-Caveat Lector-

Who’s Conservative?

by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

Jeff Tucker recently stated what we’ve long realized: there is something
profoundly wrong with what passes for conservatism today. Entirely
ignorant of the conservative intellectual tradition, many self- described
conservatives sound more like Woodrow Wilson or Leon Trotsky than
Edmund Burke. Unlike Jeff, though, I’m not ready just yet to give up on
the word conservative. Leftists have taken enough of our words away.

National Review’s Jonah Goldberg, for instance, who hates being told he’s
not a genuine conservative (even though nothing could be more obvious),
offers this justification for war with Iraq: "The United States needs to go
to war with Iraq because it needs to go to war with someone in the region
and Iraq makes the most sense." Elsewhere, he writes: "Every ten years or
so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country
and throw it against the wall, just to show we mean business."

If you’re wondering if these are the words of a conservative, try to imagine
Russell Kirk uttering them.

But it is the various forms of Wilsonianism, uttered apparently in all
seriousness, that most decisively disqualify neoconservatism from any place
within the conservative intellectual tradition. When writing for Internet
outlets, I inevitably receive a few emails from people who condemn me for
not wanting to bring democracy to Iraq, and/or to "liberate" the Iraqi
people. One man actually told me that if I weren’t a "liberal" I would be
more eager to liberate this oppressed people. Such an ignorant remark
impugns the decency of every early American patriot, who to a man
believed in what would today be called an America First foreign policy, but
this does nothing to stop a belligerent minority from uttering it.

It says a great deal about the state of conservative thought in America that
any of this nonsense could actually be confused with genuine
conservatism. To the contrary, this kind of messianic ideology, whereby
there exists some moral obligation to spread democracy and to "free" the
various unfree peoples of the world, is precisely what the great
conservative Edmund Burke meant when he spoke of the "armed
doctrines" of the French Revolution. Mesmerized by the universalisms of
the Enlightenment, the Jacobins were ready to spread revolution
throughout Europe – for why should only the French enjoy the blessings of
liberty?

Burke is often referred to as the father of modern conservatism. It hardly
requires much imagination to figure out what he would think of the
neoconservatives’ imperial program of global democracy. To appreciate
Burke’s arguments, though, one would have to shut off Rush Limbaugh and
learn about conservative thought by reading actual books.

Let us assume that modern democracy is the best form of government – a
debatable proposition, to say the least – and let us also assume that the
War Party is being sincere in their professed desire to bring democracy to
Iraq. Let us also assume that the Iraqis will eventually reconcile themselves
to being invaded by American and "coalition" forces, and won’t engage in
sabotage against the U.S.-installed regime. Let’s even assume that the U.S.
will support a democracy in Iraq even when it becomes obvious, as it
should be already, that free elections will of course yield an anti-American
government. Let’s assume all of this.

There are still problems. First of all, majoritarian democracy is just about
the worst arrangement for a place like Iraq. Although followers of the War
Party tend to be more familiar with the conservatism of Sean Hannity than
that of John C. Calhoun, whom they’ve never read, it is Calhoun whose
wisdom is especially valuable here. Calhoun warned that majority rule,
which can be justified only on the basis of convention and utility rather
than on any strictly moral foundation, can work only in places where there
exists a basic commonality of interests among the people. Otherwise,
majority rule becomes just another form of tyranny, as interest groups
with mutually exclusive goals use their electoral strength to oppress each
other.

This is why Calhoun believed in the concurrent majority. He believed that
distinct groups should be able to resist the oppression of electoral
majorities. He appealed to ancient examples of such arrangements, in
which measures did not pass unless they had the approval of majorities in
each group, rather than simply requiring a majority of the entire people
taken in the aggregate.

If someone wanted to establish a democracy in Iraq, surely Calhoun’s
principle of the concurrent majority is the model to be followed. The
Kurds, the Sunnis, and the Shi’ites would be at each other’s throats under
any other arrangement (and possibly even under this one as well).
Naturally, of course, our global democrats consider Calhoun to be
unacceptably reactionary, and insist on the French revolutionary model of
political organization: a single aggregated people in whose name the
government operates.

Yet this is almost nit-picking. The real difficulty with neoconservative
ideology is the alleged imperative to spread democracy in the first place.

It is essential to note, first of all, that a conservative recognizes a
hierarchy of concerns: I owe my children, my neighbors, and my co-
religionists much more than I owe anyone in Iraq or anywhere else. Cicero,
like so many figures in our classical past, held that "the union and
fellowship of men will be best preserved if each receives from us the more
kindness in proportion as he is more closely connected with us." Holy
Scripture confirms the wisdom of the ancients, instructing us that "if any
man have not care of his own, and especially of those of his house, he
hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel" (1 Tim. 5:8).

The calling of the monk or missionary to serve distant peoples is often
confused with a general Christian obligation to have equal concern for
every individual in the world, and might be cited by globalists in support of
their call for ceaseless wars of "liberation." But no such general obligation
exists. For one thing, what the missionary does in leaving family and friends
behind is known in theology as a supererogatory work. It is not an
instruction binding upon the great mass of mankind. In fact, it would be
positively harmful and disruptive if every Christian devoted himself to works
of supererogation. Thus, for example, when in the late thirteenth and
early fourteenth centuries some of the stricter Franciscans insisted that
their lives of absolute poverty must be binding upon anyone who wished to
call himself Catholic, the popes absolutely denied this universal obligation
at the same time that they praised it among those whom God had called to
adopt it. Likewise, when socialists in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries began to appeal to the common property of certain early
Christian communities as a biblical mandate for communism, Catholic moral
theologians were unanimous in responding that disorder and chaos would
result if works of supererogation – expressly intended only for the few –
were transformed into binding legal and social norms.

St. Thomas Aquinas had this to say in support of patriotism and against the
suggestion that all people everywhere have an equal claim on our sympathy
and assistance: "Our parents and our country are the sources of our being
and education. It is they that have given us birth and nurtured us in our
infant years. Consequently, after his duties toward God, man owes most to
his parents and his country. One’s duties towards one’s parents include
one’s obligations towards relatives, because these latter have sprung from
[or are connected by ties of blood with] one’s parents…and the services
due to one’s country have for their object all one’s fellow-countrymen
and all the friends of one’s fatherland." Elsewhere St. Thomas remarked
that "people’s charitable activities towards one another are to be
exercised in accordance with the varying nature of the ties that unite
them. For to each one must be given the service which belongs to the
special nature of his connection with him that owes it."

Over 100 years ago, Fr. F. X. Godts spoke of those who "take the name of
‘Internationalists,’ boasting that they have no country and no fellow-
countrymen." "Their unholy doctrine," he concluded, "is as much opposed
to nature as it is to religion."

Fr. Edward Cahill, S.J., echoing Cicero, explained in The Framework of a
Christian State (1932) that "obligations of piety extend in due proportion,
directly or indirectly, to parents, relatives, fellow-countrymen, and to all
persons closely connected with these." He went on:

"Hence, when St. Paul says that in the Church ‘there is neither Gentile
nor Jew…Barbarian or Scythian, bond or free, but Christ, all in all’…he
does not imply that the Church wishes to abolish or ignore the natural ties
which bind individuals to their own country, no more than she would wish
to abolish family ties or distinction of sex, or even reasonable distinctions
of class, all of which are necessary for the good of the human race. He
means rather, that just as the Church, while consecrating and upholding
domestic ties and obligations, nevertheless, receives equally into her fold
the members of every family, so also she receives and cherishes impartially
the citizens of all nations, for all are equally dear to her Founder"

Although I am no admirer of Theodore Roosevelt, having written a chapter-
long critique of his presidential tenure, he was obviously correct, if a bit
colorful, when he observed that "the man who loves other countries as
much as his own stands on a level with the man who loves other women as
much as he loves his own wife."

It is the Stoics of ancient Rome with whom the idea of world citizenship
has been historically associated, but the idea was given still greater
impetus much more recently by the eighteenth-century Enlightenment.
The Enlightenment tended to encourage the idea that the ideal man was a
citizen of the world, his affections not limited by the merely immediate. In
his book The Brave New World of the Enlightenment, Professor Louis
Bredvold, speaking about William Godwin, noted that he "absolves man from
all ties of attachment to individuals so that he may devote himself to the
pursuit of universal benevolence." That is quite a perceptive summary of
the temper of the Enlightenment: a denigration of the natural obligations
that a man incurs by virtue of being a father, husband, and friend in favor
of the obligation he is now said to owe without discrimination to the
entire human race. Thus, for example, when John Lennon lectured the
world on peace and brotherhood even though in his own life he went
years without seeing his son from his first marriage, he was only one in a
long series of universalist humanitarians dating back at least to Jean-
Jacques Rousseau, the eighteenth-century political thinker who was all
broken up at the news of the suffering caused by the earthquake in
Lisbon, but who placed all five of his own children in a foundling asylum,
thereby condemning them to lives of hard labor and misery.

South Carolina Senator Robert Y. Hayne, a genuine conservative,
elaborated on this point in his famous 1830 debate with Daniel Webster. He
spoke of those who exercised what he called "false philanthropy":



Their first principle of action is to leave their own affairs, and neglect
their own duties, to regulate the affairs and the duties of others. Theirs is
the task to feed the hungry and clothe the naked, of other lands, whilst
they thrust the naked, famished, and shivering beggar from their own
doors; to instruct the heathen, while their own children want the bread
of life. When this spirit infuses itself into the bosom of a statesman (if one
so possessed can be called a statesman), it converts him at once into a
visionary enthusiast. Then it is that he indulges in golden dreams of
national greatness and prosperity. He discovers that "liberty is power"; and
not content with vast schemes of improvement at home, which it would
bankrupt the treasury of the world to execute, he flies to foreign lands,
to fulfill obligations to "the human race," by inculcating the principles of
"political and religious liberty," and promoting the "general welfare" of the
whole human race.

Hayne’s description of false philanthropy eerily anticipates the views of
Woodrow Wilson, the American president who to any serious conservative
was the Great Satan of twentieth-century American history. Wilson was
eager to involve the United States in World War I, one of the worst
conflagrations in human history, despite there having been no obvious
American interest at stake. Oh, the president tried his best to trump some
up, of course. But they generally made no sense. To paraphrase historian
Ralph Raico, Wilson insisted that every American had the right, in time of
war, to travel aboard armed, belligerent merchant ships carrying munitions
of war through declared submarine zones. No other professed neutral had
ever dared put forth such a doctrine, let alone gone to war over it.

Wilson’s mind was elsewhere: he was looking ahead to the peace
settlement, at which he believed a genuinely disinterested United States
would be able to forge a just and lasting peace. More importantly, under
American leadership a League of Nations would be established to provide
collective security against aggression. To those who protested that
national sovereignty might be compromised by the kind of supranational
organization that he proposed, Wilson replied that a time would come
"when men would be just as eager partisans of the sovereignty of mankind
as they were now of their own national sovereignty."

This is a recipe for endless warfare and ceaseless strife. Moreover, military
intervention is always an uncertain undertaking, fraught with danger and
unforeseen consequences, such that the genuine statesman of
conservative inclinations determines upon it only after the most serious
reflection and after the exhaustion of all alternatives. Woodrow Wilson
truly and sincerely believed he would "make the world safe for
democracy" by getting the U.S. into World War I even though he
effectively admitted we had no national interests at stake. (He spoke of
our "high, disinterested purpose.") The result was 120,000 dead Americans,
250,000 wounded, our government transformed (and not for the better)
forever, and one of the most disastrous peace settlements in history,
which gave rise to the Nazis less than a generation later.

Whoops.

As Professor Raico explains, "Instead of letting the European nations find
their own way to a compromise peace, American power had swung the
balance decisively in favor of Britain and France. Among the consequences
was the fall of the Kaiser and the old Germany, which Wilson, believing his
own propaganda, considered the epitome of evil." The catastrophe of
Wilson’s policy becomes still clearer when we consider the testimony of
George Kennan, writing just after World War II: "Today if one were offered
the chance of having back again the Germany of 1913 – a Germany run by
conservative but relatively moderate people, no Nazis and no Communists –
a vigorous Germany, full of energy and confidence, able to play a part
again in the balancing-off of Russian power in Europe, in many ways it
would not sound so bad."

Isn’t that like saying that Wilson, in chasing after his visionary schemes,
ultimately wasted all those American lives? I leave that to the reader to
decide.

A conservative would never have entertained the saccharine expectations
that Wilson appears to have had, or been so eager to sacrifice the
sovereignty of his nation for the sake of an abstraction called "humanity."
Leftists, not conservatives, deal in abstractions. Marx and Lenin wanted to
save "humanity" – though, perhaps not coincidentally, they showed far less
solicitude for the actual human beings they encountered. (There is no
evidence that Marx, for all his braying about alleged mistreatment of
workers, even once visited a factory.) Americans, historically, have been
well wishers of freedom everywhere but defenders only of their own. That
was the posture of Washington, Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, and indeed
all of our early statesmen. Federalist and Republican, Democrat and Whig
agreed on a policy of America First. This is a sober, sensible, grown-up
conservatism that is based on learning and solid thinking, rather than on
MSNBC’s "Countdown: Iraq."

Senator Robert A. Taft, whom I recently had the privilege of profiling for a
forthcoming encyclopedia, appreciated the prudent, limited, finite, and
sensible foreign policy of American tradition, since it was so naturally
appealing to the conservative instinct. Known in his day as "Mr.
Republican," Taft explained in A Foreign Policy for Americans (1951): "No
foreign policy can be justified except a policy devoted without reservation
or diversion to the protection of the liberty of the American people, with
war only as the last resort and only to preserve that liberty."

To those "who talk about an American century in which America will
dominate the world" and encourage our country to "assume a moral
leadership in the world to solve all the troubles of mankind," Taft replied
with the prudence and caution that are the conservative’s trademark. "I
quite agree that we need that moral leadership not only abroad but also at
home…. I think we can take leadership in providing of example and advice
for the improvement of material standards of living throughout the world.
Above all, I think we can take the leadership in proclaiming the doctrines
of liberty and justice and in impressing on the world that only through
liberty and law and justice, and not through socialism or communism, can
the world hope to obtain the standards which we have attained in the
United States."

It is simply not true that any moral obligation exists for those fortunate
enough to live under politically stable regimes to spend their blood and
treasure from now until the end of time to bring liberty to the peoples of
the world. Harry Elmer Barnes used the apt phrase "perpetual war for
perpetual peace." The relatively small number of livable places in the world
would simply exhaust themselves in conflict and nation-building, and the
constant warfare would doubtless have countless unpredictable
consequences – as any government intervention has. Over two centuries
ago, Charles Pinckney held out the more modest goals for which
republican governments should strive: "If they are sufficiently active and
energetic to rescue us from contempt, and preserve our domestic
happiness and security, it is all we can expect from them – it is more than
almost any other government ensures to its citizens."

Even if perpetual wars to install what would inevitably be perceived as
alien regimes were in fact desirable, the fact remains that nations, even
our own, possess finite resources. Even before adding the cost of invading
Iraq, we are presently facing deficits in the $400+ billion range (when
federal accounting tricks are taken into account). That also doesn’t
include the projected $100 billion to $200 billion that respectable sources
say the postwar occupation of Iraq is likely to cost. How many such
operations can we afford before we bankrupt our own country once and
for all? Anyone responding that the spread of democracy is more important
than dollars and cents has simply taken leave of his senses, taking up
residence in the Never Never Land of liberalism where there are no
constraints and anything is possible if you simply wish hard enough.

In the nineteenth century, Henry Clay, explaining why America had
contributed neither arms nor funds to the Hungarian cause for which
there was so much American sympathy, raised this very point:



By the policy to which we have adhered since the days of Washington…we
have done more for the cause of liberty in the world than arms could
effect; we have shown to other nations the way to greatness and
happiness…. Far better is it for ourselves, for Hungary, and the cause of
liberty, that, adhering to our pacific system and avoiding the distant wars
of Europe, we should keep our lamp burning brightly on this western
shore, as a light to all nations, than to hazard its utter extinction amid the
ruins of fallen and falling republics in Europe.

Likewise, William Seward, Lincoln’s Secretary of State, declared: "The
American people must be content to recommend the cause of human
progress by the wisdom with which they should exercise the powers of
self-government, forbearing at all times, and in every way, from foreign
alliances, intervention, and interference." In 1821, John Quincy Adams
declared most famously of all that America "has abstained from
interference in the concerns of others, even when the conflict has been
for principles to which she clings…. She goes not abroad in search of
monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and
independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own."

There is the prudence and perspective of the conservative. No
conservative, whose hallmark is a disposition toward stability, would risk his
own country’s well being, both financial and moral, in a ceaseless crusade
of visionary schemes. A real sense of history, as well as an appreciation of
what is possible in this fallen world, should sober us up from the utopian
fantasies of liberalism. Great American statesmen of the past understood
this: we can be an example to the world, but beyond that we dare not go.
No mother should ever have to be told that her sons died trying to
straighten out the political situation in Nigeria. As Lord Byron said, "Who
would be free, themselves must strike the blow."

March 27, 2003

Copyright 2003 by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.

Professor Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [send him mail] holds an AB from Harvard
and a PhD from Columbia. He teaches history, is associate editor of The
Latin Mass Magazine, and is co- author (with Christopher A. Ferrara) of The
Great Façade: Vatican II and the Regime of Novelty in the Roman Catholic
Church (2002). The book (as well as a sample chapter) is available at
greatfacade.com. another version of this essay will appear in the March 31
issue of the Remnant.

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