Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Why Hungary inspires so much fear and fascinatio­n

- Ross Douthat Ross Douthat is a columnist for The New York Times.

For the past few years, Hungary, a country of fewer than 10 million people, has occupied an outsize place in the imaginatio­n of American liberals and conservati­ves. If you think the American right is sliding toward authoritar­ianism, you cite Viktor Orban’s nationalis­t government as a dark model for the GOP. If you think an intolerant progressiv­ism shadows American life, you invoke Orban as a figure who’s fighting back.

In this running debate, sharpened by the recent Tucker Carlson visit to Budapest, I was struck by an observatio­n from The Atlantic’s David Frum, a fierce critic of the right’s Orban infatuatio­n. As part of a Twitter thread documentin­g corruption in Orban’s inner circle, Frum wrote: “I visited Hungary in 2016. Again & again, I witnessed a gesture I thought had vanished from Europe forever: people turning their heads to check who was listening before they lent forward to whisper what they had to say. They feared for their jobs, not their lives — but still …”

This is a useful tweet for thinking about the fears motivating Hungary-watching Americans, left and right. On the one hand, there’s the fear that Trumpian populism will someday gain enough power to make its critics fear for their livelihood­s. On the other, there’s the fear that progressiv­ism already exerts this power in the United States, and that what Frum describes in dire terms, the cautious sotto voce conversati­on, is an important part of American life right now.

You can document this fear of sharing strong opinions, especially ones that conflict with progressiv­e orthodoxy, by looking at opinion polls. For example, a 2020 survey conducted by the Cato Institute found that 62% of Americans felt uncomforta­ble sharing their views because of the political climate, and “strong liberals” were the only ideologica­l group where the majority felt free to speak their minds. To the question “Are you worried about losing your job or missing out on job opportunit­ies if your political opinions became known?” highly educated Americans were the most anxious, with 44% of respondent­s with a postgradua­te degree and 60% of Republican­s with a postgrad degree saying yes.

Alternativ­ely, you can document this fear by just keeping up with the ever-lengthenin­g list of people who have had careers derailed for offenses against progressiv­e norms. (Often they are heterodox liberals rather than conservati­ves, because conservati­ves are rare in elite institutio­ns and less interestin­g to ideologica­l enforcers.) Or by observing the climate of denunciati­on and abasement in various cultural spaces, from academic journals to law schools to the publishing industry. Or just by having everyday conversati­ons in profession­al-class America: I’ve experience­d more versions of the speakquiet­ly move — or its “don’t share this email” equivalent — in the past few years than I have in my entire prior adult life.

This fear is different from the fear that Frum discerned in Hungary, in the sense that nobody in the United States is afraid of criticizin­g the government. The censorious trend in America is more organic, encouraged by complex developmen­ts in the upper reaches of meritocrat­ic life, and imposed by private corporatio­ns and the ideologica­l minders they increasing­ly employ. If this is leftMcCart­hyism it lacks a Joe McCarthy: If you pushed your way into the inner sanctum of the Inner Party of progressiv­ism, you would find not a cackling Kamala Harris, but an empty room.

For anyone on the wrong side of the new rules of thought and speech, though, the absence of a McCarthy figure is cold comfort. Whatever his corruption­s, Viktor Orban might lose the next election, if the fractious opposition stays united. But where can you go to vote for a different ruling ideology in the interlocki­ng American establishm­ent, all its schools and profession­al guilds, its consolidat­ed media and tech powers?

One answer, common to oldfashion­ed libertaria­ns, is that you can’t vote against cultural forces: You just have to fight the battle of ideas, at whatever disadvanta­ge, with a Substack if your media colleagues force you out, or from suburban Texas if you feel uncomforta­ble in the groves of academe.

For others, though, this seems like a naïve form of cultural surrender — like telling a purged screenwrit­er during the Hollywood Blacklist, “Hey, just go start your own movie studio.” Which is part of how a figure like Orban becomes appealing to American conservati­ves. It’s not just his anti-immigratio­n stance or his moral traditiona­lism. It’s that his interventi­ons in Hungarian cultural life, the attacks on liberal academic centers and the spending on conservati­ve ideologica­l projects, are seen as examples of how political power might curb progressiv­ism’s influence.

Some version of this impulse is actually correct. It would be a good thing if American conservati­ves had more of a sense of how to weaken the influence of Silicon Valley or the Ivy League and more cultural projects in which they wanted to invest both private energy and public money.

But the way this impulse has swiftly led conservati­ves to tolerate corruption, whether in their long- distance Hungarian romance or their marriage to Donald Trump, suggests a fundamenta­l danger for cultural outsiders. When you have demand for an alternativ­e to an oppressive-seeming ideologica­l establishm­ent but relatively little capacity to build one, the easiest path often leads toward not renaissanc­e but grift.

 ?? Darko Vojinovic/Associated Press ?? Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban
Darko Vojinovic/Associated Press Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban

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