Although
the attack on Tom Woods by Ronald Radosh in FrontPageMag (March
10) did not contain any new accusations against Tom or his best-selling
guide that one could not read in other establishment publications,
what made the newest screed stand out was the accuser’s mask.
Unlike the motley crowd of left-libertarians, neo-liberals, and
global democratic chicken hawks who previously weighed in against
Tom, his latest critic speaks as a concerned conservative. Radosh
is fuming over the supposed misrepresentation of Tom’s work as
"conservative" by Adam Cohen of the New York Times
(January 26); and so he feels impelled to rush to the aid of the
true American right-of-center. He is further incensed that Tom
had quoted him about the Amerasia case in a discussion of Joe
McCarthy and had thereby created the impression that Radosh was
a closet McCarthyite.
Radosh exaggerates,
as Tom points out, the connection drawn between him and the former
junior senator from Wisconsin, and it is easy to imagine that
Tom cites Radosh on the documented Communist affiliation of Amerasia,
partly because no one but a hardened Communist would think of
Radosh as a right-winger. In fact it is a bit unsettling to see
someone whose career has moved in a trajectory from the anti-anti-Communist
Left to leftist anti-Stalinism claiming to be defending the true
Right. What exactly are this chap’s credentials to tell us what
we are to believe about Lincoln or Joe McCarthy or about what
image to project in presenting ourselves to the New York Times?
I suppose Radosh has the same right to engage in this exercise
as I would to instruct Shiites about how they should interpret
the Koran. The difference in that case, however, is that an authentic
Shiite publication would not publish me as someone who speaks
for their theology. By contrast, the "conservative movement"
has been turned into something that resembles the American conservative
tradition even less than it does the New York Times.
This brings
me to my last point, which is the absence of any conceivable misunderstanding
in Adam Cohen’s review in the New York Times that Woods
is presenting an identifiably conservative view of American history.
As Radosh certainly notices, Cohen expresses the concern that
if Tom’s book continues to sell well, he may contribute to a "boomlet
for rightist attacks on mainstream history." What makes Tom
a dangerous author therefore is his "attempt to push the
record far to the right." Why should one imagine that Cohen
would be attacking neoconservatives, who would not differ from
him significantly in their established interpretation of "mainstream"
American history? If Cohen would utter only two views, which he
may in fact already hold, that Stalin was bad for the Jews and
that the American government should actively spread its current
version of democracy throughout the solar system, he and Radosh
and the website that paid Radosh to attack Tom Woods would all
be on the same page.
In
closing, I should reassure Ron that he and his neocon buds will
be allowed to continue to write for liberal publications. No one
could possibly confuse him or Max Boot with Tom Woods or me. The
reason liberals court neocons but not Ralph Raico or Tom
DiLorenzo is that they do understand certain palpable differences.
But Radosh may know all of this and have written his otherwise
senseless screed to indicate to his establishment liberal friends
that he is still willing to attack the real enemy, on the right.
Perhaps the reward will be a full page photo of him in the New
York Times Sunday Magazine, with a flattering bio, the kind
of tribute that their liberal friends bestowed ten years ago on
Bill Kristol and David Frum. The hour for Radosh, Cathy Young,
and Max Boot to be showcased as "conservative" stars
should not be long in coming.
March
14, 2005