National Cliff Notes
Last year, I noted that National Review had pretended not to notice Pat Buchanan’s bestselling book State of Emergency. Back then, National Review was at least pretending to support immigration restriction, so they might have been forced to say some good things about the book—which is no doubt why they ignored it.
Buchanan’s latest blockbuster, Day of Reckoning: How Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart criticizes the ideologies and policies of globalism, imperialism, and other causes sacred to National Review, so it is not surprising that this book they decided to disparage rather than ignore it.
Accordingly, they assigned their review to Peter Wehner, a former Bush administration official who now safely grazes at the neoconservative Ethics and Public Policy Center. Actually, calling Wehner’s piece a “review” is giving it far too much credit.
This is evident from the very first sentence: “The man who authored The Death of the West has now turned his considerable spirit of despair to America.” First of all, The Death of the West was largely about the U.S., with significant attention to Europe. Even if Wehner didn’t know that, you might think he’d realize that America is, well, part of the West.
Wehner tries to rebut Buchanan’s warnings about the dire future of the American experiment mainly by parroting his own recent essay in Commentary about how much “good news” there is on social indicators like abortion, crime, welfare, illegitimacy, and test scores.
Although some of his assertions seem dubious, I’m perfectly willing to concede that there has been some temporary progress on these fronts—progress which will only be undermined by our ongoing importing of pathology from third world countries. My quibbles aside, what is astouding about this “review” is that it doesn’t actually address a single argument Buchanan has made. The extent of Wehner’s logic seems to be: “Buchanan offers some bad news, but here’s some good news. Move along, folks, nothing to see here.”
Some of the older neoconservatives, such as Charles Murray and James Q. Wilson made legitimate contributions throughout the 70s and 80s, dissecting the dysfunctions of the underclass and the failures of liberal social engineering. That’s what neocons were good at. However, when they started looking at the big picture they lost their bearings, as the past four years (at least) have amply proved. Because they were good at things like detailed analyses of the failures of teachers’ unions, assorted neocons (or their much less talented sons) somehow got the notion that they were meant for grander things, for “big ideas” like “Benevolent Global Hegemony,” “The First Universal Nation”, and “The End of History.” Boiled down, as the neocons used to boil leftists slogans down, to what they really mean, such abstractions amount to little more than this assertion:
America can attack any country it wants, and admit as many immigrants as big business craves, and everything will work out fine.
It is this profoundly anti-conservative position that Buchanan attacks. But Wehner remains oblivious. To his credit (but his editors’ disgrace), Wehner admits he hasn’t read the book, and simply quotes some publicity passages reprinted on the Drudge Report. It says a great deal about National Review that they’re willing to print a “review” of a book by a reporter who got his information from a Web site. Perhaps the magazine should be renamed National Cliff Notes.
Even if he had stuck to the Drudge Report, Wehner would have seen that Buchanan isn’t primarily concerned about the misdeeds of the underclass. These can destroy cities and schools, but they won’t wreck a nation. Day of Reckoning is about how America is in trouble due to its overstretched empire, disintegrating national identity, massive demographic transition, and economic dependence on staggering foreign debt. None of which, strictly speaking, is Al Sharpton’s fault.
To the extent that Buchanan discusses cultural decline, he talks about how Americans have completely irreconcilable views on abortion, homosexuality, the existence of God, and other issues that once weren’t even open to discussion. We are split along a deep and unbridgeable moral chasm—as we once were in 1859. It’s good news that the number of abortions may be declining. That doesn’t change the fact that half our country regards as a fundamental right what the other half sees as murder.
Wehner’s C- Goucher College term paper concludes with a few platitudes about how “liberty inevitably gives way to license…. Yet we have found, time after time, that liberty, while not without its drawbacks, is the most reliable path to human excellence, prosperity, and progress.”
This is all well and good, but it has nothing to do with Pat Buchanan’s book. It ignores both his diagnosis and his prescriptions. Talking about how great an abstract “liberty”—at least in the sense that Wehner describes it—tells us nothing about what to do about trade, debt, foreign policy, or immigration. You know, the subjects of the… book under review. Instead of this weakly reasoned squib, Wehner might as well have written a little haiku about a plum tree. It would have as much to do with Day of Reckoning as this “book review.”
However, I will not emulate Wehner here; let me address what he did say, rather than what he didn’t. Wehner praises liberty—which is all to the good, depending on what he means by it. Our hard-won freedoms help define us as a nation. But Wehner’s praise is little more than a shallow slogan—of the sort he no doubt polished during his tenure as former deputy assistant to President Bush. The hard work comes in considering, rationally and prudentially, how to preserve that liberty. This used to be the work of conservatives. Neoconservatives are always fond of quoting Ronald Reagan’s assertion that it is “Morning in America”—as if it were a universal principle, rather than an inspiring piece of rhetoric. They should remember something else that president once said:
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.
Thanks to the neocons, those sunset years may well be upon us. Pat Buchanan, as usual, is man enough to tell the unpopular truth. We ignore him at our peril.


Comments
One of the sadder things about the sunken state and boosterist role of the National Review is that the Old Man, father to William F., a conservative of the old stripe used to invite his friend Albert J. Nock over for lunch. Mr. Nock would then apparently converse on a variety of subjects with the family over lunch and the young William F. was given the benefit of some real conservative economic and political philosophy.
Circumstances and opinions change but it seems a shame that there remains nobody at the publication who thinks the philosophy of Nock, and those like him deserves an honest appraisal. The Republican Party has lost itself to Special Interest, Big Government and the pernicious effects of the Security State and the N.R. appears to be one of the bands playing sweetly as the ship goes down. It is a shame to see such a commitment of thinking and writing go toward propping up a government that validates Mr. Nocks most bitter musings.
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Marcus wrote: “Day of Reckoning is about how America is in trouble due to its overstretched empire, disintegrating national identity, massive demographic transition, and economic dependence on staggering foreign debt. None of which, strictly speaking, is Al Sharpton’s fault.”
As I said before, mostly what the neo-cons have done is take the utopian ideology of ‘free markets” to it’s logical conclusion, and succeeded in mostly proving that the rantings of Marx & Lenin that Imperialism was the final stage of unrestrained capitalism were true. The destruction of the economic security of America’s middle class by the forces of finance capitalism (IMF/World Bank/Fed) occurs simultaneously with the dismantling of the value system that sustained it.
For guys like me (and Pat Buchanan is the same age as I) that fought against the 60’s “counterculture” and the “New” Left on college campuses, to watch the takeover of the conservative movement by ex-Leftists, and the betrayal of the ideas of Goldwater and Russell Kirk are profoundly depressing.
How could we have known that the tool that our enemies would use to destroy America would be the rhetoric of “free markets” along with the values of unrestrained consumerism and materialism to displace God and Community and Family? Not in our wildest dreams would we see the world turned upside down as it is today.
Give em hell, Marcus! You and your friends are our only hope for the future!
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A great piece. Thanks for writing it, Marcus.
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Marcus,
Good post. Watching the National Review crowd criticize immigration at the height of the Senate debate was like watching a lion pretending to enjoy being a vegetarian. And no sooner than a couple weeks after the demise of the bill, they were back to their old tricks. Ramesh Ponnuru was calling patriots racists, and so forth.
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Thanks Taki for bringing Marcus aboard--we need more young people like him.
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That the editors of National Review would allow a “book review” which a writer never read is scandalous. And this means it is a “hit piece”. It is once said is that Conservatism is about “Virtue”. What Virtue, What Duty, What Truth, is allowing a book review in which the writer never reads the book? It is anti-conservative. It is anti-Western. National Review is a conservative publication? I stopped reading it years ago. There is no true conservative anywhere.
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Oh yes there are, Mr. Wheeler. But like digging for gold, one has to get through both the dross and the fool’s gold to get to the real thing.
But they are there.
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Excellent piece Marcus! As someone in his early 20’s it is great to see a fellow young conservative with such a sharp mind published.
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How could we have known that the tool that our enemies would use to destroy America would be the rhetoric of “free markets” along with the values of unrestrained consumerism and materialism to displace God and Community and Family? -Joe Populist
I read both left and right websites and the liberals have talked badly about the neo-cons for years and the neo-cons them. How could one have known about the dangers of materialism and unrestrained free markets? The words of Jesus. He warned of usury [money making from nothing IE inflation] and he also warned of materialism [Mammon]
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Very good article..For one to evaluate a book without
reading it, would certainly indicate a rush to criticize.
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Who says reprobates such as Taki do not accomplish good deeds?
I say naught. For example, Taki published young turks like Marcus E.
Thank you Taki, in whatever brothel you are presently domiciled in!!
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Here is a really nasty attack on Buchanan’s book at the “Frontpage” website:
http://tinyurl.com/27hb3d
One quote will give you the gist of the piece.
“If he [Buchanan] appears anywhere as a commentator, it should only be in full Klan regalia.”
The “National Review” and “Frontpage” crews don’t really believe in all that Diversity Is Our Strength nonsense, of course, but they are more than willing to betray the nation’s future and feed your children to the lions for some pet project or class interest today. Besides, if they ever did try to stand up to the establishment’s Final Solution To The White Problem their fan-boys would quickly see just how irrelevant and powerless they really are.
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