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Saturday, March 01, 2008
Jonah Goldberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Prince of Polysyllabism
by Jonah Goldberg
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William F. Buckley died this week at the age of 82. He was, among other things, the founder of National Review (my professional home for the last decade), architect and leader of the modern American conservative movement, host of "Firing Line" (where he was the longest-serving television host in history), renowned author of some 50 books - which included spy novels, political polemics, histories, biographies, sailing memoirs and countless animadversions of an acutely sesquipedalian flavor, as the peripatetic proselytizer of polysyllabism might say - harpsichord recitalist, syndicated columnist, esteemed lecturer (he gave some 70 speeches a year for decades), adventurer, father of acclaimed novelist and journalist Christopher Buckley and husband to philanthropist Patricia Buckley, one-time New York City mayoral candidate (when asked what he would do if he won, he responded, "Demand a recount"), mentor to countless young conservatives and inspiration to millions more.

In short, his life was richer and more packed than an overburdened sentence, such as the above.

In the inaugural issue of National Review, he set out to "stand athwart history, yelling Stop."

That rallying cry has always earned the scorn of liberals and leftists who believe in their bones that they are the servants of Progress, and that Progress is something you can't stand in the way of. (Alas, it has also elicited rolling eyes and titters from a new generation of self-described "compassionate conservatives" who believe that the government is there to love you.)

Still, it was the Marxists who best articulated this conviction that with every page ripped from the calendar, humanity was closer to the ideal of universal collective endeavor. They spoke of cold impersonal forces of history moving inexorably toward a utopia where, it just so happened, people like them would be in charge.

But Marxism was merely one expression of this conviction, which had stained the American soul well before Buckley was born. For example, in 1892, James Baird Weaver, the Populist Party's presidential nominee, spoke for coming generations of Progressives, reformers and activists when he proclaimed, "We have tried to show that competition is largely a thing of the past. Every force of our industrial life is hurrying on the age of combination. It is useless to try to stop the current."

A generation later, Harry Garfield, the president of Williams College and director of Woodrow Wilson's Fuel Administration, giddily announced: "We have come to a parting of the ways, we have come to the time when the old individualistic principle must be set aside." Now, he gushed, "we must boldly embark upon the new principle of cooperation and combination."

In 1932, Stuart Chase, the man who reportedly coined the phrase "The New Deal," lamented that the Russians were having all the fun remaking the world. New Dealers spoke of creating a new "religion of government" whereby citizens took it on faith that collectivism was the natural order.

By the mid 1940s, no less than Franklin Roosevelt insisted that the old Bill of Rights, which denied the government the power to meddle in the affairs of men, should be supplanted by a new "economic Bill of Rights" that would hasten the historical rush to collectivism.

When Buckley graduated from Yale, he penned a blistering critique of his alma mater, complaining that it had come to take this collectivist tide for granted, particularly since Yale had abandoned Godly faith in favor of the cold, impersonal forces that seem to go hand-in-hand with atheism (perhaps because those who believe that God is dead consequently believe that man must play God to his fellow men).

Just the year before, renowned literary critic Lionel Trilling had proclaimed in The Liberal Imagination that, "in the United States at this time Liberalism is not only the dominant but even the sole intellectual tradition." Conservative impulses, he insisted, "do not express themselves in ideas but only in action or in irritable mental gestures which seek to resemble ideas."

This, then, was the History - with a capital H, bequeathed to it by Hegel and Marx and a thousand other false prophets - that Buckley set about to stand athwart, and eventually to thwart. For Buckley and his band of happy warriors, collectivism in its brutal forms in the Soviet Union was anathema, but collectivism in its genteel form here at home was also folly. "You cannot paint the Mona Lisa by assigning one dab each to a thousand painters," Buckley said.

In his battle with those who believed the Earth moved in one direction, he was the Hercules pitted against the Atlas of collectivism. Few were more successful in the battle. He did not merely "part the Red Sea," as Ronald Reagan once told him, "you rolled it back."

There were so many facets to Buckley's talents, it seems absurd to try to sum them up. A joyous heart, an omnivorous mind, a fearless stomach for battle: this was the anatomy of "WFB." There will never be another. He was, as he might say were he not so modest, a hapax legomenon in the book of life.

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About The Author
Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online.
 
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Dear Butt, I'm sorry! Boutte!
Jonah wrote his usual,intelligent essay in the cause of conservatism; this time an eulogy of a great conservative writer and activist. Your cheesy remarks (Military industrial complex? how dated is that?) merely illustrate the essence of Buckley's life thesis, i.e., that liberals are weak-minded regurgitators of discredited ideas. Oh, he had money. The bugger! Now that made him bad. Admit it; the bad part for you is that he had more money than you. That is the soul-searing truth that really makes liberals like you grit your teeth. Since you are not willing to work or take the risk to better yourself you would have the government make it illegal for anyone to have more than you. Talk about parasites?.

Anna
The liberals have infiltrated every moneyed foundation, think tank and self help organization in this country. The only way to confront and challenge their efforts to distort the direction and control the finances of these organizations was to join them and compete with the legal/leftists for their control.

Time and again, good people were not prepared for the underhanded and brutal methods the leftists were willing to go to in order control the political makeup of their associates.

If Buckley was invited to join the CFR, it was just as much in the organization's benefit to have him as an erudite member, as much as it endowed Buckley with any honorarium.

If there was an opposition, they most certainly would have welcomed a Buckley. Besides, Buckley was a debater, and where else was there so much arrogant and vocal opposition to conservatism to be found.

In Buckley's case, you sound like someone finding fault with Mother Thesea because the general acclaim was that she was a saint.

CFR
CFR is by invitation only. Their agenda is treasonous. The only reason to be a member in my opinion is if it is your intention to expose their activities.

The guy who wrote the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights was the second largest slave owner in his state and made one of his slaves his concubine. I have issues with that too.

I love Churchill but unfortunately he was a committed imperialist and it was Britain who wanted Mossedegh overthrown and we did the dirty work for them. Churchill called it one of his proudest moments. Didn't exactly turn out that way.

I don't believe in sacred cows any more. Jorge cured me of that. Being sucker punched by Bush was a most unpleasant experience.

I love my country and I think the goals of CFR/TC are nothing short of treason. They are doing an end run around our constitution and sovereignty, eroding it quietly and steadily. The reason they have gotten as far as they have is they are not confronted.

What exactly are we talking about on this site when we are about to lose our country? It's a freaking joke. So throw rotten eggs at me if you want.


Anna/CFR
What a dolt - membership in CFR no more dictates a person's views than subscribing to the NYT.

Why do these guilt by associations always become critical in the case of a conservative, but liberals can freely hobnob with the most despicable dictators and nary a newsworthy eyebrow is raised?

WFB
I wonder why any conservative or patriot would be a member of CFR? Buckley was a member.

CFR wants to kill this country..."it's single-minded intent to destroy the United States as an independent nation, to establish, for the greater good, a New World Order."

Not really for the "greater" good. This will be for the bankers/multinational corps.

Just found out Bill was a member a couple of days ago. Big inconsistency to me.

GunnyG
The way to remember WFB properly is with his inimitable quotes - and their insight is matched only by their brevity.

On more than one occasion did I have to reread his words to grasp his meaning. Anyone who claimed an ability to speed read WFB didn't want to understand him anyway.

Thanks, copper
I've been reading Jonah's 'Fascist Liberalism' and, with all respect, decided to patrol his singular accolade to our heroic founder, William Buckley.

Like everyone else, with whom we live contemporaneously, we tend to minimize the best of us for the persons of stature they are. But WFB was difficult to minimize because his genius was obvious.

It's the same with everything: try breaking a leg and you'll know the value of walking! And we generally know we will get our leg back!

How do we conservatives get along without our right arm, permanently - are we tough enough, smart enough, have we learned enough?

grubby
Just beautiful.

Jim
Maybe he should have linked his conservative philosophy to 'globalism', 'environmentalism', 'Zen Buddiism' or any other 'ism' that momentarily fashionable on the liberal cocktail circuit.

In fact, it was WFB's Christianity that enabled him to realize how socialist and secular Yale had become. Further, Christianity is conservative because it stresses 'individual' salvation, and that ultimately no one is responsible for the choices we make but ourselves.

And compassion comes from being 'individually' generous - not by getting a gov't to steal on our behalf.

It just so happens that the leftist problem lies in the fact that their views are so relativistic, fleeting and opportunistic that, in the absence of a belief system in anything outside themselves, they will readily latch onto anything that satisfies their shallow little selves.

Let's face it: given the proper drumbeat, at any given moment, the global warmists would switch to global cooling with the same ignorant fervor.

'Christianity is a collectivist creed'? Perhaps owning a BMW is a 'collectivist creed'. Does that allow for developing a philosophy based on membership in the local swingers commune?

Jim, you have collectivism on the brain.

Buckley and God, a conflicted coupling
Unforturnately Buckley's conservatism was fatally flawed to the extend he linked it with Christianity -- and opened the door for the Christian right wing to flood the Republican party.

The flaw was this: that Christianity is ultimatley a collectivist creed, in that the individual is subordinate to diety, much as a citizen would be subordinate to the state. As a citizen who violated the State's dictates would be dispatched to a gulag, so would a Christian who displeased the Lord be flung down into hell.

William F. Buckley's conservatism, erudite though it was, was not rational nor consistent, and will ultimately be forgotten.


Boutte
Not only is your English constructed with little better engineering than a school kid's treehouse, but your thoughts are so confused, vitriolic and meandering that they're more likely to destroy each other and render the writer laughable than to seriously convey or confront an opposing notion.

Now we understand the 'A's your gay seventh grade English teacher gave you.

WFB's last column
As I was reading Buckley's last TH posting, I couldn't help thinking, not of the content, but how thankfully I felt that he was still writing. There was a sense of reassurance that conservative's grand minister of ideas was still surveying the national landscape looking for nanny fascists and leftist lies to harpoon.

Now that he's gone, though his loss is immense, we still have his voluminous body of work to guide us and future generations - those that survive the liberals and their indoctrination that is.

No One EVER Bested WFB in a Debate
I came of age in the early 1970's - a time when people my age were reflexively liberal by default. I was well down that road myself until by happenstance I stumbled across Buckley on The Firing Line. It was a life-changing epiphany for me.

I am here to tell you that that man mopped up the floor with every liberal of the day foolish enough to place themselves in his intellectual crosshairs. It also set me down a new road of inquiry into the human experience that I haven't diverted from since. WFB was my introduction not only to political conservatism but to intellectual inquiry itself.

Lazy thinking fops like Boutte could not carry the intellectual jockstrap of the redoubtable WFB and they serve as a daily reminder to conservatives like myself why I threw in my lot with giants like WFB.

THANK GOD
for the guidance and words to the right provided by The father of Modern Conservatism. May our ideas reign for another 500 years as we defeat the liberals!

ALL,

On your "TO-DO" list, check the NUMBER ONE blog on TH for:

1. A tribute to the Father of Modern Conservatism.

2. A rip on Red Nanny Pee-Lousy

and

3. What Barney "Ol Lispy" Fwank is up to.

(click on my name or better still, bookmark:
http://noliberalspin.blogtownhall.com/ )

Also Boutte
I wonder why folks like you even come in here...do you just like to pick on folks?

Boutte...
...you wouldn't recognise intelligent writing if it jumped up and spit in your ear.Please take your rambling,made up history somewhere else.You embarrass Townhall.

The grandfather of “Florence of Arabia”
William F. Buckley’s son is Christopher Buckley?

One of the few fiction books I’ve read recently was the hilarious satire on terrorism, of all things, “Florence of Arabia.” The son has a love for words and alliteration that sparkles and hones in to expose.
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