The American Conservative

by Kevin

For those of you who might have missed the link by Instapunidt, there is a scathing review of Pat Buchanan and his newly launched magazine The American Conservative up over at Tech Central Station. Standing Pat by Nick Schultz captures Pat and his unwillingness to see that his particual nostalgic bitter and self-indulgent brand of conservatism is not THE American Conservatism. He also points out how odd it is for a group so willing to point on potential apostates (like the paleos boggeymen the Neoconservatives) that their rhetoric lines up so well with the fringe ledt on a number of issues (Iraq, Israel, Trade, etc.). Here is the key:

Conservatism, whether Buchanan wants it to be or not, is an evolving tradition – one that has adapted to changes in fact and circumstance. And through its changes it has continued to have a deep influence on politics and society. Indeed, as one prominent conservative put it to me when I asked him about TAC, “Conservatives have always – always – recognized the need for reform and slow change in their own thinking as well as the society at large.”

Conservative godfather Russell Kirk said as much: “Society must alter, for slow change is the means of its conservation, like the human body’s perpetual renewal.” But Buchanan and his allies are championing a conservatism that simply (and thankfully) doesn’t exist anymore, and they yearn for an imagined past in which they themselves would be largely unrecognizable. In this sense they aren’t conservative at all. They are reactionaries.

Remind me some time to discuss the difference between orthodox, reactionary, and conservative. There are important distinctions in those terms that are often blurred when conservatism is discussed.

The bottom line is that Buchanan and his followers really would like to turn back time. They have failed to acknowledge that the “Old Right” is gone and it can’t be brought back. You simply can’t ignore half a decade of political, social, and economic change and insist that we return to a better time. True wisdom will adapt to what has happened and attempt to forward those values and principles that remain true across time. The most successful politics must be optimistic and intent on change for the better even in the face of decadence and loss. Conservatism that turns inward and gives in to despair at some point stops being conservative.