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Conservative
Rigor Mortis
by
Ryan McMaken
I
would not be misunderstood. I know that the Negro people have suffered
profound wrongs – not least in their original enslavement by Northern
merchants and Southern plantation owners. But those wrongs cannot
be righted by destroying the foundations of a free constitutional
society, which is indeed the only basis upon which a joint and lasting
solution of their problems is possible.
~
Frank Meyer, 1963
The
recent histrionics over Trent Lott’s apparently unforgivable support
of American federalism has revealed just how intellectually impoverished
American conservatism has become. The heralding of Lott’s replacement,
the Nelson Rockefeller clone, Bill Frist, simply serves to add insult
to injury and illustrates how giddily content the conservative establishment
has become with being nothing more than the right-wing of a political
mainstream committed to the final abolition of American republican
and constitutional government. It seems that as long as Republicans
hold the reins of power, no degree of selling out is too much to
swallow.
No
political movement is immune to the temptation to trade principle
for power, but the alarming vigor with which power has become the
driving force behind the hijacked conservative movement in the last
decade illustrates just how moribund the conservative movement now
is. This conflict is nothing new to the conservative movement, of
course, but while there may have at one time been a tension between
the proponents of compromise and the defenders of orthodoxy, no
such tension appears to exist today. The ease with which Lott was
thrown to the dogs by a Republican monolith illustrates not just
a total impotence on the part of a truly conservative wing of the
Republican party, but a virtual absence. Yet, the neo-conservative
establishment insists that American conservatives reign supreme.
The outpouring of support from all corners of the Republican party,
for the anti-gun, pro-abortion, neo-puritan health Nazi (and Bush
crony) William Frist would be enough to raise great protest among
the Republican conservatives in Washington if there were
any. The party that the neo-cons tells us safeguards the principles
of American conservatism is too busy spending unprecedented amounts
of government money and spying on the populace to be bothered by
the fact that its leadership is so un-conservative as to make Gerald
Ford look like a raving Right-wing loon.
Rather
than admit that the conservatism of Russell Kirk, Frank Meyer, and
anyone else who dared question the New Deal and the Great Society
is long dead and rotting, the neo-conservatives have adopted the
practice of simply redefining what conservatism is every time they
are called upon to defend something that someone on the Left might
have a problem with. In much the way that Bill Clinton out-Righted
the Right, the neo-cons seem bound and determined to out-Left the
Left by engaging in some of the most repugnant "me too-ism"
seen in years. (Given the state of the Democratic Party and the
Left in the wake of Clinton, it might be wise to reconsider such
a strategy.) Lott’s maladroit comments could have provided an excellent
opportunity for those claiming to be conservatives to defend that
most conservative of doctrines: the importance of constitutional
federalism, the separation of powers and the autonomy of local governments.
This, of course, did not happen. This should not be surprising since
none of the intellectual leadership on the mainstream American Right
believe in anything resembling local autonomy or constitutional
government, but instead believe in aggressive statecraft where the
central government unilaterally protects the people from themselves.
Witness the line of argument now being forwarded to define the civil
rights bureaucracy as a tool of small government: 1. Forced segregation
laws are big government. 2. Thus, laws abolishing such laws produce
small government. 3. Conservatives like small government. 4. Conservatives
like the civil rights movement.
This
argument is woefully incomplete. Of course forced segregation laws
were idiotic, actively detrimental to human liberty, and should
have been condemned roundly by every principled defender of free
association. The destruction of these laws would have indeed been
an unmitigated victory for liberty had they not been replaced with
a massive and coercive federal bureaucracy that extended not just
to a few states as in the case of forced segregation, but across
the entire land, and would eventually become a bureaucracy used
not just to destroy forced segregation laws, but to dictate to every
inn-keeper, employer, and school board in every state how
to conduct even the minutiae of daily business. According to the
revisionists, the triumph of a unitary state over federalism is
now a conservative virtue, and the ultimate in American constitutional
government since a massive federal government, by violating our
freedoms, can keep states and localities from violating our freedoms.
The illogic of this proposition does nothing to dissuade the neo-con
prophets of universalism who seem to think that even foreign nations
are best governed from Washington.
Drunk
on power, the Republican politicians of today, thinking themselves
the inheritors of a great conservative tradition, have not bothered
to notice the change, and if they ever do come across the condemnations
of the civil rights movement penned by their conservative heroes
like Russell Kirk or Frank Meyer, they are sure to pass over such
comments with amused condescension in the way one might forgive
his doddering uncle for his continued use of the word "Chinaman"
or "colored." Trent Lott is no martyr and no great defender
of American freedom, but his lightning-quick demise at the hands
of a "conservative" leadership scared stiff over the prospect
of having to actually defend what was once a universally accepted
tenet of American conservatism says a lot about the advanced state
of decomposition in the conservative movement. Maybe now that Lott
is out, Washington conservatives can look forward to the new face
of the Republican Party, and extend the benevolent arm of federally
enforced freedom not only to our own land, but to Pyongyang, Baghdad,
and every corner of the globe. The peoples of the word wait with
bated breath.
December
28, 2002
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
is editor of the Western
Mercury.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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