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A Dilemma for the Right
LRC ^ | December 31, 2001 | Paul Gottfried

Posted on 12/31/2001 7:03:36 AM PST by ouroboros

A Dilemma for the Right

by Paul Gottfried

In recent weeks leftist colleagues have accused me of being a fast ally of Paul Wolfowitz, George Will, and Charles Krauthammer. I’ve also been told that "rightwingers like you" are trying to dump Secretary-of-State Colin Powell and to replace him with a Zionist hawk. (Someone who should know better, Robert Novak, attributed this position to the "Old Right" as well as to neocons in his syndicated column last week.) On November 25, a fellow-professor asked me whether I agreed with George Will’s latest screed on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which, like everything Will writes on this subject, is over the top. For the record, it seems to me that Israelis have a right by occupancy to the land they have held for several generations and that the Arab Jews who live there have suffered harassment and, in many cases, an expulsion no less unjust than that of the approximately 700,000 Palestinians the Israelis dislodged.

Nonetheless the situation shows rights and wrongs on both sides. I therefore wince with distaste when Will and his neocon pals refer to Palestinians as interlopers and "thugs." Will’s assertions in the aforementioned polemic that Israeli settlers occupy "only 1.5 percent of the West Bank" and that the "West Bank is an unallocated portion of the League of Nations 1922 Palestine Mandate… to be settled by negotiation" are entirely misleading. Jewish settlers on the West Bank, who are predominantly Orthodox Jewish nationalists, have been located near large concentrations of Palestinians, thereby creating an incendiary situation. The reference made by Will to the 1922 mandate is likewise disingenuous. Transjordan, which then included the West Bank, was placed under English control, pending a final settlement, and then marked out by the British for Arab habitation. The final resolution of this territorial problem between what had become Palestinian and Jewish settlements went over to a UN commission in 1947, which intended to assign to the Arabs 50% more of the mandated land than what they could take after launching a rash war against the newly declared Israeli state in May 1948. The Arabs behaved stupidly but had claims to Palestine at least as strong as those of Jews newly arrived from Europe.

It is equally dishonest to go on, like the neocon press, pretending that Israel perfectly exemplifies whatever form of "liberal democracy" the U.S. is then claiming to incarnate. Israel is not a multicultural or even pluralistic regime, except by pure accident. It was founded as an ethnic state based on a nationalist ideal and persists necessarily in treating non-Jewish groups as second or third class citizens. Gentiles hold no significant elective, judicial, or military positions, and the political place accorded to the established Orthodox Jewish state church serves to limit social contacts, and certainly marital possibilities, between Jews and non-Jews. Israel is certainly not an oppressive state, unless one happens to be a Palestinian living on the West Bank, but the democracy it practices is more like that of interwar Poland, before it sank into dictatorship, than like the (perhaps even more bizarre form of) democracy now practiced in Western countries. The two types of democracy are not the same, and only a partisan zealot would pretend they are.

American conservatives who hold moderate positions on the Middle East, although they may form the majority of those associated with the Right, count for zilch on today’s media-packaged Right. That kind of conservatism, which happens to be the only one encountered in the national press, Fox News, and the Beltway "policy community," is savagely Zionist, committed to expanding presidential power to export its vision of global democracy, and slanderously opposed to immigration reform. As far as I can see, our side, which is everyone to the right of what used to be called Cold War liberals, no longer belongs to the "conservative movement." At least for the time being, we have become more or less invisible men, identified, as far as the general public is concerned, with whatever positions neoconservatives or neoliberals care to take. A few years ago I was shocked to learn that as a "conservative" I should be defending the dropping of atomic bombs on what were a battered Japanese people in August 1945 and even the incarceration of American citizens of Japanese descent in 1942. Neither was in fact a conservative position during World War Two; and both had their primary support among liberals and leftists. (The Communist-dominated ACLU and Governor Earle Warren were early backers of the forced resettlement of Japanese Americans and the commandeering of their property during the War. Most of our military leaders, including MacArthur, had expressed reservations about the bombing, as did even more vehemently conservative foreign policy hands like Joseph Grew.)

Why in God’s name should conservatism now be identified with the archaic anti-Axis hysteria that neocons, like liberals, are whipping up in the late nineties? The answer is obvious: such people have media control and are using it to exclude more authentic conservative voices. And how does one distinguish conservative thought in New York City from the sludgy editorials that keep coming out in the New York Post, a paper that combines the cults of FDR and Martin Luther King with pro-Likud propaganda? All of this applies equally well to the Wall Street Journal, albeit with some qualification, given the Journal’s usual avoidance of outright slander against its conservative critics.

Although the real Right, and on this I am sure, will survive its present diminishment, the question is qu’y faire maintenant. Without large media outlets and generous benefactors, we’ll have to face continuing problems in getting alternative views before the public. Up until recently our neocon opponents did us the favor of making war on us. Although not well intentioned, such a tactic called attention to our existence and the presence of more than one set of opinions on the right. What has now begun to happen may be more ominous. No opinions, except for those of the center-left in the second half of the twentieth century, are given media attention as "conservative" views. Consequently all "conservatives" have been redefined as Humphrey liberals, global democrats, and Israeli hawks.

For "conservative" reading and viewing junkies, as illustrated by a close friend at Elizabethtown College, it is hard to resist contamination from the Left. My friend is always telling me about what he learns from or finds confirmed by his preferred sources of information, National Review, Fox News, and Rush Limbaugh. Such outlets unfortunately form a seamless web of neocon and centrist Republican opinions and rarely differ in what they report and advocate. Although my colleague is not a hopeless naïf (and has spent years writing scholarly studies of postwar conservative thinkers), he is exposed to neoconservative partylines, whenever he opens a conservative publication reaching more than 8,000 readers or turns on the "Republican channel." This is a problem that we non-leftists have to address as soon as circumstances permit.

December 31, 2001

Paul Gottfried [send him mail] is professor of history at Elizabethtown College and author, most recently, of the highly recommended After Liberalism.

Copyright 2001 LewRockwell.com

Paul Gottfried Archives


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial
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1 posted on 12/31/2001 7:03:36 AM PST by ouroboros
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To: Mercuria;diotima;sheltonmac;Askel5;DoughtyOne;tex-oma;A.J.Armitage;x;Campion Moore Boru;junta...
bump
2 posted on 12/31/2001 7:04:12 AM PST by ouroboros
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: ouroboros
Thanks for the flag. Good article.
4 posted on 12/31/2001 7:11:22 AM PST by NoCurrentFreeperByThatName
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: tex-oma
And HAPPY NEW YEAR, O!

Right back at ya!

Happy New Year!!

6 posted on 12/31/2001 7:12:10 AM PST by ouroboros
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To: ouroboros
I found Gottlieb's piece rather silly. As an example, his response to the fact that the Arab's rejected the '47 Partition plan with an invasion? They behaved "stupidly". Well, that's a stupid response to the point, Paul.
7 posted on 12/31/2001 7:13:12 AM PST by spqrzilla9
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To: ouroboros
It is an illustration of the decline of the paleoconservatism that the country they discuss most often is not the United States but Israel.
8 posted on 12/31/2001 7:23:32 AM PST by annalex
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To: ouroboros
Thanks for the bump.

Happy New Year! (Hope you're Kwanzaa was fresh.)

9 posted on 12/31/2001 7:26:29 AM PST by diotima
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To: spqrzilla9
Surely, many of us would react in a similar fashion if the UN decided to partition our land. Would we be grateful that it allowed us to keep some of our country, and only assigned part of it to new countries it wanted to create? Stupid it was, I don't know how much further you can go than that, particular since that paragraph is a little unclear on the details.

Gottfried has quite a bee in his bonnet, and one can disagree with him about Israel -- one can also loathe Lew Rockwell with a passion -- but Gottfried is right about National Review, George Will and the Wall Street Journal. When did American "conservatism" come to mean aggressively interventionist global "democracy?" Is it disturbing that conservative "leaders" seem to spend most of their time talking about when -- not if -- we should attack Iraq, Somalia, and a list of other countries? Reading National Review today, one sees little trace of the older ideas and ideals that inspired it. War fever is everything for them. Some war is necessary now. The passion for ever wider war isn't.

10 posted on 12/31/2001 7:31:56 AM PST by x
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To: ouroboros
Excellent insights on the diversity of conservative thought.
11 posted on 12/31/2001 7:35:11 AM PST by rdww
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: ouroboros
Oh,I get it,the media is controlled by the right,and we've got to do something about it!
13 posted on 12/31/2001 7:39:57 AM PST by tet68
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To: ouroboros
Gottfried's observations about what passes for "conservatism" in the GOP is very close to my own observations over the years. As I keep repeating, the GOP's brief flirtation with conservatism is over. All pretense has been dropped. The party is back to its roots: utopian, socialist, mercantilist anti-Constitutionalism.

That's what the party was founded upon and what the underlying philosophy of its controlling leadership has always been. Now, it has become so obvious that the party's leadership and punditry have foolishly gone public with their agenda.

Dr. Clyde Wilson's assertion that the GOP is the major obstacle to conservatism in the US today has been true for quite awhile, but is becoming less true as more and more conservatives disassociate ourselves from the socialist "right" which controls the GOP. Conservatives will survive and we will defend our ideals and philosophy as we have always done.

14 posted on 12/31/2001 7:40:41 AM PST by Twodees
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To: ouroboros
Robert Novak hates President Bush so much he has lost his mind!
15 posted on 12/31/2001 7:41:48 AM PST by OldFriend
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To: diotima
Happy New Year! (Hope you're Kwanzaa was fresh.)

And a Happy New Year to you, Miss LaTowanda. As a matter of fact, my Kwanzaa was FUNKY fresh, dope, and DA BOMB. We all dressed up in traditional African garb and gave mad props to the Kwanzaa fairy and, of course, to Allah.

Holla if ya hear me,
ouroboros X

16 posted on 12/31/2001 7:45:09 AM PST by ouroboros
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To: ouroboros;M1991; cdwright; mbb bill; ctdonath2; Zoey; kristinn; Rebeckie; Lucky; Sauropod...
"Fox News, and Rush Limbaugh. Such outlets unfortunately form a seamless web of neocon and centrist Republican opinions and rarely differ in what they report and advocate."

Guys, It occurs to me that "neoconservative" IS a good word to fit this administration and their toadies. They want to conserve that which is new. That which was given US by bill clinton. GATT, WTO, "Federalism", open borders {"boarders". A typo? As in ship?}, Troops all around the world doing as the administration says rather than Congress making those life and death decisions, etc.

And even adding to the "new" stuff with a thrown out policy of the administration being in charge of foreign trade instead of congress as stipulated in the Constitution, more government ownership of property and control of private property. Yep. "Neo" conservatives fits well. Peace and love, George.

17 posted on 12/31/2001 7:59:14 AM PST by George Frm Br00klyn Park
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To: ouroboros
"American conservatives who hold moderate positions on the Middle East, although they may form the majority of those associated with the Right, count for zilch on today’s media-packaged Right. That kind of conservatism, which happens to be the only one encountered in the national press, Fox News, and the Beltway "policy community," is savagely Zionist, committed to expanding presidential power to export its vision of global democracy, and slanderously opposed to immigration reform. "

I don't think the author makes his case that positions regarding Israel are Left-Right. Rather he makes the case that both Liberal and Conservative politics have been taken over by proponents of Zionism.

On global democracy and immigration, then let the UN (who started this) create a West Bank as a unified State with one person, one vote with open borders. Let them decide by ballot not bullet. It works for us.

18 posted on 12/31/2001 8:05:54 AM PST by ex-snook
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Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

To: theoldright
Sounds like wishful thinking on your part. In fact paleoconservatism is in the ascendancy.

My wish is that it is so, but look at the article: it complains of decline, and sounds like the author lives in Israel.

20 posted on 12/31/2001 8:22:28 AM PST by annalex
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