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'Where The Right Went Wrong' (Patrick J. Buchanan)- New York Times Book Review
NY Times ^ | September 12, 2004 | Michael Kazin

Posted on 09/18/2004 6:07:04 PM PDT by Former Military Chick

Where The Right Went Wrong: How Neoconservatives Subverted the Reagan Revolution and Hijacked the Bush Presidency. By Patrick J. Buchanan. 264 pp. Thomas Dunne Books/ St. Martin's Press. $24.95.

Underneath the pugnacious hide of Patrick J. Buchanan beats a heart of pure nostalgia. He longs to return to the high-tariff reign of William McKinley, mourns the passing of such budget-slashing icons as Robert Taft and Barry Goldwater and dedicates his new book to Ronald Reagan, who, he says, ''never took precipitate or rash action'' abroad. Buchanan's reverence for late, great conservatives is unbounded by epoch or nationality. He even praises Urban II, the ''extraordinarily eloquent'' French-born pope who inspired the First Crusade.

The former presidential candidate and longtime journalist has a mission, of course. He wants to marshal this glorious past against ''impersonators'' in and close to the Bush administration who have ''hijacked'' his movement. His enemies list of neoconservatives has unsurprising names: Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Irving and William Kristol, Charles Krauthammer and Jonah Goldberg. He detests them most of all for promoting the invasion of Iraq, for arrogantly believing it would spark a democratic revolution throughout the Middle East. But the self-described populist conservative is still fighting a war against un-Christian cultural elites. And he charges most of the same neoconservatives with abetting the godless enemy on nearly every major issue -- from gay marriage to abortion to immigration. To save the nation, the right must be cleansed.

Characteristically, Buchanan blasts away at more targets than he hits. His manifesto includes a stirring, if familiar, call to revive America's heavy industries; those who've allowed the manufacturing base to wither, he declares, are guilty of ''economic treason.'' Elsewhere, however, he writes that China poses little threat of war because its ''prosperity depends on us.'' That confident free trader needs to talk to his agitated protectionist alter ego. When not running for president, Buchanan is a regular participant in the shouting matches the networks call public affairs. In his many illogical moments, it shows.

Such belligerence weakens the main thrust of his book: a vigorous argument against the war in Iraq. A traditionalist to his core, Buchanan despises policy intellectuals who would ''define morality for all peoples for all times.'' He points out, correctly, that devout Muslims do not hate the United States because they envy our wealth and freedom, as President Bush would have it. They resist the erotic, feel-good popular culture Americans celebrate and sell around the globe and don't like being occupied by a military whose definition of evildoers clashes with theirs. But Buchanan's defense of the original crusaders negates his cautious relativism. The religious warrior makes an unconvincing apostle of peace.

Alert readers will have spotted another troubling flaw in Buchanan's worldview. His roster of warmongers is made up exclusively of Jews. But it was Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, Condoleezza Rice and the president himself -- good Christians all -- who sent all those armed Americans into Iraq. Aside from Wolfowitz, the Jewish neocons could only cheer them on from their op-ed pages, think tanks and talk shows.

Buchanan thinks he can explain this discrepancy between conservatives who decide and those who merely advocate. The neconservatives, he claims, saw that George W. Bush was ignorant about world politics and cleverly persuaded him to think like them. At one point, he compares Richard Perle's ''delight at first meeting the future president'' with Fagin's ''initial encounter with the young Oliver Twist.'' After four decades of close political combat, Buchanan seems unwilling to abandon such abusive rhetoric. It may be as essential to him as God and the flag, even while it confirms his status as a political pariah. Strangely, he doesn't realize that the president, a born-again Christian, needed no special prompting after the attacks of Sept. 11 to declare a new world war between good and evil.

Pat Buchanan's perpetual irritation with American Jews suggests a larger problem with his style of conservatism. The past to which he would like to return is full of imagined, often contradictory tales. High tariffs under the old G.O.P. were a giant subsidy to industrial companies and the regions they dominated, which is why most foes of big government abhorred them. And to claim that Reagan favored using force only to ''defend the country he loved'' ignores the proxy armies his administration sponsored in Nicaragua and El Salvador, Angola and Afghanistan and the 5,000 American troops who overwhelmed tiny Grenada.

Since the mid-1950's, when William F. Buckley Jr. created National Review, most prominent conservatives have sought to remake the world in the image of the America they cherish. The fall of the Soviet Union and the rise of Market-Leninism in China and Vietnam seemed to vindicate their labors. To demand that they give up this habit now -- when the United States has many enemies but no true rivals -- is naive. Buchanan writes that ''a rebellion is brewing among principled and populist conservatives'' against the quisling hierarchy that rules the Republican Party. But who are these people and why is their revolt so quiet?

The ideologue is caught in a bind of his own choosing. Antiwar liberals can applaud when he writes: ''In 2003, the United States invaded a country that did not threaten us, did not attack us and did not want war with us, to disarm it of weapons we have since discovered it did not have.'' But we cringe at every aspect of his cultural politics. Christian traditionalists love his stands against abortion and gay marriage, but they burn, like President Bush, to convert the benighted. Buchanan is thus left with a casual audience in the millions but a following that is probably a good deal smaller than the 449,000 votes (including those excuse-me ones from Palm Beach County) that he drew in the 2000 election.

In his call to emulate an ideal right that never existed, this tough-talking Jeremiah neglects the practice of leaders from Disraeli to Reagan who managed to thrive in a modern age. Conservatives have prospered only when they adapted their principles to the flow of history. As Tancredi, the young aristocrat in Giuseppe di Lampedusa's great novel, ''The Leopard,'' put it, ''If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change.''

Michael Kazin, the co-author of ''America Divided: The Civil War of the 1960's,'' is writing a biography of William Jennings Bryan. He teaches history at Georgetown University.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: antiwarright; bookreview; patbuchanan; republican; rightwentwrong
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To: PaleoPal

Yes that is why I skip the bs that guys like Buchanan put out.


201 posted on 09/18/2004 10:12:19 PM PDT by Honestfreedom
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To: Joe Hadenuf
Buchanan is an open isolationist, is in favor of severely restricting (some say ending) immigration into the United States, and of repealing NAFTA and raising tariffs on imported goods to protect domestic industry. He is also a harsh critic of American foreign policy and believes that most of America's international actions starting with World War 2 have been unjustified, being largely motivated by imperialist desires. Buchanan's belief that the German Nazi regime was not a threat to American interests or national safety have made some of his critics accuse him of being an apologist for the fascist state. Buchanan has a record of anti-Semitic comments. William Bennett has described Pat as "flirting with fascism" and Alan Keyes accused Buchanan staffers of appealing to racist and anti-Semitic voters. He has said that the Holocaust was barbaric and a tragedy; he also has been known to flirt with Holocaust Revisionism. In a March 17, 1990 column, he claimed that the diesel engines used to suffocate inmates at Treblinka could "not emit enough carbon monoxide to kill anybody." Buchanan believes that the Nazi regime in Germany and the Soviet regime in Russia would have in time annihilated each other, and thus America's contribution was not necessary, and may have in fact even been counter-productive.
202 posted on 09/18/2004 10:16:50 PM PDT by af_vet_1981
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To: af_vet_1981

I like Buchanan.


203 posted on 09/18/2004 10:21:13 PM PDT by Joe Hadenuf (I failed anger management class, they decided to give me a passing grade anyway)
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To: Joe Hadenuf
I like Buchanan.

Is it his flirtation with facism, antisemitic comments, or political alliance with leftists that is likable ?

204 posted on 09/18/2004 10:24:31 PM PDT by af_vet_1981
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To: Former Military Chick; rmlew; Yehuda; Clemenza
Buchanan's book is too expensive to buy as toilet paper. I will stick to Scott tissue. I can get it at the supermarket for 99 cents.



205 posted on 09/18/2004 10:36:19 PM PDT by Cacique (quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat)
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Comment #206 Removed by Moderator

To: Former Military Chick
If Buchanan were true to Ronald Reagan, he would never have violated the 11th commandment. Thou shall not criticize thy fellow Republican. However I am grateful for Pat destroying the Reform Party. Pat come home!!
207 posted on 09/18/2004 10:45:37 PM PDT by Dave Burns
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To: Former Military Chick
And ... For those who like to read reviews instead of purchasing the book. I won't miss not reading this book.
208 posted on 09/18/2004 11:06:53 PM PDT by WOSG (George W Bush / Dick Cheney - Right for our Times!)
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To: Gumption; Cacique; Former Military Chick; PaleoPal; Willie Green; Paleo Conservative
Read Death of the West and A Republic not an Empire.
Pat sees the threat of the Islamists. He simply does not believe that we can defeat them now. In his praise for Nixon's Vietnam policy and Neville Chamberlain's policy at Munich, we see Pat's ploy. He wants to buy time for the west. He sees a unified Islamist Middle East as inevitable. Thus he supports pulling out.
His policy of ending most US support for Israel while formalizing a security guarantee is similar to the Ford policy in Vietnam. He knows that we will not go to war to save Israel, given that Pat uses this as an epithet to attack the iraq campaign. It is an empty promise. He is willing to watch Israel fall, in the hope that it buys us time and is an impetus to end the demographic threats we face.
209 posted on 09/18/2004 11:11:49 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: MegaSilver

"I don't agree with Buchanan on everything."

Well, that's a relief, because PB's ideas on foreign policy and trade are idiotic. Iraq is part of the GWOT, yet Pat's in a pre-9/11 hangup with the Joooz. It's almost as if he'd rather have yassir arafat running israel than a jewish PM.


http://freedomstruth.blogspot.com


210 posted on 09/18/2004 11:12:29 PM PDT by WOSG (George W Bush / Dick Cheney - Right for our Times!)
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To: MegaSilver

Take a deep breath. Many of us attack Sharon all the time. Stop reading LF and look at posts.


211 posted on 09/18/2004 11:14:07 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: Iscool
Go find Pat's article Cui Bueno from TAC and tell me that he is not an anti-Semite.
212 posted on 09/18/2004 11:15:38 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: af_vet_1981

Buchanan's idea of fortress America is a freaking joke. Pat isn't qualified to lead a group of boyscouts let alone run the USA.


213 posted on 09/18/2004 11:22:29 PM PDT by John Lenin
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To: John Lenin
LOL!

One thing I have to give buchanan credit on. He's united all conservatives on at least one point...he's a pathetic joke.

214 posted on 09/18/2004 11:24:56 PM PDT by CWOJackson
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To: Rightwing Conspiratr1

You do realise taht Pat does not want us to have more divisions. He believes in fortress America.


215 posted on 09/18/2004 11:27:32 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: Grey Ghost II

Not likely, since we now have a naval attache in Israel to prevent mistakes like that.


216 posted on 09/18/2004 11:28:29 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: PaleoPal
Anyone who is against the war is an anti-semite. Anyone who opposes the Trotskyite neocons is an anti-semite.
Which neocon is a Trotskyite?
217 posted on 09/18/2004 11:30:13 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: PaleoPal
PAt had nothing toi do with saving Demjanjuk's life. Israel tries war criminals. The Russians turned over documents showing that Demjanjuk was a guard at another camp. Thus, Demjanjuk was proven innocent.
Demjanjuk should be stripped of citizenship and tried for the crimes he did commit.
218 posted on 09/18/2004 11:41:32 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: spodefly; Tax-chick
I think Pat is cute!

There was a time back in 1992 that I thought Barbara Boxer was hot. The I got sober...

219 posted on 09/19/2004 12:06:02 AM PDT by Clemenza (I LOVE Halliburton, SUVs and Assault Weapons. Any Questions?)
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To: Clemenza
There was a time back in 1992 that I thought Barbara Boxer was hot. The I got sober...
You've spent far too much time on LawnGuyland.
Enjoy the babes in the Pacific Northwest.
220 posted on 09/19/2004 12:29:05 AM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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