Leftism:
From de Sade and Marx to Hitler and Marcuse, by Erik von
Kuehnelt-Leddihn (EvKL)
Previously
I have examined EvKL’s treatment of what he described as “Real
Liberalism.” In this post, I will work
through his examination of “False Liberalism.”
While he sees similarities in the transition in England, it is in the
United States where he will focus:
How was it possible that in the
United States the word that means freedom-loving, generous, tolerant,
open-minded, hostile to state omnipotence and anti-totalitarian, came to stand
for the very contrary of all these notions and virtues?
He offers that the explanation is simple: the old-fashioned
liberal was often the one who did not resist change, who accepted the “Wave of
the Future.” The conservative stood
against change, and change was largely a leftist movement.
In other words, the old-fashioned liberal had no defenses
against…what shall I call it…bad
change. The libertarian, I guess you
could say, is an even more impotent position, it would seem.
The leftist ideologies all claimed
the future, they claimed utopia, they claimed the millennium in a chiliastic
spirit. They believed in the concept of a near-automatic progress (which needed
just a little "push").
Isn’t this the promise of all ideologies birthed after the
Enlightenment and absent the God that the Enlightenment ignored (and that later
periods removed and then killed)?
There were old-fashioned, i.e.,
genuine liberals who clung to their convictions; Albert Jay Nock, even H. L.
Mencken were among them.
As in all movements, transitions of thought, etc., not
everything changes at once. Even today
we find individuals who stand for what EvKL would call old-fashioned
liberal. Interestingly, these now find a
much better fit into a conservative camp as opposed to a modern liberal
camp. But men such as these are
dullards:
As long as there existed a utopia
at the end of the road, painted in the colors of absolute personal freedom, the
genuine liberal was sure to be a "progressive."
I think what is meant by “genuine” here is the newfangled
type of liberal. Certainly in these last
couple of paragraphs we also see the split that exists within the libertarian
community. It seems to me a strong
enough split that I am not sure I would even call it a community.
Sure, on some things we can ride on the train together – for
example, and for most (but not all), an anti-war road. But on many things, libertarians will find
themselves much more at home with either the left or the right as opposed to
with other “libertarians.”
Whereas Jacques Barzun places the great shift in the idea of
“liberal” in Europe – what he calls “The Great Switch” – at the turn of the
last century and prior to the Great War.
EvKL offers a different timeline, at least for the United States:
The Great Change, however, came
only in the 1930s when certain Americans, who saw in their country primarily
not their fatherland but the" American Experiment," suddenly thought
that the" Soviet Experiment" offered even more to mankind.
Perhaps EvKL has a somewhat different transition in view, as
his focus is very much on the Soviets and communism, and the acceptance of this
ideology within the US intelligentsia (and also, perhaps, in the FDR
administration). This certainly was a
transition in slope, but not direction, it seems to me. The Progressive ideas
of the income tax and central banking, born twenty years earlier in the United
States, made the 1930s possible.
While the old liberal didn’t appreciate some of the new
ideas, there were enough commonalities to keep many of them involved. In any case, he had previously and willingly
lost all defenses, because – among other reasons – “he had previously been robbed of his sense of values.”
EvKl sees this loss having come a half a generation before
(Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.); regarding this
Supreme Court jurist:
…Holmes helped move American legal
thinking towards legal realism, as summed up in his maxim: "The life of
the law has not been logic; it has been experience." Holmes espoused a
form of moral skepticism and opposed the doctrine of natural law, marking a significant
shift in American jurisprudence. In one of his most famous opinions, his
dissent in Abrams v. United States (1919), he regarded the United States
Constitution as "an experiment, as all life is an experiment"…
Yes, this is pretty bad, but it seems to me the path was set
long before – not later than 1861. Such
change doesn’t happen so quickly, nor on so shaky a foundation as a few court
rulings. EvKL offers as one example:
As a real positivist Holmes could
write that, "Sovereignty is a form of power, and the will of the sovereign
is law because he has power to compel obedience or punish disobedience and for
no other reason.”
This idea was not new with Holmes; such ideas were both put
forward and exercised in Europe centuries earlier. This idea wasn’t even new in America –
Abraham Lincoln could certainly be placed squarely within this framework. EvKL offers such similar statements from both
Holmes and later justices, but these decisions only exist because it was
already acceptable to make such decisions.
Whatever my disagreements with his historical timelines and
causes, EvKl provides a good analysis of consequences:
The lack of well-grounded
convictions, the absence of a belief in truth create a dangerous hunger. And
since nature abhors a vacuum, the absolutes of the totalitarian systems
suddenly find customers. The isms
then appear on the scene…
The “ism” on which EvKL lays as foundational to all other
“isms” is nihilism: in philosophy, nothing in the world has real meaning; in
practice, a rejection of all religious and moral principles. All that is left is the material.
He does see parallels in this American transition with events
in France before and during the Revolution.
I think this is fine as far as it goes, but I am still struggling with
his not noting the signs in American life at least beginning with Lincoln – if
not Jefferson:
If all spiritual values, if
Revelation, if the concept of the natural law, if the Aristotelian tradition
were "illusory" and Christian existentialism from St. Augustine to
Kierkegaard were "unscientific," then a naked materialism within and
outside existentialism might well be the answer.
EvKL cites a book as the roadmap of what is the false
liberal, “The City of Man - A Declaration
on World Democracy.” To summarize, a
one-world “super democracy” is to be the objective, the new religion. From the book:
“This universal religion, harbored
in the best minds of our age, this common prayer of democracy militant, was
anticipated by sages and saints of all ages. Its substance matured out of
whatever rose highest in man's speculations and hopes.”
Libertarianism is for all mankind; all we need do is embrace
free markets, and the result will be peace on earth, goodwill toward men. No other foundation is necessary…just free
markets.
As EvKl offers, “One wonders who these sages and saints were
– certainly not Dante, St. Thomas Aquinas, Shakespeare, Milton, Calvin, Luther,
Nicholas of Cusa, Goethe, St. Ignatius, or Kierkegaard.”
Returning to this new religion, traditional religion must be
controlled:
The Proposal tells us bluntly that
too much separation between Church and State is not good and that certain
controls of religion are quite in order.
There was “too much separation between Church and State”
during the Middle Ages – so much so that there was no such thing as
“state.” We see today that the
separation is almost non-existent. Sure,
we can each attend any service on any day of our choosing, but to call this a
meaningful separation – as if the church, any church, plays a meaningful
governance role or a role of checking state power – makes a mockery of the
phrase.
Conclusion
Since American freelancing leftism,
parading under the stolen liberal label, is the result of an inversion of its
former self, it does not present us with a truly systematic and coherent
logical picture. It suffers from inconsistencies and contradictions. … Not
being a systematic thinker…[the new liberal] is not really aware of his
dilemma.
I can agree fully with this, to even include my
left-libertarian…friends…. After all,
they do not see or they choose to ignore where their desired road will lead: to
the worst totalitarianism ever known to man.
Epilogue
EvKL has a view of the Reformation that I have touched on
before, but is worth noting again given my previous examinations of this period:
The Reformation was a rigoristic,
conservative movement, a reaction against
humanism, against the Renaissance, which eventually became totally transformed
by highly secular tendencies emanating, to be true, from cultural trends in the
orbis Catholicus.
To emphasize the point, he offers:
Not only would it have been
interesting to see Luther's reaction if anybody had called him a
"Protestant," a term of contempt coined by the budding
Counterreformation, he would also have been amazed at being accused of advocating
, “private interpretation”…
The "bad liberal" sounds like a postmodernist though they predate postmodernism. The rejection of reason for the substitution of naked power. The material and secular aspects are both very liberal and modern, but those OWHolmes quotes were unexpected.
ReplyDelete"The rejection of reason for the substitution of naked power."
DeleteNaked power is reasonable to the guy employing it. Without some pre-conditions to liberty, who are you to say that he is being unreasonable?
:-)
My comment was based on these 2 quotes:
Delete"…Holmes helped move American legal thinking towards legal realism, as summed up in his maxim: "The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience." Holmes espoused a form of moral skepticism and opposed the doctrine of natural law, marking a significant shift in American jurisprudence. In one of his most famous opinions, his dissent in Abrams v. United States (1919), he regarded the United States Constitution as "an experiment, as all life is an experiment"…
"As a real positivist Holmes could write that, "Sovereignty is a form of power, and the will of the sovereign is law because he has power to compel obedience or punish disobedience and for no other reason.”
In them, there is a statement that reason was itself abandoned. The rejection of logic and therefore the natural law that logic posits. He is by definition not being reasonable.
I see what you are saying though. Basing law on power is itself is using a form of reason. That reason focuses on the power of the sovereign as opposed to the power of the Sovereign God and the order made evident in His creation.
Yes, regarding your last paragraph.
DeleteTo your previous paragraphs, such reason requires some presuppositions as foundations; once it is decided that these presuppositions are unnecessary - e.g. God is removed from the equation - then on what basis is "reason" to be judged?
In other words, can I not use logic to conclude that the gas chamber is reasonable? Better - eugenics. Isn't it reasonable to remove the less-than healthy / pure / robust from the gene pool? Could be reasonable, depending on the foundation upon which you build that logic.