Human
Events...
What Is It We
Wish to Conserve?
by Patrick J. Buchanan
October 25, 2011
A
conservative’s task in society is
“to preserve a particular people, living in a particular place during a
particular time.”
Jack
Hunter, in a review of this
writer’s new book, Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to
2025? thus
summarizes Russell Kirk’s view of the duty of the conservative to his
country.
Kirk,
the traditionalist, though not
so famous as some of his contemporaries at National Review, is now
emerging as
perhaps the greatest of that first generation of post-World War II
conservatives -- in the endurance of his thought.
Richard
Nixon believed that. Forty
years ago, he asked this writer to contact Dr. Kirk and invite him to
the White
House for an afternoon of talk. No other conservative would do, said
the
president.
Kirk’s
rendering of the conservative
responsibility invites a question. Has the right, despite its many
victories,
failed? For, in what we believe and how we behave, we are not the
people we
used to be.
Perhaps.
But then, we didn’t start the
fire.
Second-generation
conservatives,
Middle Americans who grew up in mid-century, were engulfed by a set of
revolutions that turned their country upside down and from which there
is no
going home again.
First
was a civil rights revolution,
which began with the freedom riders and March on Washington of August
1963 and
ended tragically and terribly with the assassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King
Jr. in 1968.
That
revolution produced the civil
rights and voting rights acts, but was attended by the long, hot
summers of the
‘60s -- days-long riots in Harlem in 1964, Watts in 1965, Detroit and
Newark in
1967, and a hundred other cities and Washington, D.C., in 1968 that
tore the
nation apart.
Crucially,
the initial demands -- an
end to segregation and equality of opportunity -- gave way to demands
for an
equality of condition and equality of results through affirmative
action,
race-based preferences in hiring and admissions, and a progressive
income tax.
Reparations for slavery are now on the table.
In
response to this revolution, LBJ,
after the rout of Barry Goldwater, exploited his huge congressional
majorities
to launch a governmental revolution, fastening on the nation a vast
array of
social programs that now threaten to bankrupt the republic, even as
they have
created a vast new class of permanent federal dependents.
The
next revolution began at teach-ins
to protest involvement in Vietnam, but climaxed with half a million
marchers
around the White House carrying Viet Cong flags, waving placards with
America
spelled “Amerika” and chanting, “Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh -- the NLF is
going to
win.”
Well,
the NLF didn’t win. It was
crushed in the Tet Offensive. But the North Vietnamese invasion of 1975
did.
Result: a million boat people in the South China Sea, a holocaust in
Cambodia
and poisoned American politics for decades after that American defeat.
By
the time Vietnam ended, many in the
antiwar movement had become anti-American and come to regard her role
in
history not as great and glorious but as an endless catalogue of
crimes, from
slavery to imperialism to genocide against the Native Americans.
The
fourth revolution was social -- a
rejection by millions of young of the moral code by which their parents
sought
to live.
This
produced demands for legalized
drugs, condoms for school kids, a right to terminate pregnancies with
subsidized
abortions and the right of homosexuals to marry.
The
first political success of the
integrated revolutions came with capture of the Democratic Party in
1972,
though Sen. George McGovern was crushed by Nixon in a 49-state
landslide.
The
conservative triumph of the
half-century was surely the election of Ronald Reagan, who revived
America’s
spirit, restored her prosperity and presided over her peaceful Cold War
victory. Yet even Reagan failed to curtail an ever-expanding federal
government.
Did
then the conservatives fail?
In
defense of the right, it needs be
said. They were no more capable of preventing these revolutionary
changes in
how people think and believe about God and man, right and wrong, good
and evil,
than were the French of the Vendee to turn back the revolution of 1789.
Converting
a people to new ways of
thinking about fundamental truths is beyond the realm of politics and
requires
a John Wesley or a St. Paul.
The
social, political and moral
revolutions of the 1960s have changed America irretrievably. And they
have put
down roots and converted a vast slice of the nation.
In
order to love one’s country, said
Edmund Burke, one’s country ought to be lovely. Is it still? Reid
Buckley,
brother of Bill, replies, “I am obliged to make a public declaration
that I
cannot love my country. ... We are Vile.”
And
so what is the conservative’s role
in an America many believe has not only lost its way but seems to be
losing its
mind?
What
is it now that conservatives must
conserve?
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Events
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