All
my life, it seems, I have hated the guts of Max Lerner. Now, make
no mistake: there is nothing personal in this rancor. I have never
met, nor have I ever had any personal dealings with, Max. No,
my absolute loathing for Max Lerner is disinterested, cosmic in
its grandeur. It's just that ever since I was a toddler, this
ugly homunculus, this pretentious jackass, has been there, towering
over the American ideological scene. In the fifty-five years that
I have been aware of Max's presence, in all of his many permutations
and combinations and seeming twists and turns, he has taken the
totally repellent position at every step of the way. Thus:
I
hated Max Lerner when he was a brilliant young editor of the Encyclopedia
of the Social Sciences, spreading his Marxo-Veblenian poison
for the decades that that publication was highly influential in
American intellectual life.
I
hated Max Lerner when (in 1937) he wrote an introduction to the
Modern Library edition of the Wealth
of Nations, in which he dismissed Adam Smith, in Marxo-Freudo
lingo, as "an unconscious mercenary in the service of the rising
capitalist class."
I
hated Max Lerner when he was a Stalinist apologist before, during,
and after World War II. I hated his pompous, sing-song Stalinoid
delivery when he was a radio commentator in New York just after
the war.
I
hated Max Lerner when, in the unforgettable imagery of that hilarious
and perceptive work by Dwight Macdonald, Confessions of a Revolutionary,
reporter Lerner, advancing through Germany at the end of World
War II, leaped from an army jeep to confront an elderly shell-shocked
German farming couple, asking them: "Do you feel guilty?" after
which he proceeded to a gala banquet with Red Army generals, wolfing
down caviar and toasting each other with champagne.
I
hated Max Lerner when, leaping on the "consensus" bandwagon in
the 1950s, he ignored all conflicts and problems and celebrated
America
as a Civilization.
I
hated Max Lerner when, in his insufferably clotted and tedious
column in the New York Post, he began to boast about being
the "patriarch" of his newly-burgeoning family.
I
hated Max Lerner when he abandoned that family to take up permanent
residence in Hugh Hefner's Playboy Mansion, there celebrating
the sleazy joys of hedonism.
I
hated Max Lerner when he became a pro-Vietnam War liberal and
then a Reaganite.
And
now I hate Max Lerner especially when, now of course
a neocon, he emerges, at the age of 180 or whatever, out of his
residence at the Playboy Mansion (Hefner himself having thrown
in the towel on the hedonic life), to join the Smear Bund in their
assault on Pat Buchanan (Washington Times, Oct. 8). But
leave it to Max to add that special Lernerian twist, in which
he shows himself not at all different from the Original Lerner
of long ago. In his newspaper column Lerner commits his foul act
in the course of a running smear of Charles Lindbergh (the excuse
is a review of a documentary on the Lone Eagle) in which Lerner
shamelessly resurrects the old, discredited Rooseveltian-Stalinist
lies about Lindbergh being pro-Nazi and anti-Semitic.
So,
Max. Here we are again, old buddy. What goes around comes around,
eh? After fifty-five years we can close the books at last. Marxist,
Veblenite, Stalinist, 50s consensus-man, pro-war liberal, Reaganite,
neocon, what in Hell's the difference? Nothing's changed. Two
constants loom through all the gyrations of your life. You've
always been a pompous, humorless egomaniac. And you've always
worshiped at the shrine of war and the State. So what else is
new?
Murray
N. Rothbard (19261995) was the author of Man,
Economy, and State, Conceived
in Liberty, What
Has Government Done to Our Money, For
a New Liberty, The
Case Against the Fed, and many
other books and articles. He
was also the editor with Lew Rockwell of The
Rothbard-Rockwell Report.