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University
of Pennsylvania political science professor Anne Norton has just published a
most revealing exposé on the neocon cabal entitled Leo Strauss and the Politics of American
Empire. Distributed by
the Yale University Press, it is the work of a true "insider" who
nevertheless does not consider herself to be a Straussian. "I am the
student of Joseph Cropsey," Professor Norton writes on the first page,
referring to the prominent student of Leo Strauss at the University of
Chicago. She continues, "I am the student of Ralph Lerner, who was the
student of Strauss. I studied with Leon Kass and watched Allan Bloom teach. I
know many Straussians, and some of the students of Strauss, very well."
Professor
Norton distinguishes between the students of Straussianism who are simply
academics who are interested in Strauss’s philosophy, and the
"lesser Straussians" who regard themselves as "a chosen set of
initiates into a hidden teaching." Harry Jaffa and his cabal of
perpetually politicking mimickers fall into this latter category. "The
West Coast Straussians," as she calls them, "are prone to zealous
partisanship in politics and the academy," and "the dominant figure
among [them] is Harry Jaffa . . ." Regarded as "vehement and
ideological," Jaffa’s battle cry is that "the salvation of
the West," if it is to come, "must come from the Republican
Party." These Republican Party sycophants, writes Norton, frequently
pick fights with more genuine conservatives, and especially libertarians,
such as "the followers of . . . Frederick Hayek, Ayn Rand, and Willmoore
Kendall."
Speaking
Lies for Power
Professor
Norton explains why so much of what Straussians write – especially with
regard to Lincoln, in my experience – is so diametrically opposed to
actual, documented history. Strauss’s method – and the method of
his followers – is to pick a book or document and read and re-read it
until an interpretation can be concocted that uses the book to support their
political preferences. They tend to ignore all other interpretations of the
same books and documents – and all other scholarship on the topic in
general – a decidedly unscholarly approach. Straussian critics have
long recognized that they "refuse to read the work of other
scholars," writes Norton, while they organize campaigns of character
assassination and harassment against other academics who disagree with their
unique – and often bizarre – interpretations. (See the Thomas Landess article in the LRC archives
about the Straussian assault on the late Mel Bradford.) The
effect of all this, says Norton, is to prevent the circulation of ideas, and
to "preserve the powerful against criticism." In other words, their
purpose is to produce propaganda to help prop up the Republican Party and its
statist/imperialist policies. It is exactly the opposite of the honorable
tradition of "speaking truth to power"; it is hiding the
truth from the public in order to accumulate and abuse power.
The
Straussian neocons have indeed infiltrated the Republican Party, and with
mostly calamitous results for America and "the West." Professor
Norton cites a 1999 book entitled Leo Strauss, the Straussians, and the American Regime,
which lists an impressive number of Straussians who have become part of the
Republican Party apparatus over the past twenty years. These include John
Agresto (acting chairman, National Endowment of the Humanities), William
Allen (Chair, U.S. Civil Rights Commission), Joseph Bessette (acting
director, Bureau of Justice Statistics), Mark Blitz (associate director, U.S.
Information Agency), David Epstein (Dept. of Defense), Charles Fairbanks
(assistant deputy secretary of state), Robert Goldwin (special assistant to
President Ford), William Kristol (chief of staff for Vice President Quayle),
Carnes Lord (National Security Council), Michael Mablin (House Republican
Conference director), John Marini (U.S. E.E.O.C), Ken Masugi (E.E.O.C.), Gary
McDowell (advisor to Attorney General Meese), James Nichols (National
Endowment for the Humanities), Ralph Rossum (Bureau of Justice Statistics),
Steven Schlesinger (Bureau of Justice Statistics), Gary Schmitt (head,
advisory board on foreign intelligence), Peter Schram (Dept. of Education),
Abram Shulsky (director of strategic arms control), Nathan Tarcov (State
Dept. planning staff), Michael Uhlman (assistant attorney general), Jeffery
Wallin (director of special programs, National Endowment for the Humanities),
Bradford Wilson (assistant to Warren Burger).
These
are the less powerful Straussian political hacks, says Norton. Among the more
powerful and influential in Washington are Paul Wolfowitz, Leon Kass
(chairman of the President’s Council on Bioethics), John Waters (former
drug czar), Francis Fukuyama, William Kristol, Robert Kagan, Gary Schmidt,
and Allan Bloom student Alan Keyes. That list was compled in 1998; it is
undoubtedly much longer today.
The
Straussian Assault on Academic Freedom of Inquiry
The
Straussian method of "scholarship," writes Professor Norton,
creates extreme hubris in the minds of Straussians, who tend to believe that
they alone have discovered THE TRUTH, and that what is really intellectual
laziness is "the inevitable entitlement of cultural superiority."
Thus Professor Norton, who was a graduate student for years at the University
of Chicago, living amongst the Straussian cabal, writes of how the Straussian
students, many of whom are now on the above-mentioned list of Republican
Party office holders, roamed the halls and classrooms with organized
"Straussian truth squads." These were "bands of intellectual
vigilantes, entering the classrooms of professors they disliked or distrusted
[i.e., non-Straussians], asking questions not to hear the answers but as a
form of disruption and intimidation."
"Professors
who had less respect for Leo Strauss . . . were read quotations from
[Strauss’s] Natural Right and History."
The other faculty and students at Chicago viewed the Straussians as
"intellectual brown shirts, engaged in a campaign of deliberate
intimidation." This of course is a practice that these same people
practice today, rarely engaging in honest intellectual debate but rather
attempting to intimidate or censor those who disagree with them. Alan Keyes,
for example, typically dismisses his critics as being "incapable of
recognizing moral purpose," as though he alone possesses such abilities.
Strauss
himself, writes Professor Norton, "does not seem to have discouraged the
truth squads." Quite the contrary: As a political activist and
consummate conniver within his own academic department, "he directed
financial aid to the students he preferred and tried to control hiring in the
department" so that only his admirers would be hired.
Every
single one of the Straussian students at Chicago, recalls Professor Norton,
participated in the "truth squads." Among them was Allan Bloom who,
as a faculty member at Cornell, helped organize a personal smear campaign
against the distinguished Cornell historian Clinton Rossiter, author of over
twenty books on the American founding principles and institutions and editor
of The Federalist Papers.
Bloom got all of the Straussians who had infiltrated Cornell to shun and
disassociate themselves completely from Rossiter, who apparently refused to
go along with the Straussians’ "unrelenting and totalitarian
enforcement of orthodoxy of opinion," as Norton describes it. The old,
gentlemanly Professor Rossiter was so devastated by being shunned by his
colleagues that he committed suicide.
"The
most conspicuous of the Straussians in the Reagan and the two Bush
administrations," writes Norton, "have ties to Allan Bloom."
His students, like Alan Keyes, tend to be "the most vociferously
ideological of the Straussians."
Professor
Norton makes short work of Paul Wolfowitz’s phony story, told to Vanity
Fair, that there is no such thing as a Straussian "cabal," and
that he never had much to do with such a movement. Quite the contrary, proves
Norton. Wolfowitz did take two courses with Strauss himself at Chicago. And
the "circle" around the scheming Bloom at Cornell was centered in
"Telluride House," where Bloom himself resided – as did
Wolfowitz when he was a student there. Other students at Cornell viewed
the "circle" residing at Telluride House as "the Straussian
cult," with a very strange "master-disciple relation." So
cult-like was Bloom that he even refused to grade papers of students who
"listened to other professors."
The
"Statesmanship" Charade
"Political
Straussians," i.e., the Jaffa-ite wing of the cabal, are "great
admirers of civil religion" and write endlessly about their
"secular saints" Churchill and Lincoln. They are also infatuated
with such contemporary autocrats as Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore and General
Perves Musharraf, the military dictator of Pakistan.
Why
does this political cult idolize Churchill and Lincoln, rewriting and
perverting history along the way? In the case of Churchill, it "enables
latter-day imperialists [a.k.a. neocons] to represent empire in the guise of
the underdog." And their praise of Lincoln "becomes questionable as
well," says the astute Professor Norton, for he is always praised as
"the Great Emancipator" but never discussed as the man "who
suspended habeas corpus." Thus, Lincoln is not admired so much for
"his faith in the Constitution," but for "the virtue of
dictatorial action on behalf of democracy." That is, he is praised by
the Jaffa-ites precisely because he trashed the Constitution and essentially
declared himself dictator. Their entire enterprise of Lincoln idolatry is
aimed at encouraging contemporary and future American presidents to be just
as dismissive of constitutional constraints on governmental power in pursuit
of American imperialism and empire. Lincoln’s "moral force"
provides them with the perfect camouflage for advocating "a more
authoritarian presidency," Norton concludes.
Some
commentators have recently expressed surprise that the idea for President
George W. Bush to endorse Teddy Kennedy’s nationalization of education
in the guise of the "No Child Left Behind" legislation came from
the neocons. This should be no surprise to anyone who understands the
Straussian cult, however. Norton explains by citing a passage from The Modern Prince: What Leaders Need to Know, by
Straussian Carnes Lord. Lord’s thesis, writes Norton, is that
Civic morality is
not to emerge . . . from the practices, thought, reflection, and debate of a
people over time, directed by parents, teachers, authors, local school
boards, and the sense of the community in practice. Instead, it is to be
directed by the government, more precisely by the particular leaders in
power.
Norton
then cites Lord himself as saying, "Political leaders have every right
to form and express judgments about the teaching of national history, and to
take action to shape public school curriculum in this area."
The
Straussian Love Affair with War
Norton
also catalogues how all of these "tiny, round-shouldered men," the
vast majority of whom have never served in the military, are almost insanely
enthusiastic about war. They tell us that war – any war – will
restore our "moral seriousness," "clear away the fog of
unthinking relativism," enable us to see evil, restore virtue, heroism,
valor, and a sense of sacrifice, allow us to die for our comrades, country
and faith, avoid the "hazards of civilization," make us more
thoughtful, force us to "consider our loyalties," make men
"decisive," and "places greatness within the reach of ordinary
men."
Proof
that this is all a bundle of propaganda aimed at duping the public into
supporting imperialism is the fact that all of these glorious benefits are
foregone by the Straussians themselves, who rarely, if ever, volunteer for military
service. They also are quite conscientious about making sure that their
children avoid the military like the plague.
Phony
Conservativism
Straussians
are not conservatives; they are statists and imperialists, which is the
farthest thing one can imagine from the genuine, old-fashioned conservativism
of an Edmund Burke or a Russell Kirk. Above all, Norton writes, traditional
American conservatism, from the time of Jefferson, has "advocated a
small government." But the Straussian neocons advocate just the
opposite: "Abstract reasoning and utopian projects," such as
invading and conquering the entire Arab world, supposedly in the name of
"democracy." With the ascendancy of the neocons, writes Norton,
"American conservativism embraced big government with a vengeance . . .
. Nowhere was the shift more apparent than among the Straussians active in
Washington."
Professor
Paul Gottfried and many other columnists for LewRockwell.com have recognized
most or all of the things Professor Norton writes about for some time now (see
the "Neo-Conservativism" archives on LRC). The
fact that Yale University Press has gone to the trouble of having an Ivy
League professor write a book about the Straussian neocon cabal is further
evidence of what a menace to freedom, prosperity and security these power-mad
propagandists truly are
Thomas DiLorenzo
Also
by Thomas DiLorenzo
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo is professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The Real Lincoln; Lincoln Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about
Dishonest Abe and How Capitalism Saved America. His
latest book is Hamilton’s Curse: How Jefferson’s Archenemy Betrayed
the American Revolution – And What It Means for America Today.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com
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