Redstate
The Hungry and
the Well Fed
By Erick Erickson
October 29th, 2013
In
William F. Buckley’s
mission statement for National Review, written in 1955, he did not
mention winning elections. That’s not to say it is unimportant,
unneeded, or unwanted. But it was not mentioned. In fact, Buckley
wrote, “We believe that truth is neither arrived at nor illuminated
by monitoring election results, binding though these are for other
purposes, but by other means, including a study of human experience.”
What was
mentioned was
standing athwart history yelling stop. Buckley sought to build a
National Review that provided commentary on the landscape of American
politics and culture, building an intellectual case for conservatism.
Today’s National Review is willing occasionally to yell Stop. It
did so notably on the proliferation of porn in culture. But on many
of the day’s fights, the editorial positions read more like those
of the Republican National Committee than the standard bearer of
American conservatism.
In 1955,
William F. Buckley
wrote,
Conservatives
in this
country — at least those who have not made their peace with the New
Deal, and there is serious question whether there are others — are
non-licensed nonconformists; and this is dangerous business in a
Liberal world, as every editor of this magazine can readily show by
pointing to his scars. Radical conservatives in this country have an
interesting time of it, for when they are not being suppressed or
mutilated by the Liberals, they are being ignored or humiliated by a
great many of those of the well-fed Right, whose ignorance and
amorality have never been exaggerated for the same reason that one
cannot exaggerate infinity.
The
present editors of
National Review, over the last several years, have made it clearer
and clearer that they now speak mostly for the well-fed right and not
for conservatives hungering for a fight against the leviathan. They
have made their peace with the New Deal, moving beyond Buckley. For
that matter, Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, and most of the defunders have
largely made their peace with the New Deal. And still National Review
is too timid to join the merry band of defunders themselves too timid
to approach the parameters under which William F. Buckley started his
charge. The editors have conformed to the politics of necessary
victories instead of the policy of standing “athwart history,
yelling Stop, at a time when no one is inclined to do so, or to have
much patience with those who so urge it.”
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