative" with social democratic activism
carried out by Republican politicians or enabling acts passed
for government bureaucrats with Republican votes. For those who
haven’t noticed: "Conservatives" inside and outside
of Congress as well as Hannity, whose notion of a good thing is
the bureaucratically managed Civil Rights Revolution, stand well
to the left of liberals like Ron Paul.
July
5, 2004