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The blog.
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Well, it was a nice run. But I think it’s time to turn out the lights on the Liberal Fascism blog. Alas, turning out the lights on liberal fascism might take a bit longer. As only the most loyal readers may have noticed, I haven’t been updating the blog much this summer. I fell out of the habit while I was on the NR Cruise and never got back into it. One reason for that might be that if you wanted to read about the themes of my book, all you had to do was open a newspaper. Let’s see. Off the top of my head, in the first six months of Obama’s presidency we’ve seen corporatism and “state capitalism” run amok, in the government takeover of two car companies and numerous banks. Labor unions have become increasingly indistinguishable from the government and the party that controls it. Herbert Croly and the Progressives have once again been rehabilitated as founding fathers of the New Age. The entire liberal intellectual class is convinced that this the time for a new New Deal. Critics of statism are vilified by liberal elites as racists and fascists. (And those who refuse to get with the Gorian program are guilty of “treason against the planet“). When out of power, liberals lionized free speech and celebrated dissent as the highest form of patriotism. Now, they label dissent “un-American” and the president insists he doesn’t want to hear a lot of talking from anyone who disagrees with him. While the stench of eugenics and euthanasia do not quite sting the nostrils yet, the odor is detectable and the liberal impulse for controlling the lives of others has been re-exposed. Indeed, our own messianic president, who insists that we can create a Kingdom of Heaven on Earth, also apparently believes that “we are God’s partners in matters of life and death” and that religious organizations that are true to their calling should rally behind a united front to expand the scope and role of government. When the head of state says such things, it is hard not to be reminded of the Progressive concept of the God State, a major theme of Liberal Fascism. The “State is the actually existing, realized moral life . . . The divine idea as it exists on earth,” Hegel declared in The Philosophy of History. The State, according to Hegel, was the “march of God on earth.” The progressives agreed. Richard Ely, the founding father of progressive economics, proclaimed “God works through the State in carrying out His purposes more universally than through any other institution.” It’s revealing, to me at least, that I wrote the book with Hillary Clinton as the stand-in for the fascistic ideas lurking inside contemporary liberalism. Here’s how I put it in the new afterword for the paperback edition:
Needless to say, I could go on. And I will, mostly over at the Corner. I haven’t given up my argument. I just don’t think the argument is best served by this stand-alone blog, particularly since NR has techno-changes coming down the pike. The blog will continue to exist in the archives and if you bookmark it now, you can revisit it and poke around as much and for as long as you like.
Summing Up Also, in the current issue of NR I have a short item on the recent spate of “Obama as Hitler” epithets being thrown around by a few people on the Right (and a lot of idiot Larouchies). A link is unavailable but here’s the relevant passage:
I should note that I am not quite agreeing with David Frum’s recent broadside against conservatives who find relevance in fascism and Nazism. David writes “can we get a grip here” and I certainly agree that if people think Obama will become a Hitler, or even a Mussolini, they need to do some more thinking. But I think this bit from David is a sort of sleight-of-hand I’ve encountered many times before. He writes:
That’s all true, but misses an important point. What the fascists were or are primarily known for is not necessarily dispositive to the question of what they actually were. Speaking for myself, the relevance of the generous social welfare programs and anti-smoking programs is to point out that the Nazis weren’t exactly what we’ve been told they were. Sure, they were violent and hysterically devoted to an authoritarian leader, but they were also more than that and their popularity with the German people cannot be easily chalked up to those features either. The Nazis did not rise to power on the promise of bringing war and violence. They just didn’t. They rose to power by promising national restoration, peace, pride, dignity, unity and generous social welfare programs among other things including, of course, scapegoating Jews. People forget how Hitler successfully fashioned himself a champion of peace for quite a while. Limbaugh’s counter-attack on liberals, specifically Pelosi, is exactly that, a counter-attack. He was saying that if liberals are going to call conservatives Nazis for opposing nationalized healthcare maybe they should at least account for the fact that Nazis agreed with them on the issue, not conservatives. If liberals want to have a fight over who is closer to fascism, I see no reason why conservatives should cower from that argument, particularly since the facts are on our side. But I reject entirely the idea that liberals today are literally Nazi-like, particularly if we are going to define Nazism by what “they were known for.” Liberals don’t want to invade Poland or round up Jews. As I’ve said many times, one naive hope I had for my book was that it would remove the word “fascist” from popular discourse, not expand its franchise. Alas, on that score the book is a complete failure.
The Scoreboard My thanks to everyone at NR, Random House, and most of all to my editor Adam Bellow for their support and help. But, lastly, let me say how grateful I am to all of you who’ve supported the book, touted the book, used it in book clubs and sent it to relatives. Your encouragement has meant more than I can convey. Please keep sending me tidbits, insights and links to stories of the day that relate to Liberal Fascism (and if you have a time machine, please go back and send me some of that stuff when I was still working on the book!). Thanks so much for defending me and LF in the comments sections at blogs and elsewhere. Such efforts are not only appreciated but vital for the book’s long term success. Oh, wait, sorry. If you made it this far I should let you know that I’m going to be starting an email newsletter in the Fall, at the Suits’ insistence. Expect book updates and arguments to appear there from time to time. Be on the lookout for announcements in September. So that’s it. Thanks so much for everything and look for me in the Corner where the conversation will continue, amidst all the other conversations. |
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From the LA Times:
There’s an interesting contradiction here. According to the pro-choice perspective, it’s outrageous for the state to interfere in a woman’s decision to terminate a pregnancy. But it’s pragmatic and reasonable for the state to consider terminating a person, if some money can be saved. This logic is nothing new. |
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The editorial blog of the Baltimore Sun is accusing me of violating Godwin’s law, and some of the commenters are rushing to my defense. |
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From an AP story on the kerfuffle over Neo-Nazis signing up for the adopt-a-highway program:
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Over at the Armed & Dangerous Blog. |
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The LF Voxiversity Exams Continue The Chapter Two Quiz is now up. |
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From a reader in response to my magazine piece from the last issue:
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From pages 369-371:
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From pages 364-365 of my book:
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I’ve been so incredibly swamped since the von Brunn shooting I haven’t had a chance to post a few things on Hitler and Christianity that I think are relevant given all of the “he’s a rightwinger talk.” Remember von Brunn subscribes to the view that Christianity was a Jewish conspiracy against European-Pagan vigor. This email reminded me:
Right, but Nazis were Christianists and Christianists are Nazis. Remember this from Jesse Jackson: “In South Africa, we call it apartheid. In Nazi Germany, we’d call it fascism. Here in the United States, we call it conservatism.” Or his statement that the Christian Coalition was a “strong force” in Nazi Germany? |
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The test on the introduction is now up, over at the Voxiversity. |
He goes on to make many fine points. I just want to offer a slight — really slight — dissent. I agree that social democracy and racial fascism are deeply different (a point I make several times in my book). And I’m grateful that Reihan actually recognizes a distinction between fascism and “racial fascism.” In the 1920s, Mussolini’s fascism was not racial (it became racial in the late 30s when Mussolini wanted to justify his North African adventures and, later, when he fully became Hitler’s stooge). The question is, how different are social democracy and non-racial fascism? The problem for many people is that they cannot imagine the possibility that fascism isn’t shorthand for racial fascism, never mind get their heads around the idea that Nazism was — and was understood at the time as — racial socialism. The word “fascist” appears twice in Mein Kampf and neither time as a meaningful label for National Socialist ideology. Meanwhile the word socialist appears nearly 200 times, if memory serves, and it is often used as an accurate description of Hitler’s preferred policies. Regardless, I will concede that non-racial fascism and social democracy are still different, just as social democracy and, say, Leninism are different. But few eyebrows would be raised were one to note that Leninism and social democracy share common roots and more than a few common aspirations. But when one says similar stuff about fascism and social democracy, teeth are gnashed and cloth rent. |
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From a reader:
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I like this one:
Me: Any bets that this guy hasn’t read a single page of the book? Update: Oh, I should have said that the asterisks are mine. This is a family website. I should have also have mentioned that I started this book when Barack Obama was an obscure Illinois state senator. So I deserve every success simply for the quality of my prescience. |
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I’m delighted to announced that the paperback of Liberal Fascism will debut at #5 on The New York Times besteller list. Because the list works on a weird time-delay, it will appear a week from this Sunday. Thanks again to everyone, including the knee-jerk critics, for making it a success. |
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From a reader:
Update: Quite a few readers wondered why I didn’t contest this. I think the reason is that I basically agree with it. I think the confusion stems from the fact that the emailer was referring to the liberal-leftist mindset rather than his own. But I think he’s absolutely right. Liberals start from the assumption that fascism is on the right and then they fit their own biases to the political spectrum. What I Don’t Like becomes “fascist.” Things I Have Sympathy For, in whole or part, becomes left. Update II: From the reader himself:
Update III: It is very strange, but readers keep thing the above correspondent is talking about himself when he says “we make $750,000 …” He doesn’t. He’s characterizing a mindset. |
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I have every confidence that fans of my book and those otherwise interested in the issues raised by it, will find Charles Kesler’s discussion of progressivism both familiar and enlightening. Kesler overdosed on smart pills years ago, and he’s never recovered. Update: I take issue with my friend Peter Robinson here. |
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Those “right wing” Fascists, Cont’d Michael Moynihan has a very useful post. I’m not sure I agree with every angle of it, but I am very reluctant to disagree with him on contemporary European politics as he knows a lot more about such things than I do. |
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Now this is an interesting point:
I think the reader is basically right. John Ralston Saul talks about how America has an “unconscious civilization” of fascism. I think he’s too Marxist, but makes the same basic point I make, which is that we’ve inherited some corporatist and fascistic arrangements without realizing it. The worst thing for the country and for conservatism would be for the Right to become complacent about these arrangements. That’s why I have my whole discussion on the “Tempting of Conservatism” and rightwing progressivism. I think there’s a real danger of having Republicans and conservatives making peace with the welfare state and simply becoming “rightwing” versions of liberals, rewarding their constituencies, imposing their values etc. (Somewhere in the book, I have a quote from FDR in which he says something like: Democratic/New Dealer control of the government was good because the good guys ran it, but it would be bad or fascistic if some other faction got in there.) Of course, it’s still worth noting that conservatives — properly understood — who embrace statism, cease to be conservatives. But I think the reader is still getting at a real danger. |
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So Who Is A Right-Wing Extremist? From a reader:
I think it’s a very good question. I don’t have a systemic answer because I think the “right” in the Anglo-American tradition has a fork in it. One branch heads off toward extreme anti-statism, the other to extreme traditionalism to the point of monarchism or some such. I think you could make a persuasive case that a serious anarcho-capitalist libertarian was a rightwing extremist. I also think you could make the case that those who want to restore the monarchy in, say, France are rightwing extremists. Here’s a curious irony that I don’t discuss much because it just confuses people. I think you can make the case that Franco was an extreme rightwing ruler, but not a fascist. You can see why this is confusing. Franco is for many on the Left the quintessential fascist. The problem is that he was far, far closer to an authoritarian caudillo than a totalitarian fascist. Indeed, the general consensus among scholars of fascism is these days is that Franco’s Spain should not be lumped in with Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany. Anyway, as you can imagine, that argument gets awfully complicated given the history and the label profusion in the literature. Many critics of the book think I believe that their can’t be anything like a “bad” rightwing regime. I think this is nonsense. I’m not an anarcho-capitalist, nor am I a hyper-traditionalist, a monarchist or even in significant respects a “reactionary” save perhaps in the Marxist sense. So, at least by own standards, I’m perfectly willing to concede that extreme rightwingery can be bad. But it can’t, technically speaking, be fascist. |
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A reader asks:
Me: Well it matters for a few reasons, not least because I think it is a very interesting aspect of political life, so much so I wrote a book about it. But more importantly, it matters because one statist faction uses another statist faction to tar anti-statists as fascist. The leftwing and mainstream press in Britain (and America) routinely uses “far right” parties like the BNP to tar mainstream conservative policies. But in most ways the left has far, far more in common with the BNP than the right. Why? Because they’re both leftwing. Or, if you prefer, they’re both statist. Surely, if we should be vigilant about preventing the sort of dystopia the reader clearly fears — and we should — than at least clarifying which parties are statist and which are not is a useful project. |
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More on the BNP’s success at stealing labor votes. Here are some wonderful posts about the BNP by Daniel Hannan. For instance:
Plus readers might remember his interview with Vox Day:
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The British National Party stands to gain from disaffected Labor voters. |