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'Sock It to the Left!': The Rise of the Spite Right
by
Barry Loberfeld
by Barry Loberfeld
DIGG THIS
Of those not
there, most who know of the incident probably do so from Jerome
Tuccille's It
Usually Begins with Ayn Rand. At the 1969 Young Americans
for Freedom convention in St. Louis, one faction the libertarians
opposed the U.S. government's orchestration of both the war
in Vietnam and suppression here at home (including the nexus thereof:
conscription). Their slogan: "Sock it to the State!" They were met
(fiercely) by another faction the "traditionalists" (with
the actual tradition never identified) who opposed that opposition.
Their cry? "Sock it to the Left!"
This political
drama flashed in the warder of my brain when something recently
happened that put into perspective the bewilderment that has possessed
observers of "conservatism" in the present age. The bewilderment
itself comes from seeing too many individuals evade/dismiss/deny
every error/deception/disaster in the "War on Terror" and repeat
the same ill-conceived mantras (e.g., "Better to fight them [rump
Ba'athists? rival Muslim sects?] there than here!"). People who
used to parrot Rush Limbaugh's dictum that the military exists only
"to kill people and break things" and condemned Clinton for American
involvement in the Balkans, now pout that the "liberal media" aren't
covering the super job the Army is doing in rebuilding Iraq. (A
Reason commentator observed that the actual level of progress
would have embarrassed a Soviet apparatchik reporting to his superiors.
My own quip is that today's "conservatives" are so committed to
the welfare state that they established another one in Iraq.) It's
as if it's a badge of honor to see how long they can continue to
support no matter how incoherently an unsupportable war.
The something-recently
that clued me in to what's been going on was a response to a list
made by Christopher Garvey (who ran this year for NY Attorney General
on the Libertarian line) of rights
that Americans have lost under President Bush. The respondent,
N. (whom LRCers might recall from my "Letter
to a Conservative Friend"), complained that Mr. Garvey's facts
"sound like DNC talking points."
Bingo! Now
I saw it all too clearly. Forget the Democrats' actual record on
the war and related issues: If N. believed "liberals" were opposing
Bush's attack on civil liberties, he was going to support
it. And I thought about how any questioning of the Administration
was always met with cries of "Support the Troops!" as if all
those who didn't fall in line were ‘60s radicals spitting on returning
soldiers and calling them "baby killers." The struggle isn't against
"Islamofascism" (minted by Christopher Hitchens to baby-talk fellow
Leftists into backing the war) or terrorism or even al-Qaeda. The
imperative, no less now than in '69, is to “Sock it to the Left!”
The "conservatism" of today isn't that of Taft or Goldwater. It
arguably isn't even that of a "Religious Right," since it seeks,
not to serve any God, but only to stomp its Devil. Behold the Spite
Right.
The Spite Right
was born, not in the reflection of Read or Chodorov or Garrett,
but in the confrontationalism of Up
from Liberalism. Its progeny include Limbaugh, Hannity,
Coulter, Goldberg, Gallagher, Malkin, Ingraham, Savage, O'Reilly
self-scribbled caricatures who dwell in their own political
cartoon, where there are only intrinsically evil "liberals" (Mr.
Limbaugh adduces Ed Koch and William Kunstler on the same page)
vs. "conservatives" whose goodness derives solely from fighting
them. Such "liberals" are the Spite Right's Left, and once that
Left was deemed “anti-war,” pro-war was deemed anti-Left,
i.e., the Good. Thereafter, the only matter of duty was to defend
that war from this "liberal" assault. That meant fighting any and
all "liberal lies" that challenged Administration Truth, which was
Truth because it stood in opposition to those "lies." It
meant fighting any moral challenge to the war, which actually could
be only immoral because it challenges the war the
War on Liberals, the struggle that is the essence of morality. It
meant fighting the usual "anti-war" suspects, from Hollywood "limousine
liberals" to sign-waving street protesters. For the Spite Right,
Iraq is another name for Vietnam.
The Spite Right's
vacant contrarianism is but one more species of identity politics,
which rejects any transcendent norms, any morals that constrain
men irrespective of group affiliation. Hence its members hold themselves
to no such standards. We are told not to criticize "our Commander-in-Chief"
this from characters who slapped CHELSEA HAS TWO MOMMIES on their
bumpers. We hear roars of indignation over what Senator Kerry said
"about the troops" roars that were previously directed toward
the "liberal media" for distorting Senator Helms' Clinton-better-have-a-bodyguard
joke. We see men who never donned the uniform dare to just smear
John Murtha evidently Spite Rightists themselves are allowed
to criticize government officials "while troops are in combat"
and do so while almost literally hiding behind a woman's skirt.
Alas, we have yet to hear or see those who sought to oust Clinton
call for the resignation of a president who would not face the 911
Commission (part of his own "War on Terror") because he could not
bring along the vice president "the most insignificant office
that ever the invention of man contrived or his imagination conceived"
to hold his hand and perhaps whisper in his ear.
This hypocrisy
is hardly limited to issues relating to war. Ann Coulter, for example,
cracks that if "liberal" jurists "interpreted the Second Amendment
the way they interpret the First Amendment, we'd have a right to
bear nuclear arms by now." And what exactly does that deserve
other than a rim shot? This: If conservatives "interpreted
the Second Amendment the way they interpret the First Amendment,"
even the National Guard wouldn't have guns. One wonders if the godly
Miss Coulter reads a Bible wherein Christ commands us to ignore
the beam in our own eye but knock the mote out of our neighbor's
a musing that extends to that lamest of ducks, the equally crudely
written and drawn "Dullard Fillmore," where "liberal" hypocrisy
is the only hypocrisy that exists for condemnation. And what is
going on in the mind in the soul of a man, Michael Medved,
who decries "save-the-world liberalism" and defends the global-liberationist
delusions of George II and his court? (Answer: "Conservatives are
both happier and nicer than liberals.") I need only mention Mr.
Limbaugh and the subject of drugs.
Spite Right
relativism is as metaphysical as it is moral. Because the only reality
is of "liberal" harm, there is no consideration of what harm might
come from the anti-"liberal" forces, who will consequently continue
to aim their fire no matter what those blasts actually hit. Any
admission of error would be, not a matter of intellectual honesty,
but only a concession of right to the Left to the Devil. And
that can never be. The ultimate evil for Sean Hannity is not
to be found in a combat zone in Iraq or even in a cave in Afghanistan,
but in the seat across the desk.
I don't require
warnings that there is indeed a real Left
with real evil
no libertarian does. But the Spite Right is not alerting but
numbing us to that evil. When the wolf is said to be everywhere,
people soon come to believe there's no wolf at all the most vulnerable
state to find ourselves when it finally does appear. The sober response
to the Spite Right terror of "liberals" was demonstrated by H. L.
Mencken with regard to Communists who acted in support of black
Americans: "The way to dispose of their chicaneries is not to fight
them when they are right." The whole of morality and truth
cannot consist of waiting for a Howard Dean (or a Nancy Pelosi)
to make a pronouncement.
I find myself
speculating whether Buckleyism’s always-puzzling politics
suppression of civil liberties (except gun rights) but rejection
(if only rhetorical) of “Big Government” on economic issues
makes perversely perfect sense as a point-by-point opposition to
the politics of the Enemy. For the record, there are traces
of a pre-Buckley Spite Right. In her April 3, 1948 letter to Isabel
Paterson, author of The
God of the Machine, Ayn Rand mentions a man who said that
he was in favor of conscription "because the Communists are against
it." She quotes her husband's comment: "I suppose even Communists
are against smallpox. Is he for it?" Such is the mad logic of the
Spite Right that if known "liberals" ever officially came out against
disease, these latter-day "conservatives" would unsheathe their
daggers in defense of any and all diseases. The only remaining question:
Would the Spite Rightists continue to practice the anti-Leftism
they preach if said Left ever came out against suicide?
"Sock it to
the Left!"
December
13, 2006
Barry
Loberfeld [send him
mail] is an educator, writer, journalist, and Libertarian Party
official based on LI, NY. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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