Blistering WSJ Article on the Death of Intellectualism in the Republican Party

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Breaking Bad Snob
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Bold is my emphasis.






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  • <SMALL>NOVEMBER 8, 2008</SMALL>
<!-- ID: SB122610558004810243 --><!-- TYPE: Politics and Policy --><!-- DISPLAY-NAME: Politics and Policy --><!-- PUBLICATION: The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition --><!-- DATE: 2008-11-08 00:01 --><!-- COPYRIGHT: Dow Jones & Company, Inc. --><!-- ORIGINAL-ID: --><!-- article start --><!--CODE=STATISTIC SYMBOL=FREECODE=SUBJECT SYMBOL=OPOL-->The Perils of 'Populist Chic'

What the rise of Sarah Palin and populism means for the conservative intellectual tradition.

By MARK LILLA

Finita la commedia. Many things ended on Tuesday evening when Barack Obama was elected the 44th president of the United States, and depending on how you voted you are either celebrating or mourning this weekend. But no matter what our political affiliations, we should all -- Republicans and Democrats alike -- be toasting the return of Governor Sarah Palin to Juneau, Alaska.

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The Palin farce is already the stuff of legend. For a generation at least it is sure to keep presidential historians and late-night comedians in gainful employment, which is no small thing. But it would be a pity if laughter drowned out serious reflection about this bizarre episode. As Jane Mayer reported recently in the New Yorker ("The Insiders," Oct. 27, 2008), John McCain's choice was not a fluke, or a senior moment, or an act of desperation. It was the result of a long campaign by influential conservative intellectuals to find a young, populist leader to whom they might hitch their wagons in the future.

And not just any intellectuals. It was the editors of National Review and the Weekly Standard, magazines that present themselves as heirs to the sophisticated conservatism of William F. Buckley and the bookish seriousness of the New York neoconservatives. After the campaign for Sarah Palin, those intellectual traditions may now be pronounced officially dead.

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What a strange turn of events. For the past 40 years American conservatism has been politically ascendant, in no small part because it was also intellectually ascendant. In 1955 sociologist Daniel Bell could publish a collection of essays on "The New American Right" that treated it as a deeply anti-intellectual force, a view echoed a few years later in Richard Hofstadter's influential "Anti-Intellectualism in American Life" (1963).

But over the next decade and a half all that changed. Magazines like the Public Interest and Commentary became required reading for anyone seriously concerned about domestic and foreign affairs; conservative research institutes sprang up in Washington and on college campuses, giving a fresh perspective on public policy. Buckley, Irving Kristol, Nathan Glazer, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Peter Berger, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Norman Podhoretz -- agree or disagree with their views, these were people one had to take seriously.




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Coming of age politically in the grim '70s, when liberalism seemed utterly exhausted, I still remember the thrill of coming upon their writings for the first time. I discovered the Public Interest the same week that Patty Hearst was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army, and its pages offered shelter from the storm -- from the mobs on the street, the radical posing of my professors and fellow students, the cluelessness of limousine liberals, the whole mad circus of post-'60s politics. Conservative politics mattered less to me than the sober comportment of conservative intellectuals at that time; I admired their maturity and seriousness, their historical perspective, their sense of proportion. In a country susceptible to political hucksters and demagogues, they studied the passions of democratic life without succumbing to them. They were unapologetic elites, but elites who loved democracy and wanted to help it.

So what happened? How, 30 years later, could younger conservative intellectuals promote a candidate like Sarah Palin, whose ignorance, provinciality and populist demagoguery represent everything older conservative thinkers once stood against? It's a sad tale that began in the '80s, when leading conservatives frustrated with the left-leaning press and university establishment began to speak of an "adversary culture of intellectuals." It was a phrase borrowed from the great literary critic Lionel Trilling, who used it to describe the disquiet at the heart of liberal societies. Now the idea was taken up and distorted by angry conservatives who saw adversaries everywhere and decided to cast their lot with "ordinary Americans" whom they hardly knew. In 1976 Irving Kristol publicly worried that "populist paranoia" was "subverting the very institutions and authorities that the democratic republic laboriously creates for the purpose of orderly self-government." But by the mid-'80s, he was telling readers of this newspaper that the "common sense" of ordinary Americans on matters like crime and education had been betrayed by "our disoriented elites," which is why "so many people -- and I include myself among them -- who would ordinarily worry about a populist upsurge find themselves so sympathetic to this new populism."

The die was cast. Over the next 25 years there grew up a new generation of conservative writers who cultivated none of their elders' intellectual virtues -- indeed, who saw themselves as counter-intellectuals. Most are well-educated and many have attended Ivy League universities; in fact, one of the masterminds of the Palin nomination was once a Harvard professor. But their function within the conservative movement is no longer to educate and ennoble a populist political tendency, it is to defend that tendency against the supposedly monolithic and uniformly hostile educated classes. They mock the advice of Nobel Prize-winning economists and praise the financial acumen of plumbers and builders. They ridicule ambassadors and diplomats while promoting jingoistic journalists who have never lived abroad and speak no foreign languages. And with the rise of shock radio and television, they have found a large, popular audience that eagerly absorbs their contempt for intellectual elites. They hoped to shape that audience, but the truth is that their audience has now shaped them.

Back in the '70s, conservative intellectuals loved to talk about "radical chic," the well-known tendency of educated, often wealthy liberals to project their political fantasies onto brutal revolutionaries and street thugs, and romanticize their "struggles." But "populist chic" is just the inversion of "radical chic," and is no less absurd, comical or ominous. Traditional conservatives were always suspicious of populism, and they were right to be. They saw elites as a fact of political life, even of democratic life. What matters in democracy is that those elites acquire their positions through talent and experience, and that they be educated to serve the public good. But it also matters that they own up to their elite status and defend the need for elites. They must be friends of democracy while protecting it, and themselves, from the leveling and vulgarization all democracy tends toward.

Writing recently in the New York Times, David Brooks noted correctly (if belatedly) that conservatives' "disdain for liberal intellectuals" had slipped into "disdain for the educated class as a whole," and worried that the Republican Party was alienating educated voters. I couldn't care less about the future of the Republican Party, but I do care about the quality of political thinking and judgment in the country as a whole. There was a time when conservative intellectuals raised the level of American public debate and helped to keep it sober. Those days are gone. As for political judgment, the promotion of Sarah Palin as a possible world leader speaks for itself. The Republican Party and the political right will survive, but the conservative intellectual tradition is already dead. And all of us, even liberals like myself, are poorer for it.

Mark Lilla is a professor of humanities at Columbia University and a former editor of the Public Interest.




 

Everything's Legal in the USofA...Just don't get c
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Interesting article. Of course, the exact same thing could have been written eight years ago with just a couple of name changes.
 

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Wow..shocker. WSJ trying to derail the Repub party?
 

Breaking Bad Snob
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Interesting article. Of course, the exact same thing could have been written eight years ago with just a couple of name changes.




Glad you found it interesting.

No level headed left leaning person wants to see the Republican Party fall into ashes. I shudder to think what would happen if the Democrats had the ability to make public policy carte blanche.
 

Breaking Bad Snob
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Wow..shocker. WSJ trying to derail the Repub party?

Stop being so reactionary and try to understand what the article is saying. Do you not get that the Sean Hannitys and Rush Limbaughs are harming your party?
 

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Death..to be quite honest it is sickening to me on both sides. I listenen to Hannity, never to Rush. It may sound ironic but besides Hannity making a mountain out of a mole hill with some topics, Rush is a true patsy.

Nothing makes my stomach churn more than to see the major networks such as ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN...and major newspapers such as NYT, LATimes, ChiTribue etc. trying to inject their party lines with NO remorse as to what they are doing..Remember, FOX was not even ranked as of 5 years ago. SHould tell you something about the alienation of the Rebublican party by the left wing media.

It is not a joke. Both medias are crooked, there are just many more falling left.

To educated people like you and myself it really doesnt make a differnce. We form our own opinions based on the information at hand and from our life experiences. I listen to LEFT on Sirius a lot and I also watch the other networks, moreless to validate my own personal feelings about where my party line is drawn.

The Democrats like to point at the Republican as the "RICH" party and they are for the little guy, but when you look at the ELITE in Democratic positions, you start to realize that they could give a fuck less about the "people" like the Repubs do. Self serving politics is all that we have today, and until a fresh breath overtakes this attitude, it will never change. Unfortunately, most of these kinds of folks will get derailed before they get close.

Obama could give a rats ass about the same people he campaigned for. He is starting to get breifings and I am sure he is saying to himself, "HOLY FUCK". There is no coincidence that after 4 or 8 years as POTUS, the individual looks like they have aged in dog years.

I think the only reason why I am so adament about being anti-Obama is that he has pulled the wool so far over the voters eyes it is almost comical to me. The promises he made, the whole "Hope and Change" mantra is useless rhetoric, appealing to the masses of peasants in this country with a promise to make their lives better....and it is all bullshit.

I ramble, but when I see jackholes like Susan Sarandon, Oprah, Sean Penn, etc. acting like anyone actually gives a fuck about who they endorse makes me despise the Dem party even more, because if anyone grew up in a dreamworld, it is the Hollywood elite.

I appreciate your opinion Cracker, unfortunately mine will NEVER be swayed.
 

Breaking Bad Snob
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How can you tell it's bullshit if he hasn't even been sworn in yet? It seems you're ready to impeach him now.

It appears as if your mind is made up and that Obama will not be able to do anything right in your eyes. That's too bad.

I spent more time educating myself about the candidates than I ever have in the past in an attempt to make amends for voting for W in 2000. I don't want a guy I'd like to have a beer with running the most powerful nation on the planet, and Obama struck me as an intellectual who was serious about fixing this country. Will he do it? I don't know, but he has my full support like McCain would have had he won and like W had his first two years.

Give the guy a chance. He may be the worst President ever or he may be the best. You've made your decision even before the inauguration.
 

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This isn't the WSJ "saying" this...but they are allowing the discussion to go forward. Rather "intellectual" of them to allow all views.

This is the WSJ allowing a lefty to take his shots...kick the Repub's when they are down so to speak.

Which is fine...I wish liberal papers were as open and inclusive as the right wing rags are.

And all of us, even liberals like myself, are poorer for it.
Mark Lilla is a professor of humanities at Columbia University
 

Breaking Bad Snob
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I didn't get the impression that he was kicking the Republican Party while they are down. It seems more like imploring them to return to what they used to be because that will make this country that much stronger.
 

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How can you tell it's bullshit if he hasn't even been sworn in yet? It seems you're ready to impeach him now.

It appears as if your mind is made up and that Obama will not be able to do anything right in your eyes. That's too bad.

I spent more time educating myself about the candidates than I ever have in the past in an attempt to make amends for voting for W in 2000. I don't want a guy I'd like to have a beer with running the most powerful nation on the planet, and Obama struck me as an intellectual who was serious about fixing this country. Will he do it? I don't know, but he has my full support like McCain would have had he won and like W had his first two years.

Give the guy a chance. He may be the worst President ever or he may be the best. You've made your decision even before the inauguration.

Simply by the fact of simple math and statistical analysis. Plugging in the numbers..

Current Debt + Tax Breaks + Corporate Tax + Rich Tax + New Spending + Unemployment + Stock Market = IMPOSSIBLE to do what he says without

1) Fucking the lower and middle classes
2) Grossly raising taxes on upper class (250K+)
3) Lowering the tax bar set by HIM (see number 2)

Cannot be done. Period. Blame it on Bush, the economy, whatever..

The other thing is the utter lack of responsibility for the housing and credit crisis by the Democratic party. Did you educate yourself on this? Or just the issues that helped your support for Obama. What about Obamas Chicago politics background? It is checkered to put it lightly , and probably criminal.

THAT is why I cannot support him, he is untruthful in his past, voted entirely different than his party lines, and KNOWS he does not give a fuck about the people that got him elected. Period.
 

Breaking Bad Snob
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Did you vote for McCain? He's not exactly pristine.

Every election, I always felt like I was voting for the person who I disliked the least. To me, Obama was different. We'll know soon enough if I was drinking the Kool-Aid or not. And if I was, I'll admit it.
 

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Not saying McCain is pristine. The Keating 5 deal was a long time ago and he came clean, his name was cleared and he accepted responsibility. Obama has climbed up the ladder stepping on the heads of people that have bent rules. Im sure he owes a big debt of gratitude to Tony Rezko, who sits in prison, for not ratting him out. We will see. If anyone from inside the Chicago/Illinois machine comes out and rats it could be very bad for BO. Anyway, whats done is done.
 

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Good read.

I think McCains campaign advisors and current Republican insiders would whole heartedly agree.
 

Breaking Bad Snob
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Unfortunately, the Joe the Plumbers of the world would not agree.
 

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How come it seems to be only Republicans that got portrayed as dumb?

Reagan, Quayle, Bush, Now Palin. I can't think of one Dem counterpart.
 

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The two paragraphs below provide an excellent summation of how I personally evolved on social and political topics. I confidently voted Republican in 1980, 84 and 88 only to see that during that period and during the next 20 years the Republican party show increasing disdain towards people with strong education backgrounds, most especially in the areas of science, history and civics.

=====

Magazines like the Public Interest and Commentary became required reading for anyone seriously concerned about domestic and foreign affairs; conservative research institutes sprang up in Washington and on college campuses, giving a fresh perspective on public policy. Buckley, Irving Kristol, Nathan Glazer, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Peter Berger, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Norman Podhoretz -- agree or disagree with their views, these were people one had to take seriously.



Coming of age politically in the grim '70s, when liberalism seemed utterly exhausted, I still remember the thrill of coming upon their writings for the first time. I discovered the Public Interest the same week that Patty Hearst was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army, and its pages offered shelter from the storm -- from the mobs on the street, the radical posing of my professors and fellow students, the cluelessness of limousine liberals, the whole mad circus of post-'60s politics. Conservative politics mattered less to me than the sober comportment of conservative intellectuals at that time; I admired their maturity and seriousness, their historical perspective, their sense of proportion. In a country susceptible to political hucksters and demagogues, they studied the passions of democratic life without succumbing to them. They were unapologetic elites, but elites who loved democracy and wanted to help it.
 

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How come it seems to be only Republicans that got portrayed as dumb?

Reagan, Quayle, Bush, Now Palin. I can't think of one Dem counterpart.

Ha!

Carter got punked by some punk Iranian students...

Clinton got punked by a 21 year old bimbo...

Gore got punked by a guy the left thinks is retarded...ditto Kerry.

Who's dumb? :nohead:
 

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Good read.

I think McCains campaign advisors and current Republican insiders would whole heartedly agree.


Doubt it.

Those are the people the McCain campaign (and McCain himself) called the Georgetown cocktail party crowd.
 

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How come it seems to be only Republicans that got portrayed as dumb?

Reagan, Quayle, Bush, Now Palin. I can't think of one Dem counterpart.

Palin and Quayle were the only ones truly over their heads.

Bush and Reagan weren't "intellectuals", but they were far from dumb.
 

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