The “revelation” of the rampant antisemitism problem on the right kicked off a sub-debate about the responsibility of the so-called post-liberals for the turn of the conservative movement into open bigotry and unreason. But before we attend to that: What is “post-liberalism?” There are two senses in contemporary usage. One is a self-conscious intellectual movement of the right that believes that liberalism, as a philosophy of economic and moral individualism, is corrosive to both personal and collective well-being and should be replaced with a vision of the “common good,” usually defined through a synthesis of conservative Catholic social teaching and nationalism. The other sense describes the general turn on both the left and right away from the liberal consensus of the late 20th and early 21st centuries—often called neoliberalism by its critics—towards other traditions like Marxism or the aforementioned Catholic Integralism. The implication in both usages is that liberalism is not merely being opposed, but transcended in some way: the good things in liberalism, like pluralism and toleration, would be preserved, while the bad stuff, like alienation and class stratification, would be eliminated. It sounds nice. And that’s the problem: It’s essentially a euphemism. David French, in his critique of the post-liberal intellectuals, blames them for the lurch into fascism:
I actually think he’s got it kind of backwards. The post-liberals were following the crowd but believed they were guiding it. “Post-liberalism,” “national conservatism,” etc., are all attempts to come up with a kind of fascism lite: ex post facto attempts to contain an explosion of reactionary energy and make it respectable and rational. Not only a fascism lite, but also an antisemitism lite and therefore a national socialism lite: instead of Jews, there would be “Jews” sotto voce: references to cosmopolitanism and “globalist elites.” There would be “nationalism,” but somehow not racism. It turns out that the only people who want fascism lite are the diet fascists. And I totally agree with French that they are partly responsible for contributing to the atmosphere of moral collapse. Ross Douthat acknowledges that the post-liberals are not masters of events when he writes:
I would go one step further: if you produce propaganda for a regime, you are partly culpable for what that propaganda covers up or encourages. It doesn’t matter if someone else would have done it in your place. That’s what war criminals say: It’s a moral evasion of the gravest order. And this gets to my disagreement with Douthat. His version of events turns everything into grand historical forces, where individuals have no agency and therefore no responsibility. Trumpism, etc, is an inevitability. In this, he reminds me of the “conservative revolutionaries” of Weimar, people like Spengler, Heidegger, and Jünger, who may have disdained the vulgarity of Hitlerism but whose gloomy prophecies of civilizational decadence and decline also gave it a dolorous glamor. I pointed out to Douthat that this invocation of Zeitgeist was exactly what Hannah Arendt was criticizing in her essay “Personal Responsibility Under Dictatorship:”
This abstracting and intellectualizing tendency—tracing everything back to “ Plato or Gioacchino da Fiore or Hegel or Nietzsche, or to modern science and technology, or to nihilism or the French Revolution”—is alive and well among the post-liberalism. It’s the presence of these “greater forces” that makes Douthat call for mutual understanding rather than recrimination. When I put this problematic to him, Douthat had two responses:
It’s not hateful to say the truth: only one side has both the theory and practice of ending constitutional rule in this country. And you and I don’t live in a dictatorship, Ross, but can the same really be said of the people grabbed by ICE and sent to some hellish torture dungeon overseas, beyond the reach of the law? We do not live in a dictatorship yet, but a growing number already do. Douthat admitted to me that Trump’s designs were tyrannical. But he said that the post-liberals were not united in their support of dictatorship in principle. I would reply, "Yes, many of them want to pretend what’s going on is something else.” Not to mention that to praise or excuse a tyrant out of love or ambition or perversity rather than fear is more blameworthy than if we did live under a total dictatorship; they don’t even have the excuse of being afraid for their lives or livelihoods. I already mentioned in a previous newsletter Douthat’s response to me:
To me, it is another evasion. We can see now very clearly what the more dangerous and destructive form is. And it has no logical bearing on the moral question at hand: is this regime, in the here and now, detestable? That some future crimes might be committed does not make a crime today any less of one. Abstractions without principles are mere euphemisms. All these phrases: “post-liberalism,” “national conservatism,” etc., etc., are just ways to paper over what’s happening in the here and now: rampant lawlessness, cruelty, and corruption. They allow people to avoid using their judgment about what’s in front of them. More to the point, they are essentially lies. I want to quote another part of that same Arendt essay, which has to do with the breakdown of judgment:
Yes, intellectuals may not be able to bend great social forces to their will, but they are ultimately responsible for the judgments they make. To judge the present as anything less than obscene is to contribute to the obscenity. Post-liberalism means nothing. Invite your friends and earn rewardsIf you enjoy Unpopular Front, share it with your friends and earn rewards when they subscribe. |