[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

TRUTH About John McCain's Service - Forgotten History

Bombshell Fauci Documentary Nails The Whole COVID Charade

Joe Rogan expressed deep concern that Joe Biden and Ukrainian President Zelensky will start World War III

Fury in Memphis after attempted murder suspect who ambushed FedEx employee walks free without bail

Tehran preparing for attack against Israel: Ayatollah Khamenei's aide

Huge shortage plagues Israeli army as losses mount in Lebanon, Gaza

Researchers Find Unknown Chemical In Drinking Water Posing "Potential Human Health Concern"

Putin visibly ‘shocked’ by US green-light for long-range missiles to strike inside Russia

The Problem of the Bitcoin Billionaires

Biden: “We’re leaving America in a better place today than when we came into office four years ago … "

Candace Owens: Gaetz out, Bondi in. There's more to this than you think.

OMG!!! Could Jill Biden Be Any MORE Embarrassing??? - Anyone NOTICE This???

Sudden death COVID vaccine paper published, then censored, by The Lancet now republished with peer review

Russian children returned from Syria

Donald Trump Indirectly Exposes the Jewish Neocons Behind Joe Biden's Nuclear War

Key European NATO Bases in Reach of Russia's Oreshnik Hypersonic Missile

Supervolcano Alert in Europe: Phlegraean Fields Activity Sparks Scientists Attention (Mass Starvation)

France reacted to the words of a US senator on sanctions against allies

Trump nominates former Soros executive for Treasury chief

SCOTUS asked to review if Illinois can keep counting mail-in ballots 2 weeks after election day

The Real Reason Government Workers Are Panicking About ElonÂ’s New Tracking System

THEY DON'T CARE ANYMORE!

Young Americans Are Turning Off The TV

Taxpayer Funded Censorship: How Government Is Using Your Tax Dollars To Silence Your Voice

"Terminator" Robot Dog Now Equipped With Amphibious Capabilities

Trump Plans To Use Impoundment To Cut Spending - What Is It?

Mass job losses as major factory owner moves business overseas

Israel kills IDF soldiers in Lebanon to prevent their kidnap

46% of those deaths were occurring on the day of vaccination or within two days

In 2002 the US signed the Hague Invasion Act into law


Neocon Nuttery
See other Neocon Nuttery Articles

Title: From Lincoln Republican to Neocon
Source: LewRockwell.com
URL Source: http://www.lewrockwell.com/gottfried/gottfried103.html
Published: Sep 29, 2007
Author: Paul Gottfried
Post Date: 2007-09-29 18:47:57 by Peetie Wheatstraw
Keywords: None
Views: 202
Comments: 3

Although Bill Hawkins and I have not agreed on all political and historical questions, until this week I continued to respect him as a principled, intelligent person. Hawkins, or so it seemed to me, was a Lincoln Republican, who praised the consolidated national government achieved by the victorious Union side in the War Between the States. He also consistently applied his nationalist principles taken from an earlier age by being a critic of liberal immigration policies and an outspoken advocate of tariffs. Although his views would not appeal to readers of this website, as someone who can appreciate nation states and the efforts involved in building and sustaining them (I am to Ralph Raico’s consternation an admirer of Bismarck), I could tolerate, even if I did not entirely share, Hawkins’s politics. Certainly I would not have put him into the category of those assorted half-recovered Trotskyists, global democratic warmongers, and salesmen for propositional nationhood exemplified by neoconservatism.

But, to all appearances, I got Hawkins wrong. In a featured diatribe in the neoconservative-financed FrontPageMag.com, this erstwhile friend of mine went to town on the "leftist, anti-American libertarians" and other members of the "defective Right" who oppose our military presence in Iraq. Now I have not always agreed with Justin Raimondo, whom Hawkins debated at a John Randolph Club meeting in Washington last week. Justin and I debated (more or less) the same issue, whether the US should withdraw from Iraq at once, over which he and Hawkins famously locked horns a few days ago.

Having declared where I’ve stood on this issue, it also seems to me that Hawkins’s rant against Justin and other Ron Paul supporters leaves much to be desired. Hawkins talks up the "authentic conservative tradition," but is oblivious to the fact that avoiding foreign entanglements was a keystone of that tradition for decades. The paradigmatic American conservative circa 1950 was the quasi-isolationist Robert Taft and not the democratic crusaders FDR and Truman. If what Hawkins says about the antiwar Right really being the "anti-American Left," is true, why doesn’t the Left happily embrace Raimondo, Rockwell, Paul Craig Roberts, Ron Paul and all of the other paleolibertarian and paleoconservative opponents of the war, who are supposedly hugging the left? (By the way, I am surprised that Hawkins didn’t notice at the meeting he attended that old-line traditionalists as well as libertarians were calling for immediate American withdrawal from Iraq.) The liberal establishment does not reach out ecstatically to Hawkins’s "disagreeable lot" because they know and hate those who are opposing the war from the right. Nobody in his right mind would confuse Ron Paul’s partisans with anyone on the left. Nor have the neocons done so. Hardly ever do Hawkins’s new-found buds allow antiwar figures from the right, as opposed to those from the left, onto their talk shows. The one time I saw the rule broken, when Ron Paul appeared on the O’Reilly Factor, the guest was treated with shocking rudeness. This was all the more telling since I heard O’Reilly last night gushing all over his honored guest Jesse Jackson, who presumably also opposes the Iraqi War.

Hawkins’s remarks on Murray Rothbard as an anti-American Communist sympathizer are also open to question, despite the fact that Murray once did seek an accommodation with New Leftist opponents of the war in Vietnam, an undertaking that he then rapidly abandoned when it became obvious that the two sides were divided by too many domestic issues. As for the notion of Murray applauding Soviet despotism, this is a vicious urban legend. This great Austrian economist was a champion of laissez-faire capitalism and an enemy of socialism. However, he was an opponent of Cold War militarism and the national security state, and an early advocate of détente, which disturbed the National Review crowd, with whose views at the time I happened to agree. But that was quite different from being the leftist that William F. Buckley presents, in an attack obituary written immediately after Murray’s death.

As Fate would have it, Hawkins highlights (and links to) that attack in his brief against Murray. Unfortunately Buckley’s credibility is suspect, as Hawkins would learn from consulting the relevant chapters in my just-published book on American conservatism. Buckley has constantly laundered the history of the postwar conservative movement that he founded and then handed over to the neocons. This has involved misrepresenting those whom he cast out of his movement, including Murray, and exaggerating the compatibility of the neoconservatives with those whom these new friends were allowed to supplant. It is hard to think of any public intellectual in my lifetime who has played more loosely with the facts surrounding his own accomplishments and misdeeds. There is for example nothing that Buckley or his liberal luncheon companions say about his attacks on Old Right enemies in the early postwar conservative movement that seems to check out.

Finally I am taken aback by Hawkins’s newly discovered affection for the true American Right, the neoconservatives, whom he is protecting against "the ignorant bashing" of the "defective Right." I remember a time when Hawkins joined in this bashing, when it came from an older friend Anthony Harrigan, whose views on the neoconservatives were the same as mine. Having written several books on these former "liberals who shifted right during the Cold War, attracted by the strong foreign and defense policies that were the hallmark of traditional conservatism," I do not consider myself "ignorant" about their activities. Most of them ended up as Cold Warriors but not as "traditional conservatives." They managed to turn the later phase of the Cold War into a neo-Wilsonian crusade to spread their version of democracy worldwide. With due respect to Hawkins, neocons did "pervert foreign policy," at least as that policy was understood on the anti-Communist right of the 1950s. They also brought along their own massive baggage when they took over the conservative movement, e.g., neo-Wilsonian, ultra-Zionist enthusiasms, and a willingness to move constantly leftward on social issues.

Neocons have ruled the "conservative movement" with an iron fist and as someone whom they kicked out of it as unceremoniously as they did Murray Rothbard, despite the fact that I never opposed the Cold War, I recognize democratic centralism when I see it. These are all criticisms Hawkins too, if memory serves, once made in conversation, and I would be gratified to learn why he has suddenly swerved over to the other side, and at an age when he is not likely to benefit from his new, powerful patrons.


Poster Comment:

It seems neo-con lawn jockey William Hawkins' article "The Defective Right" in Neo-Con Izvestia dba "FrontPageMag" this past Thursday was a real "shot across the bow" for libertarians and palaeo's.

This article makes me recall sadly a former friend, who denounced NAFTA to me when it was enacted 15 years ago, denounced NATO's expansion into Eastern Europe, and introduced Ron Paul to me as the great constitutionalist of our era, yet who perversely and unaccountably is now a "regime loyalist," for example, cold-bloodedly dismissing the barbaric destruction of Lebanon by Israel the summer of 2006, and discussing with chilling casualness the use of "tactical nukes" against the "threat" of Iran. I once asked him with genuine concern what had happened to the old friend who wanted to restore the republic, not "go abroad in search of monsters to destroy." He replied, simply and ominously, "They [by which I understood him to mean the neo-con vermin] won."

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Peetie Wheatstraw (#0)

what had happened to the old friend who wanted to restore the republic, not "go abroad in search of monsters to destroy."

Another "why the change" is Cheney, from his early-'90s stand on not going all the way to Baghdad in Gulf War I.

In Cheney's case it could be mental/emotional illness. Maybe in your friend Bill Hawkins as well. I've seen Alzheimer's do similar things to people.


I've already said too much.

MUDDOG  posted on  2007-09-29   19:17:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: All (#0) (Edited)

Paul Gottfried, in a comment on a post by Justin Raimondo concerning Hawkins' article at "Taki's Top Drawer," also had this interesting tidbit of speculation:

I have written an even longer piece on this dismal subject for Lew Rockwell’s website [my note: i.e., the article posted on this thread]. What is left unsaid is that Bill [Hawkins] may need the money, and the neocons can provide a lot of it for those who turn on their paleo friends. This is a very old story; it goes back to how the “evil ones” took over the now cannibalized conservative movement.

If you can't beat 'em, buy 'em.

"Aux armes, citoyens! Formez vos bataillons! Marchons! Marchons! Qu'un sang impur abreuve nos sillons!"

Peetie Wheatstraw  posted on  2007-09-29   19:26:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Peetie Wheatstraw (#0)

"They [by which I understood him to mean the neo-con vermin] won."

that gave me chills.

christine  posted on  2007-09-29   19:40:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]