[Salon] He Didn't Like Ike - Claremont Review of Books



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On the subject of those exalted founders of the Conservative Movement, principally William F. Buckley, James Burnham, and Willmorre Kendall, the “thought control Conservatives,” with their fascist-love carried over from Spain to the U.S. Or in Buckley’s case, from his Texas oil rich father. And perhaps Mussolini with time spent in Italy in 1939 on a Buckley family “pilgrimage,” as “Isolationists,” added to by their later ideological kinship/friendship to Jewish German fascist Leo Strauss. When “Neoconservatism” was just a “glint in their eyes!” 

With the aforementioned having to be distinguished from "ordinary Americans” inclined to a “conservative” disposition, who had already adopted the “conservative” label (like Peter Viereck) in opposition to New Deal excesses, which abounded, before these three expropriated it for their budding fascist Movement.  These three right-wing fanatics “Didn’t Like Ike! In fact they despised him! For civil rights issues they opposed him on (contrary to Conservative Right-revisionists), and for his forbearance and arms control efforts with the USSR and China, both of whom the right-wing fanatics wanted preemptive war with; Now!

And when Reagan began to turn to Arms Control and Detente, the surviving two turned on Reagan, for his “Appeasement!” As is well documented. And as I recall from my own experience as a “naive conservative,” when not realizing the actual American-style fascism these three always strove for! Now I do, confirmed by multiple resources, but especially from their own writings. Both public, and personal, to be found in archival research I’ve done. With their writing being what keeps these fascist Zombie"s “minds alive,”  for contemporary generations, with a Trumpite “think tank” and media platform doing so much over the last few years to "reanimate” them. 

Though reinventing them as “Restrainers,” or “would-be Restrainers,” in a fallacious “Right-wing Peacenik tradition,” as what seems a deliberate deception campaign to provide a falsified “history” manufactured to place Trump as part of. Which he is, but of the “real, odious, one,” not the “Peacenik” one being manufactured for him, when his Oligarch backers realized throwing up the usual pro-war Republican was no longer working for them. So like Dr. Frankenstein, they had to create something “new,” a “Right-wing Peacenik,” and create a false “tradition" to place him into to deceive people, and create in their collective consciousness “false memories” of a “lost tradition,” when “Right-wing Conservatives” represented the “Party of Peace.” Which was complete bullshit, if you’ll pardon the _expression_.

This is not to criticize or be judgmental of those who, like me, and friends and family and people whom I respected, then, and now, who self-identified as “conservatives,” and took positions on turbulent domestic issues of the 1950s-1980s deemed more "conservative,” given the context of the times, and those having to do with the Cold War, and who rightfully opposed the Soviet Union, as I did, for its Human Rights record. But it is to belatedly recognize that within that “Anti-Communist/Anti-Soviet” coalition, resided some genuine fascist minded ideologues, calling themselves Conservatives, for reasons of a “deception campaign.” Named Buckley, Burnham, and Kendall, and associates at National Review magazine, as their version of a “non-anti-semitic,” but racist/segregationist/militaristic American version of Der Stürmer! 

With the racist/segregationist part of that fully acknowledged by Buckley, unapologetically, in his “Up from Liberalism,” book of 1959, and re-affirmed in 1968, and ratified by Goldwater in a foreword. A book which could have been plagiarized from Kendall’s writings, as Bozell accused Buckley of, of his own writings, and both did with Kendall’s. And none of that changed for Buckley, except as necessity would later drive it, into at least the late 1980s, if not later. But Buckley never disavowed the innate hyper-militarism of their radical-right “Conservative” ideology. Except for, at the end of his life, Buckley lamented the Iraq War, after he and his magazine, and the writers who he had personally hired, as “Conservatives,” had done so much to incite and promote a “failed war.” Like some of the Nazi’s did at Nuremberg, after their failed war!

Which is presented by Responsible Statecraft’s right-wing as “evidence” of a turn to "Restraint,” in a “classic,” in my opinion, example of historical revisionism and misdirection! Vote Trump, who’s also in that same “tradition" (the "real one,” not the fabricated one), is the subliminal message. As one saw in the more overt messaging in QI programs with such ‘experts” as Trump sycophants Mollie Hemingway and Saurabh Sharma, pronouncing a fabricated “history” of Republican/Conservative foreign policy of “restraint” 🤣 

Just like what is going on currently to falsely present Trump as “conservative,” when in fact he, and his "Israeli Right” allies, represent a the “original meaning,” per Buckley, Burnham, and Kendall, of “Conservative,” as a form of early American fascism in its intent, "growing into Trumpism” today, with all its fascist like qualities retained if not added to!

As described by Haaretz, in regard to Yoram Hazony, “appropriating the past to suit today’s political and ideological purposes,”  is the sine qua non of American Conservatism ever since Leo Strauss arrived in the U.S. lamenting as a fascist that as a Jew, there was no place for him in the Third Reich. And as a fascist, he had to conceal that somewhat in a “democracy,” once he was in the U.S. So he turned to the “Ancients,” and with some revisionism, turned them to his purposes of subterfuge by presenting Athenian admirers of Sparta (pre-fascists), as “democrats,” and using “that” form of democracy to articulate his own yearnings for a fascist state and culture. 

Thus, his focus on Xenophon, Socrates, and Plato (read The Republic, for a fascist “utopia"), and ambiguous writings on Hobbes and Machiavelli, also pre-fascists, written by Strauss, and his disciple Willmoore Kendall, so as not "give the game away.”  

That same model is used today in promoting Trump and Trumpism in the fabricated “Tradition” of "Right-wing Restrainers,”  (“Peaceniks," if you will :-), with reinventing “Traditional Conservatives” as the antithesis of what came later, Neoconservatism,” when in fact, what came later, was the extension, and natural “outgrowth,” of Buckley, Burnham, and Kendall, as the original, ultra-militarists. And correctly identified as “Thought-Control Conservatives,” by Peter Viereck. 

Which distinguishes them somewhat from other self-identified “Conservatives,” like Russell Kirk, whom Willmoore Kendall mocked, in fact. And who didn’t have brains enough to even recognize a distinction, though Kirk too was a McCarthyite.  And Kendall feeling the same contempt for “libertarians. Making it so comical when “libertarians and Kirkian Conservatives” here, as the “Right-wing Peanut Gallery,” take such relish in our Kendallian Traditional Conservative’s routine derision of me for revealing the “real Kendall.” While being too obtuse to realize Kendallianism was, and is, aimed at their elimination! Just as Kirk failed to understand as the “Benevolent Sage of Mecosta,” as attached below. 

Which Murray Rothbard, as an intellectual leader of the Austrian School of libertarianism (whom I once met and had a lovely hour-long conversation with, but I have issues with all of them, including Rothbard’s own fabrications of the “Old Right” of Mencken, who adored Ludendorf!), would have agreed with everything I’ve said about Buckley, Burnham, and Kendall. As he wrote, with an example of his feelings on Kendall below, though he too did not fully comprehend them, foolishly seeing them in “econoministic” terms, in an inept, obtuse, manner. 



Attachment: 4. Reading Dwight Eisenhower Out of the Conservative Movement-1.pdf
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Attachment: Pages from rothbard-the-betrayal-of-the-american-right.pdf
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Attachment: The Benevolent Sage of Mecosta.pdf
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Title: He Didn't Like Ike - Claremont Review of Books

So sharing this article below by West Coast Straussian Claremont Review only for this point;  that William F. Buckley “Didn’t Like Ike.” In fact, he and his fellow “Traditional Conservatives,” as they’re now called, of Buckley, Burnham, and Willmoore Kendall, detested Eisenhower! For Eisenhower’s “moderation,” and refusal to launch a preemptive, even nuclear, war against the USSR and “Red China!” 

Which contradicts “Traditional Conservative’s” claim today that they’re the inheritors of the Eisenhower (though ambiguous) opposition to the Military Industrial Complex and of his “foreign policy restraint.” Which was less “restraint” than the reality of an opposing force, the USSR, imposing “restraint” upon us. 

And omitting as they, the New Right/TradCons/NatCons, do, as another example of their right-wing historical revisionism, that Eisenhower opposed and detested them, vehemently! That is, the “Traditional Conservatives” the New Right of today (Trumpites) claim as their ideological forebears. And no doubt was smart enough to recognize their hand in promoting and building the “Military Industrial Complex,” as their flacks! As we see today with Traditional Conservatives acting the same for Trumpism, and its always constant intent to build the “Greatest Military Ever.” With each year having to outdo the previous in military spending, accounting for Republicans constant demand for even more military spending than the previous year, and of their “opposition.” 

For the reason being that they had not only emerged out of the cesspool of McCarthyism which Eisenhower had opposed, but had helped create it! And provided an ideological rationale for it, to include justifying harm done to the innocents they deliberately swept up in their “Witch Hunts!” And the “Founders” of the Conservative Movement, as anti-Eisenhower, disaffected CIA Officers, primarily Willmoore Kendall as Buckley’s mentor at Yale, and guiding hand in his book celebrating McCarthy, and James Burnham, with Buckley, were absolutists against “foreign policy restraint!” Such as it was under Eisenhower, and the “Traditional Conservatives” were stark-raving mad with their eagerness for, and promotion of, preemptive war with the USSR and China!

To include “preemptive” nuclear war. Allied as they were with equally “Mad” Air Force Officers, like Generals LeMay, Powers, and General/Senator Goldwater. With the latter representing and promoting the Military Industrial Complex in Congress and to the American people. And by way of his friend, Henry “Scoop” Jackson, created a faction within the Democratic Party to oppose the antiwar “McGovernism” which had taken hold in it. As can be seen in actual correspondence in his ASU Archives, contra the (unreliable) memories of those promoting Goldwater’s and his politics today. 

With that “Tradional Conservative” model of Goldwaterism, also largely the creation of the Buckley conspirators through Buckley brother-in-law Brent Bozell’s (the “Catholic Francoist,” like so much of the Buckley family) ghostwriting Goldwater “doctrine,” being an anti-constitutional, hyper-militaristic “model” in US politics that we should never adopt/emulate. But it lives on in the Republican party and especially in Super-Hawks, like Ron DeSantis, Trump, and Haley (now backing Trump). And counter-intuitively perhaps if one hasn’t studied politics in any depth beyond what the major parties present themselves as, in the right-wing of the Democrats, personified in Biden today. And lives on especially in the rabidly right-wing Heritage Foundation and their President Kevin Roberts. With they so exulted by “Realists and Restrainers,” carrying on the the madness of their “Traditional Conservative” ideological forebears, as one can see in their Project 2025 version of Mein Kampf! 

With Project 2025 a template for an authoritarian government in preparation for a Republican taking office in 2025. And calling for an even greater, more massive military buildup designed for offensive war than what Trump kicked off in 2017, which Heritage too had helped design, and implemented. And led naturally to a spurring of fear in our “Enemies,” Russia, China, and Iran, so that they began counter-measures, as “reciprocity” is natural to war, as Clausewitz recognized 3 centuries ago. Leading directly to and eventuating, counter-measures in 2022 to what Trump and his right-wing ally in Poland, Duda, had escalated in Ukraine during Trump’s administration, as Duda and Trump both admit to, proudly! Right-wing Peaceniks, hell!

He Didn't Like Ike

William F. Buckley, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Carter, Clinton, and George W. Bush.

Depending on how you count, Alvin Felzenberg has just published the 10th, 11th, or 12th book about William F. Buckley, Jr., which makes Felzenberg the Larry Fortensky of biography. For those who have given short shrift to the tabloid press over the years, Mr. Fortensky was, depending on how you count, the seventh or eighth husband of Elizabeth Taylor. As the happy couple departed for their honeymoon, Fortensky, a game and ruggedly-built construction worker, reportedly said, “Well, I know what to do, but I’m not sure that I can make it interesting.”

Not to worry: Felzenberg knows what to do and how to make it interesting. A Man and His Presidents: The Political Odyssey of William F. Buckley Jr. is a deeply researched and crisply written story of the man who more than any other synthesized and popularized modern political conservatism. In my estimate—informed by ten or eleven other Buckley books, not to mention a 45-year friendship with Buckley—Felzenberg’s is the most useful and heuristic volume since Buckley associates Linda Bridges and John R. Coyne, Jr.’s Strictly Right: William F. Buckley Jr. and the American Conservative Movement (2007).

The “odyssey” (which often seems more of a straight-line projection of young Buckley’s iron purpose than a storm-tossed and unpredictable voyage) begins with Dwight D. Eisenhower, whom National Review’s early readers will remember as the implausible villain of Buckley’s mid-1950s worldview. Felzenberg, a professor of government and communications at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School who has served in two presidential administrations, attributes this animus to the fact that Ike, for all his well-earned fame and easy charm, was not Robert A. Taft, a “true conservative” in the view not only of young Buckley but of William F. Buckley, Sr.—an important influence on his son’s politics. Both Buckleys, like Taft, had warmed to the America First cause in the late ’30s; both Buckleys, like Taft, had refused to accept New Deal aggrandizement as a permanent feature of American life. And then there was this: young Buckley wanted to start a magazine, and Ike was in the way. Which, I believe, was in part how Eisenhower, the most conservative president of the 20th century save only for Calvin Coolidge and Ronald Reagan, became the bête noire of America’s most influential conservative magazine.

In Felzenberg’s telling, most of Buckley’s relationships with “his” presidents were less consequential than perfunctory. John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush make appearances in these pages, do a brief turn upon the political stage, and then are dismissed in a chapter or less. (Buckley died in 2008, just before Obama ascended the throne.) The exception is a nicely nuanced account of Buckley’s long if low-wattage friendship with George H.W. Bush. The two met at Yale, where as veterans of the wartime military they stood out as being older and more proximately ambitious than many of their classmates. They quickly became big men on campus: Bush as captain of the baseball team, Buckley as chairman of the Yale Daily News. And both were good students—though Bush was the stellar academic performer, finishing near the top of his class. Buckley and Bush became warm friends at Yale and would remain so for the rest of their lives, but they never became brothers in political faith.

Buckley’s relationship with Richard Nixon was much more complicated, but then everybody’s relationship with Nixon was much more complicated. Felzenberg does an admirable job of tracking them as they move through the kaleidoscopic phases of their evolving careers, the one trying to use the other for tactical gain here, the other joining, or shucking, a convenient alliance there. (Following Nixon’s zig-zags through his own poorly-lit, psychological obstacle course, reminds more than occasionally of Whittaker Chambers’s lambent dictum, “to live is to maneuver.”) What was it that kept Buckley and Nixon at the bench all those years, trying to fashion a durable relationship? My guess is that each recognized in the other one of the most remarkable political minds of the age. (Some of the most stimulating evenings of my life were spent at Buckley’s table. Willmoore Kendall’s evaluation of his former student was on the mark: “Buckley is the world’s finest conversationalist.” But even those magical Buckley evenings faded by comparison with Nixon dinners in the Octobers of even-numbered years. Nixon had been a part of five—five—national tickets and was the world’s finest analyst of American politics.)

* * *

The centerpiece of this book, not surprisingly, is the story of Buckley’s relationship with Ronald Reagan. In the early going, despite Buckley being 14 years younger, Reagan was the student hungry for knowledge and direction and Buckley the instructor, more and more diligent in his duties as he came to appreciate the special qualities of his charge. My sense of the relationship is that Reagan stopped thinking of himself as the student sometime before Buckley did—Reagan had the politician’s genius for making others feel more important to him than they were—but there is no question that Reagan benefited enormously from the private tutorial. It didn’t hurt the relationship, either, that of Buckley’s many friends, only “Ron” had a spouse with as much style and moxie as Patricia Taylor Buckley. The two couples became a fast, four-way friendship.

I congratulate Felzenberg for seeing the Buckley archive at Yale for what it is—a rich and invaluable resource—and not what several earlier biographers have mistaken it for—a repository of revealed truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. The young Buckley, unlike you and me, and unlike even Nixon and Reagan, knew in his twenties that a) he would be famous, and that b) he would care what people wrote about him. He thus tended the central file fastidiously. I don’t mean to suggest that there is any falsification in those voluminous folders. There wasn’t even any systematic cosmeticization. But of the several thousand surviving Buckley letters, more than a few were intended as much for the file as for the recipient.

A couple of years ago, for example, I read with mounting incredulity Kevin Schultz’s book-length treatment of the relationship between Buckley and the novelist Norman Mailer, titled, astonishingly, Buckley and Mailer: The Difficult Friendship that Shaped the Sixties (2015). Schultz, who had apparently spent months spelunking in the New Haven stacks, may have been a victim of the Buckley archive. All you had to do was spend five minutes in the same room with Buckley and Mailer to know that they could never be friends. They never embraced but circled each other, neither eager but both prepared to duke it out with the other side’s most formidable controversialist. Regrettably for fans of literary blood-feuds, push never came to shove. In the interim, they exchanged warm and witty letters, copied to file.

* * *

I should also cite Felzenberg’s measured treatment of James Burnham, Buckley’s longtime colleague as a senior editor at National Review. A little revisionism on Burnham’s place in the conservative movement is overdue. Buckley said more than once that Burnham was the most important intellectual force at the magazine. True enough. But Buckley’s audience was not listening as carefully as Buckley was speaking. Buckley had three primary ambitions for National Review. He wanted it to be a platform-writing, candidate-promoting political magazine; an agenda-shaping, coalition-building ideological force (despite urgent appeals from Ludwig von Mises to abjure “ideology” in all its forms); and a transmitter and protector of the inherited culture. Buckley wanted no part of an academic journal.

When it came to political decisions, Jim Burnham’s was an articulate voice, sometimes mesmerizingly so, but it did not always carry the meeting. During the time I was participating in endorsement decisions, for instance, there were three sharply contested GOP nominations—in 1964, 1968, and 1976. Burnham pressed the case, respectively, for Rockefeller, Rockefeller, and Ford. The magazine supported Goldwater, Nixon, and Reagan. And as the philosophical debate raged—the compass-setting process, in effect, for the embryonic political movement—Burnham was more bemused observer than active participant. The principal debaters were the “freedom” faction’s Frank Meyer and the “virtue” faction’s Brent Bozell. What emerged from that robust, protracted, and occasionally exasperating colloquy was the now-familiar “Buckley-style” fusionist conservatism. Burnham seemed more bemused than ever. When the culture war flared, as it did intermittently, Burnham frequently saw the episode as back-of-the-book material.

Burnham was an impeccable editor, an acute analyst, a fine deadline writer, and a consummate bureaucrat. (So consummate, in fact, that his intramural rival, Meyer, soon found himself rendered extramural, sent into internal exile in upstate New York.) I admired him greatly and give him principal credit for professionalizing the magazine—for making it if not more acceptable to intellectual elites, then at least less easily dismissed. I found him a deft and dedicated anti-Leftist more than he was a conservative, hyphenated or otherwise.

* * *

I have but three nits to pick with Felzenberg’s account. First, there are scores of blind quotations in this book, many of them spicy, a few of them blood-drawing. As a reader who likes to know who is zinging whom, I flipped to the footnotes and found, frequently, only page references to other books by other authors, the quotations having been sourced to interviewers rather than interviewees. Disappointing.

Second, Felzenberg at least twice describes Buckley as “athletic.” As one who shared brief excursions with him into soccer, lacrosse, fencing, softball, bowling, darts, golf, and volleyball—detecting no trace of athletic ability in him in the process—I was jarred slightly by the adjective. Perhaps the reference was to sailing. Or skiing. Or the trebuchet.

Third, where is Bill Rusher? National Review publisher William A. Rusher was for many years the director of political operations not only for the magazine itself but for its fissiparous offshoots that provided both structure and filigree to the conservative movement. Rusher was Buckley’s bridge to both Goldwater and Reagan, and Rusher’s extremely complicated relationship with Nixon always colored Buckley’s only slightly less complicated relationship with Nixon. In these pages, Rusher appears as a marginal figure in Buckley’s political life. He wasn’t.

My theory of the author’s misdemeanor is this: Buckley and Rusher communicated constantly, sometimes hourly, striding between offices separated only by a short hallway. They communicated in writing only when there was a simmering problem to be resolved or a strategic question to be argued. The daily harmony of close and productive collaboration may thus have gone largely unrecorded. Perhaps we should blame the Yale archive here, too.

Let not the central point be clouded. Al Felzenberg has written a fine book, a valuable contribution to our understanding of the man who, after declaring as a college student that he intended to change the world, proceeded as an author, editor, and political activist to do just that.

Neal B. Freeman, a former editor and columnist for National Review and the founding producer of Firing Line, is the author of Skirmishes (National Review Books).


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