Some while ago, a fellow leftie put
me on to Antiwar.com. I took a look at the site, bookmarked it, and have ever
since been a regular visitor, sometimes clicking on it two or three times in
a day. I have even on occasion donated money to keep it afloat. I find there
a broad array of factual reports and opinions consonant with my distressed and
outraged view of an America seemingly gone mad with imperial hubris and pathological
self-delusion.
Being somewhat dim about such things, I did not at first notice that the
site is hosted and sustained by right-wing libertarians whose position on the
conventional political spectrum is as far from my own as it is possible to get
without falling off the other edge of the world from my own. Whereas I look
to Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky, and Edward Said for intellectual simulation and
solace, reaching back, when I desire some historical perspective, to Karl Marx,
the managers of antiwar.com are more likely to reach out to Ludwig von Mises,
Friedrich Hayek, and Milton Friedman, with obligatory obeisances to the authors
of the Federalist Papers.
This is not the first time I have found myself in suspicious company. Thirty-five
years ago, when I published In
Defense of Anarchism, I was chagrined to receive congratulatory notes
from the likes of Murray Rothbard, and to be offered, by an earnest graduate
student, without a word, a tattered copy of Lysander Spooner's No
Treason. Indeed, in the sixties, it was often said that the political
spectrum was shaped like a horseshoe, with the two ends a good deal closer to
one another than either was to the middle. Nevertheless, an America in which
the most trenchant, uncompromisingly condemnatory critique of the present administration
issues from the pen of Patrick Buchanan clearly requires some new direction
of analysis.
I am united with my libertarian brethren in a hatred of the imperial state,
and in my disdain for the dishonesty, self-delusion, and wanton profligacy of
this nation's policies in the Middle East. I am one with them, also, in my dismay
at the erosion of such individual liberties as survived the post World War II
era. But if I may speak as a philosopher, I and they are most at odds in the
realm of possibility, not of actuality. I would support a foreign policy that
genuinely furthered progressive economic and political developments throughout
the world, whereas they would view such policies, even if they might be sympathetic
to some of them, as an inappropriate overreaching of state power and a violation
of the authority that could justly be assigned to the state by an alert and
vigilant electorate. I believe, as they fervently do not, that capitalism rests
on exploitation, as Marx argued, and I am therefore always ready to consider
ways in which the state might mitigate, if not vitiate, the capitalist economic
regime.
But since the United States does not, in actuality, offer me the slightest
hope of being able to throw my support enthusiastically behind a government
that truly embodies the principles in which I believe, I am left to consider
how best to resist the advances of the imperial expansionism that has captured
the state. And in this effort, as necessary as it is disheartening, I find myself
reaching out to those at the other end of the political spectrum.
We can surely agree on the necessity of defeating politically the drive
for U. S. military hegemony. We even can agree on several of the most hotly
contended social issues that currently divide the electorate – same-sex marriage,
abortion rights, rights of free expression. If we can somehow turn this nation
from its imperial path, then there will be time enough to fight over the justice
or injustice of capitalism, the need for collective social action to provide
decent wages and health care, or the merits of federal restraints on corporate
depredations.
As the past two elections have demonstrated, the politically active fraction
of the electorate is very evenly divided between the two major political parties.
It is also the case that the center of the political spectrum has shifted dramatically
to the right, with only a handful of genuine old-fashioned Rooseveltian liberals
left in Congress [with the honorable and important exception of the Black Caucus],
and increasing numbers of stone-age troglodytic reactionaries masquerading in
the Republican Party as conservatives. An alliance of Blue State Democrats with
true blue libertarian conservatives would have a reasonable chance of defeating
the imperialists. It might then be possible to get America to stand down from
its militarism and imperial expansionism, and return us to the far better, though
admittedly unsatisfactory state of affairs of only a few years ago.
This alliance would undoubtedly splinter almost as soon as it had triumphed,
for on a wide range of important domestic issues the partners disagree irreconcilably.
Nevertheless, in a world gone mad, we must learn to cherish second bests. As
Paul Newman says to Robert Redford in The Sting, when explaining to him
the workings of the Big Con, if we succeed, it won't be enough, but it is all
we will get, so you have to be willing to walk away.