National Review
January 28, 2008
A Half Century’s Slander - It isn’t conservatives who must answer
for fascism
by JONAH GOLDBERG
http://nrd.nationalreview.com/article/?q=ODhhMjc5NmM4ZDRlNjZlM2QxMTYzMTQwNTE5NjI3M2M= If you search Lexis-Nexis for articles from just the last two years
in which “Bush” and “fascist” are used in the same sentence, the
results exceed 2,000. Search for the years encompassing his entire
term, and smoke will start to come out of your computer.
A stack of recent books have branded Bush, Cheney, Republicans,
conservatives, the Christian Right, and, of course, “neocons” as
fascists, Nazis, or sympathizers with fascism and Nazism. Feminist
author (and former Gore consultant) Naomi Wolf argues that America
has already gone Nazi, equating the United States of today with the
Germany of the early 1930s. The dyspeptic left-wing journalist Joe
Conason warns that America is on the verge of fascism in It Can
Happen Here. The Pulitzer Prize–winning former New York Times
reporter Chris Hedges’s book on the Christian Right gets straight to
the point, beginning with its title: “American Fascists.”
Today’s F-bombers will tell you that conservatives have brought such
charges on themselves by supporting George W. Bush and “his” War on
Terror. What passes for the Left’s argument is by now so familiar
that we need not dwell on it for long. Nazis cracked down on civil
liberties; America is cracking down on civil liberties. Nazis used
terror and, allegedly, so does the Bush administration. Nazis
invaded countries; America invaded countries. Hitler lied; Bush
lied. Nazis rounded up Jews after labeling them enemies of the
state; Bush is rounding up Muslims and labeling them enemies of the
state. Hitler was a bad guy; Bush is a bad guy. Auschwitz,
Guantanamo: What’s in a name?
But this is nothing new. In 2000, when Bush was still promising a
“humble” foreign policy, Jerrold Nadler denounced Republican efforts
in the Florida recount as having “the whiff of fascism.” Jesse
Jackson lamented that, in the hanging-chad controversy, Holocaust
survivors were being victimized “again.” Earlier that year, Bill
Clinton denounced the Texas GOP platform as a “fascist tract.”
During the fight over the Contract with America, Rep. Charlie Rangel
complained that “Hitler wasn’t even talking about doing these
things.” (This is technically accurate in that Hitler wasn’t pushing
term limits for committee chairmen and “zero based” budgeting.) When
Newt Gingrich invited black congressmen to Capitol Hill social
events, Rep. Major Owens responded by declaring, “These are people
who are practicing genocide with a smile. They’re worse than Hitler.
. . . We’re going to have cocktail-party genocide.”
Ronald Reagan was of course called a fascist by Communists from his
earliest days fighting Reds in Hollywood. Before that, “everyone
knew” that Barry Goldwater was a Nazi or Nazi sympathizer.
Two generations of Hollywood scriptwriters, actors, and producers
have been warning that the fascist peril lurks beneath the surface
of the Right. Pleasantville, Falling Down, Fight Club, American
Beauty, American History X, and countless other films advanced this
idea. In the film adaptation of Tom Clancy’s novel The Sum of All
Fears, the all-too-real threat of Islamist terror is switched to a
cabal of rich, white, conservative businessmen who just happen to be
— you guessed it — Nazis. Even after 9/11, it seems liberals think
the fascist Right is America’s real, and only, existential threat.
* * *
This received wisdom is understandably vexing for conservatives, who
have never had a kind word for fascists or Nazis. I’ve gotten used
to it. When speaking on college campuses, I’ve been called a Nazi
many times. The kids, accustomed to bullying their opponents with
charges of intolerance that would be better aimed at themselves,
rarely expect a response.
“So, tell me,” I usually ask my accuser, “except for the bigotry,
murder, and genocide, what exactly is it about Nazism you don’t
like?”
Taking advantage of the ensuing pierced-tongue-tied silence, I
explain: The Nazis were socialists. The Nazi ideologist Gregor
Strasser put it succinctly: “We are enemies, deadly enemies, of
today’s capitalist economic system with its exploitation of the
economically weak, its unfair wage system, its immoral way of
judging the worth of human beings in terms of their wealth and their
money.” The speech that first attracted a young Adolf Hitler to
fascism was titled “How and by What Means Is Capitalism to Be
Eliminated?” The Nazi-party platform demanded guaranteed jobs, the
“abolition of incomes unearned by work,” the nationalization of all
large corporations and trusts, profit-sharing in all major
industries, expanded old-age insurance, a government takeover of big
department stores (think Wal-Mart), the prohibition of child labor,
and countless other “progressive” reforms.
Then I explain that the Nazis — all in the name of “progress” —
sought to purge the authority of Church and tradition from society,
and to replace them with the supremacy of the state and the dictates
of political correctness. The Nazis partly grew out of and co-opted
the first “green,” youth, and health movements in the West. The
proto-Nazi philosopher (and rabid anti-Semite) Ludwig Klages wrote
one of the founding texts of modern environmentalism, Man and Earth,
which presages most of the contemporary complaints from Al Gore and
others on the environmental left. In 1980, the German Greens
reissued his manifesto to celebrate the founding of their party.
The Nazi war on smoking would make Michael Bloomberg’s heart leap.
Nazis led the world in researching organic foods and alternative
medicines (the concentration camp Dachau boasted the largest
alternative- and organic-medicine research lab in the world).
According to the medical historian Robert Proctor, the National
Socialist “campaign against tobacco and the ‘whole-grain bread
operation’ are, in some sense, as fascist as the yellow stars and
the death camps.”
Nazism rejected open scientific inquiry in favor of research
dictated by “holistic” imperatives, and was tainted with a mysticism
that exalted the “natural order” above reason (such postmodern
buzzwords as “logocentrism” and “deconstructionism” originate in the
Nazi canon). Heinrich Himmler was an animal-rights activist and
proponent of “natural healing.” Hitler and his advisers endlessly
discussed the need to move the entire nation to vegetarianism as a
response to the unhealthiness promoted by capitalism.
And then there were the Italian Fascists. Benito Mussolini was
raised on the mother’s milk of revolutionary socialism. His father,
an ardent socialist who was a member of the First International
along with Marx and Engels, read Das Kapital to young Benito as a
bedtime story. He first earned the title “Il Duce” as leader of
Italy’s Socialist party.
Mussolini’s Fascism was dubbed “right-wing” by orthodox Communists
as a way to discredit dissent from the Bolshevik party line. But
Mussolini and the Italian Fascists remained committed to socialism.
When he was kicked out of the Socialist party solely for supporting
World War I — to “save socialism,” in his words — he responded,
“Whatever happens, you won’t lose me. Twelve years of my life in the
party ought to be sufficient guarantee of my socialist faith.
Socialism is in my blood.”
When you point to these and myriad other facts which support the
conclusion that National Socialism, as well as Italian Fascism, was
a phenomenon of the Left, liberals fall back on a very different
argument. So maybe the National Socialists were socialists after
all, they say. But that’s incidental to the “true nature” of Nazism
and fascism. They only posed as socialists cynically, to attract
more followers. In reality, Nazism and fascism are about war,
racism, and mass murder.
Let’s put aside for a moment the fact that this position is flatly
untrue, and ask what it entails about conservatives. If all the
manifestly leftist attributes of fascism are irrelevant but it’s
still fair to call conservatives Nazis and fascists, then
conservatives must be Nazi-like because we too are murderous bigots.
This is isn’t an argument. It’s slander. And it’s high time we set
the record straight.
* * *