The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Columnists’ thoughts on the nation’s headlines

-

Find out the hot opinions of the day.

The mindset that winning and fighting are selfjustif­ying made the conservati­ve movement vulnerable to infiltrati­on by the alt-right. Last year around this time (and the year before that), I was arguing with some of my fellow conservati­ves about the insanity of finding any common cause whatsoever with the so-called altright. The issue wasn’t that every avowed nationalis­t who claimed membership in the alt-right was a Nazi or Klansman. It was that the alt-right was open to Nazis and Klansmen. And why wouldn’t these newly minted white supremacis­ts welcome such pioneering organizati­ons to their cause? Right-wing cynics, hucksters, and opportunis­ts deliberate­ly blurred these distinctio­ns in the name of a right-wing popular front. Steve Bannon, until recently a White House consiglier­e, is by most accounts not a bigot in his personal dealings. But when he ran Breitbart, he had no problem making it a “platform” for the alt-right. Internet entertaine­r Milo Yiannopoul­os was a Breitbart star for his defenses of the alt-right and its supposedly hilarious Holocaust jokes. He was let go (and disinvited from the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference) only when it was revealed he was equally broad-minded about some expression­s of pedophilia as he was about some expression­s of Nazism.

In Bannon’s case, and in the case of so many on the right who pulled their oars to the beat of Bannon’s drum, the motivation wasn’t racism or anti-Semitism; it was the need to win at all costs (or to make a profit). Win what? Well, that varied. At first it was the war on the “establishm­ent,” including Fox News. Then one alleged civil war on the right or another. And, ultimately, the fight to get Donald Trump the nomination and the presidency.

As the primaries wound down, the imperative for unity intensifie­d. Why look under rocks when you can use them as stepping stones to victory? Besides, Trump was making it as clear as possible that he welcomed support and praise from any quarter. The Right’s game of footsie with the alt-right ostensibly ended when Trump won. Bannon disavowed them once he made it to the White House. Like France after the liberation, it seemed everyone was suddenly a member of the resistance and nobody was a collaborat­or. At least, that is, until the president invited speculatio­n that the old popular front is still operationa­l. Whatever its status at the White House, the alt-right thinks it will replace the traditiona­l Right. It won’t, for the simple reason that the vast, overwhelmi­ng majority of conservati­ves are patriotic and decent, just like Americans generally. They don’t want anything to do with people who want to overthrow the Constituti­on and set up racial Bantustans.

No, the real threat to traditiona­l conservati­sm is the mindset that made it possible to form even a theoretica­l alliance with the alt-right in the first place: the idea that winning and fighting are self-justifying. Over the last decade, many on the right have convinced themselves that the real problem with conservati­sm is a lack of will. They admiringly quote left-wing activist Saul Alinsky and claim that “we” have to be like “them” by doing whatever is necessary to “win.” During the campaign, when Trump attacked the ethnicity of an American judge or the parents of a fallen Muslim U.S. soldier, the response from his defenders on the right was usually, “At least he fights!” Such amorality was warranted, many explained, because if Clinton had won, America would be “over.” National-security official Michael Anton, then writing from the safety of anonymity, dubbed it a “Flight 93 election” and argued that conservati­ves must do anything for victory or accept certain death. In an interview with New York magazine, Anton went further. “If we must have Caesar,” he said, “who do you want him to be? One of theirs? Or one of yours (ours)?”

The election is over. Yet that spirit not only endures, it has intensifie­d. Trump’s conservati­ve critics, or “apostates” as Conrad Black calls us, face the same ultimatum. “The choice, for sane conservati­ves,” Black writes, “is Trump or national disaster.” Black is hardly alone in making this or similar cases. The upshot of them all is that the test for “sane” (or real or good or true) conservati­ves is loyalty to the president, not to any coherent body of ideas or ideals. Even truth takes a back seat.

I’d point out that such thinking could invite the worst and most opportunis­tic creatures to infiltrate the movement. Except they already have.

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg The National Review
Jonah Goldberg The National Review

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States