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The
Return of Fusionism
by Ryan McMaken
Just
when you thought the neoconservatives could claim unquestioned control
over the conservative movement, a little pocket of resistance erupted
within the American Conservative
Union. The ACU, the longtime lobbying arm of the mainstream
conservative establishment has apparently had just about enough
of the insults emanating from the adolescent know-it-alls of the
neoconservative camp. The final straw came when David Frum, in an
attempt to rid the American right of everyone who failed to agree
with him on every little detail of foreign policy let
loose in the pages of National Review on conservative
icon Robert Novak, calling him unpatriotic and anti-Semitic. The
response came from David
Keene and Donald
Devine, old-school activists and operatives of what they call
"Reagan conservatism." Keene sprung to the defense of
Novak, declaring Frum to be less than "intellectually respectable,"
while Devine called for an end to the big government conservatism
and neo-colonialism of the neoconservatives that has now so obviously
taken over the conservative movement.
For
those of us with nothing better to do than read books on conservative
philosophy, it is hard not to see in this exchange a revival of
the old conflict between James Burnham and Frank Meyer, the central
theorists of Cold War conservatism. Their names are still invoked
liberally by many conservatives, although it is still puzzling why
these two men should be mentioned next to each other so often when
talking about a vision for the future of American conservatism.
Pretty much the only thing that Burnham and Meyer could agree on
was that Soviet communism was a terrible thing. Although both were
willing to stop at nothing (including full-blown nuclear war) to
prevent whatever they imagined the "victory" of communism
to be, their reasons for hating communism, as well as their prescriptions
for what should replace communist systems, differed considerably.
Today,
the neoconservatives claim both these men as their mentors when
appealing to mainstream conservatives, although Burnham is clearly
the favorite. Some neocons of late have even taken to claiming that
Burnham was in fact, more or less, the first neoconservative. This
is stretching the truth a bit, since as Paul Gottfried has pointed
out, Burnham lacked the neoconservative fondness for utopianism
that the modern neocons draw upon so frequently. Additionally, Burnham
was always rather pragmatic and grounded in the historical realities
of the United States. Unlike those who claim to be his disciples,
he would likely not claim to be able to export American style democracy
to every corner of the globe or to bring about an end to ideological
conflict among nations. Nevertheless, he did manage to come to a
lot of conclusions that neocons must like. He was thoroughly Machiavellian,
he supported an anti-communist Pax Americana in Europe, and
he had a pronounced disdain for ordinary people. He preferred to
address only the "ruling classes" whom he adroitly identified
as existing in every society, even democracies. His primary problem
with Communism, however, was not that it was anti-democratic, but
that it destroyed the authority and stability of the nation-state,
which he believed was the primary institution that gave meaning
to human existence. Thus, if we look carefully, we can see that
the underlying worldview of Burnham is fairly incompatible with
the internationalist and democratic "end of history" that
the neocons are so fond of whooping it up for, yet for the average
neocon, there is still plenty to like about James Burnham.
So,
we can grant Burnham to the neocons. He has been theirs ever since
National Review editor John O’Sullivan resurrected him in
1990 to declare the virtues of the American pursuit of a British-style
empire. Burnham was indeed a wily choice for O’Sullivan since Burnham’s
unrelenting worship of power and of the "civilizing" force
of the State meshed nicely with the neocon dreams of a world empire.
While corrupted somewhat, the Burnham legacy lives on.
It
was particularly interesting then, that in recent weeks, the shade
of Burnham’s antagonist, Frank Meyer, seems to have inspired the
few pockets of resistance finally cropping up against the neocons
in their recent war against everyone on the right who has dared
to disagree with them. The dissent emanating from the American Conservative
Union is appropriate enough given that it was none other than Frank
Meyer who had been a central advisor and activist for the ACU since
its founding in 1964 until his death, and it was Meyer who put much
of his energy into reconciling disparate groups on the American
right instead of throwing them out on the street as Frum has recently
attempted to absolutely no avail. As one might expect, Meyer tried
to use the ACU to back up his own agenda of fusionism, a strategy
that sought to unite the libertarians and traditional conservatives
around an opposition to communism. Regardless of how well this actually
worked at the time, this strategy now has little relevance today
given the disappearance of the Soviet threat. Devine’s suggested
plan, however, is a new fusionism founded not on an anti-Communist
platform, but on "opposition to big government." Devine
refers to Meyer as the "intellectual muscle" of the conservative
movement, and identifies Meyer’s death as contributing to the rise
of "national greatness" conservatism and neoconservatism.
According to Devine, such grandiose thinking has obscured the real
goal of the conservative movement: promoting freedom and limited
government.
It
should be immediately obvious, however, that even though Devine
possibly intended his remarks to promote reconciliation, such a
foundation for the conservative movement is absolutely unacceptable
for the neoconservatives in their obsession with an expansionist
foreign policy. As with both the neoconservatives and with the "New
Right" as the Buckley, Meyer, Burnham gang was called in the
1950’s, any concern for rolling back the power of the government
was always just tacked on the keep the support of the Old Right
and libertarian remnants within the movement. Frank Meyer was the
only big name who ever spent any real time or effort discussing
the virtues of free markets and free association. Most conservatives
of the New Right busied themselves with planning the nuclear holocaust
that would eliminate half of humanity, but would take Soviet communism
with it. Meyer was not immune to these delusions of victory by self-destruction,
but at least while Burnham was declaring that man is too pathetic
and weak to ever be truly free, Meyer fueled by an excellent understanding
of the centrality and dignity of the individual person actually
seemed to value liberty. For all his libertarian tendencies, however,
Meyer was primarily an anti-communist, and through this, he was
able to reconcile his libertarian thought with the anti-individualism
and State-worship of Burnham and the conservatives who believed
that domestic policy must always give way to foreign policy considerations,
and no sacrifice of liberty was ever too much.
Some
conservatives made efforts at truly protecting human liberty, but
they rarely got far. When Meyer came out in opposition to the draft
in 1967 with Russell Kirk, Barry Goldwater, and Milton Friedman,
Burnham denounced them by pointing out that leftists and pacifists
also opposed the draft, ergo, Meyer was supporting the enemies of
conservatism and the war against communism. Freedom never had a
chance. How proud Burnham would be today of the neocons who incessantly
rely on pointing out that the allegedly unpatriotic conservatives
happen to agree with some leftists on the matter of war in Iraq.
Then as now, the destruction of foreign governments and political
advantage was the real goal, not the liberty of Americans. Conservatives
had to decide whether it was men who gave the State meaning, or
if it was the State that gave men meaning. Unfortunately, it was
the latter than often won out.
One
could go on and on about how the stated line of fighting big government
was nothing but s sideshow in the conservative movement after the
Second World War, but now that even the ACU is willing to say that
the movement’s been hijacked by big government conservatives, it's
not really all that necessary anymore. Devine pulls no punches in
describing the "domestic policy drift" to the left since
the neocons took over, and he notes that their flexibility on welfare
has been ever present as long as they have gotten their way on pursuing
empire. Real conservatism, Devine claims, was always based
on limiting government. Well, even if it wasn’t true in the past,
now is as good a time as any to revitalize what Murray Rothbard
called "the party of liberty." The first order of business,
of course, would have to be to get rid of the neoconservatives and
all their fondness for wars, taxes, spending, and mindless jingoism.
Devine
calls for "utilizing libertarian means for traditionalist ends."
These ends, apparently, are those of "returning power to states,
communities, and the people rather than support the lesser-evil
big government solution." It’s difficult to argue with an agenda
like that, but its also hard to imagine an agenda that could possibly
be any more unlike the agenda that is currently being pursued by
the Republican party and the "conservative" media like
National Review, Fox News, and the Weekly Standard.
Devine says the ACU recognizes this and would like to put a stop
to it. If this were to actually happen, it would finally be the
realization of what so many of us have been hoping for since the
end of the Cold War – An American right devoted to actually increasing
freedom instead of destroying it in the name of whatever crusade
captures the public imagination at any given time. I wish Mr. Devine
the best of luck. He’s going to need it when everyone at the ACU
discovers in the pages of National Review that they are all
now unpatriotic anti-Semites. At least then they’ll be in good company.
May
28, 2003
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
writes from Colorado. His personal web site can be found here.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Ryan
McMaken Archives
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