BOOK REVIEW
Liberal Fascism
A conservative slur no longer
By Rich Lowry
National Review Online
January 8, 2008
The
f-bomb of American politics is the word “fascist,” routinely hurled by
the left at conservatives. Ronald Reagan and Barry Goldwater were
smeared as incipient fascists, and George W. Bush now receives the
honor, along with practically anyone to the right of Rosie O’Donnell on
a college campus.

The operational meaning of the word “fascism” for most liberals who
invoke it is usually “shut up.” It’s meant to bludgeon conservatives
into silence. But many on the left also genuinely believe that there is
something fascistic in the DNA of contemporary conservatism, as if
Republican Party conventions would get their rightful treatment only if
they were worshipfully filmed by Leni Riefenstahl.
In his brilliant new book
Liberal Fascism,
Jonah Goldberg (a colleague of mine) demonstrates how the opposite is
the case, that fascism was a movement of the left and that liberal
heroes like Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Delano Roosevelt were products
of what Goldberg calls “the fascist moment” in America early in the 20th
century. How we think of the ideological spectrum — socialism to the
left, fascism to the right — should be forever changed.
Benito Mussolini was a socialist and earned the title “Il Duce” as the
leader of the socialists in Italy. When he founded the fascist party,
its program called for implementing a minimum wage, expropriating
property from landowners, repealing titles of nobility, creating
state-run secular schools and imposing a progressive tax rate. Mussolini
took socialism and turned it in a more populist and militaristic
direction, but remained a modernizing, secular man of the left.
The Nazis too were socialists, “enemies, deadly enemies, of today’s
capitalist economic system,” in the words of the party’s ideologist
Gregor Strasser. The party’s platform sounded a lot like that of the
Italian fascists. The Nazis wanted to chase conventional Christianity
from public life and overturn tradition, replacing them with an
all-powerful state. Both Hitler and Mussolini were revolutionaries,
bitterly opposed to “reactionary” forces in their societies.
By what standard, then, are they considered conservatives who took
things to extremes? The left points to their anti-Semitism and
militarism. But anti-Semitism isn’t an inherently right-wing phenomenon
— Stalin’s Russia was anti-Semitic. As for militarism, these regimes
looked to it as a way to mobilize and organize society, something deeply
anathema to the anti-statist tradition of postwar American conservatism.
On the other hand, the progressive movement of the early 20th century
looked to Mussolini as an inspiration and shared intellectual roots with
European fascism, including an appreciation of the “top-down socialism”
of Otto von Bismarck. Goldberg eviscerates Woodrow Wilson as the closest
we have ever had to a fascist president. Wilson and his supporters
welcomed World War I as an opportunity to expand the state, instituting
“war socialism” and a far-reaching crackdown on dissent.
FDR picked up where Wilson left off. The crisis of the Great Depression
was the occasion for reviving “war socialism.” The man who ran the
National Recovery Administration was an open admirer of Mussolini, and
the alphabet soup of New Deal agencies had their roots in World War I
and the classic fascist impulse to mobilize society and put it on a war
footing.
Goldberg sees the fascist exaltation of youth, glorification of
violence, hatred of tradition and romance of “the street” in the New
Left of the 1960s, still the subject of the fond memories for the
liberal establishment in this country. Goldberg argues that “liberal
fascism” — the phrase was coined by H. G. Wells, and he meant it
positively — is a distant heir to European fascism. The liberal version
is pacifist rather than militaristic and feminine rather than masculine
in its orientation, but it also seeks to increase the power of the state
and overcome tradition in sweeping crusades pursued with the moral
fervor of war.
Goldberg’s keen intellectual history is, at bottom, a profound
cautionary tale about the perils of state aggrandizement and of
revolutionary movements. If nothing else, it should convince liberals
that it’s time to find a new insult.
© 2007 by King
Features Syndicate
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