America’s Coup D’État in the Making
Deception
and
Self-Deception
By Claes G.
Ryn
October 17,
2008 "Lew
Rockwell" --
- Following
Plato, many
moralists
have
associated
political
virtue with
a reluctance
to pursue
and exercise
power. To
want to rule
others is to
be morally
disqualified
from doing
so. The
strong
tendency in
traditional
Western
political
thought to
disparage a
desire for
power has
been
unfortunate.
Without some
people
governing
others,
basic social
order could
not exist,
to say
nothing of
effecting
desirable
change. The
prejudice
against
power-seeking
has left
politics too
much to
people with
the wrong
kind of
ambition,
who want to
rule as an
end in
itself.
The reason
for
observing
that the
pursuit of
power need
not be
immoral but
can be a
means to
good is that
this article
will
challenge a
particular
manifestation
of the will
to power –
one that
finds
expression
in
increasingly
influential
arguments
for boosting
the
prerogatives
of the
American
president
and the
federal
government.
The
criticism
that will be
directed
here against
that
hankering
for
domination
must not be
misunderstood
as stemming
from
opposition
to any and
all efforts
to acquire
power. What
will be
rejected is
an
inordinate
and
blatantly
partisan,
and
therefore
perverse,
craving to
rule – a
dream not
just about
taking over
the U.S.
government
but about
dominating
the world.
The people
who have
this desire
attempt to
conceal its
real nature
by
pretending
that it
comports
well with
the thinking
of the
framers of
the U.S.
Constitution.
It is in
fact alien
to that
thinking.
Would that
power of a
different
quality
could
prevail
against it!
A merely
self-serving
desire for
power cannot
present
itself as
such. It
must portray
itself as a
wish to
assist
others. How
best to
argue for
giving you
or your
group great
power? If
you are able
to persuade
others that
the present
world is
grossly
oppressive
and
destructive
of human
happiness
but that you
can make it
much better,
those others
may support
mobilizing
massive
power and
placing it
in your
hands or the
hands of
people like
you. The
more
ambitious
your scheme
for
benevolent
change, the
greater the
need for
power.
Since the
French
Revolution,
ideologies
have been
exceptionally
conducive to
power-seeking.
Jacobinism,
Communism,
and National
Socialism
are alike in
promising
glorious
change and
assuming the
desirability
of giving
vast power
to those who
claim to
know what
needs to be
done. A few
years ago,
David Frum
and Richard
Perle
provided an
all-purpose
justification
for
unlimited
power:
putting "an
end to evil"
– the title
of their
co-authored
book. Now
there is a
noble and
ambitious
goal! Power
beyond the
dreams of
avarice
would be
needed to
realize it.
That rooting
out evil
might be an
endless task
only
increases
its appeal
to a
ravenous
will to
power. We
are, of
course,
supposed to
believe that
the
connection
between
advocating
sweeping
change and
needing
great power
is purely
coincidental.
Jacobinism
and Marxism
were openly
revolutionary.
They were
the
ideologies
of
out-groups
challenging
existing
elites. What
this writer
has called
neo-Jacobinism
is the
ideology of
people on
the inside,
members of
America’s
elites, who
wish to make
the military
and other
might of the
United
States a
more pliant
and powerful
tool and who
are
attempting a
creeping
coup d’état
from within.
According to
their
ideology,
America is
called by
history to
create a
better world
based on
universal
principles.
Virtuous
American
power must
be
unleashed.
Their main
excuse at
present for
exercising
extra-constitutional
power is to
combat
"Terrorism,"
but any
threat to
their great
cause is a
potential
justification
for setting
the
Constitution
aside.
The rise of
the huge,
centralized
Federal
government
and the
corresponding
decline of
limited,
decentralized
government
resulted
from changes
deep in the
American
mind and
imagination.
The new
Jacobins
take
advantage of
the fading
of the old
ethos and
hasten its
disappearance
by
advocating
notions
incompatible
with it.
The old
American
idea of
government
was
indistinguishable
from the
commandment
to "love thy
neighbor."
That
morality
stressed the
importance
of the
person
trying to
control his
own evil and
weakness.
Strength of
will –
character –
had to be
built up so
that the
person would
become
capable of
more loving
familial and
local
relationships
and more
responsible
citizenship.
This
morality
made for
strong
communities
and
self-reliance
and
minimized
the need for
government.
Alexis de
Tocqueville
pointed to
the great
reluctance
among
Americans in
the early
19th century
to give up
power over
their own
lives to any
distant
authority.
The
Constitution
rested on an
unwritten
constitution,
which was
America’s
religious,
moral,
intellectual,
cultural,
and social
habits and
beliefs.
Traditional
America
encouraged a
strong
attachment
to life
lived
up-close. It
fostered
self-restraint,
modesty,
respect for
law, and a
willingness
to
compromise.
It was this
heritage
that brought
into being
the
constitutional
personality.
Just as
people were
in the habit
of imposing
internal
checks on
desire, so
were they
predisposed
to accept
and respect
external
constitutional
and other
legal
constraints.
Without such
people, the
Constitution
could not
work as
intended.
But the
self-understanding
of Americans
slowly
changed.
Throughout
the Western
world a very
different
moral ethos
was
spreading
that shifted
attention
away from
intimate
associations
and local
community.
It rejected
the old
notion of
original sin
and of
personal
responsibility
for people
up close. It
found
morality not
in acts of
character
toward
particular
individuals
– neighbors
– but in
"idealistic,"
sentimental
caring for
unfortunate
collectives
and mankind
at large.
The older
personality,
which the
Constitution
both assumed
and
required,
began to
wither.
Americans
started to
abdicate
authority to
benevolent-sounding
politicians
far away.
Increasingly,
doing good
became
perceived as
the
responsibility
of
government,
which alone
could take
on the large
projects now
said to be
demanded by
morality.
Governmental,
collective
action
gradually
replaced
individual,
private and
communal
responsibility.
The moral
momentum
behind the
old
decentralized
society
weakened.
Today
strong,
centralized
Federal
power seems
to more and
more
Americans
not merely
acceptable
but
desirable.
This is so
because they
are
absorbing
the
anti-traditional
moral
sensibility
now dominant
not only in
the
universities,
the arts,
the news
media, and
the
entertainment
and
publishing
industries
but in many
churches.
Hence
Americans
say
increasingly
to
government:
"Act for
us!"
Much of the
intellectual
opposition
to this
trend has
been
confused and
self-defeating.
A prime
example is
the way many
conservatives,
thinking
that they
were shoring
up
traditional
beliefs,
attached
themselves
to the ideas
of Leo
Strauss
(1899–1973),
whose
disciples
became a
major force
in American
academia and
national
politics. A
refugee from
Nazi
Germany,
Strauss
taught for
many years
at the
University
of Chicago.
Because he
appeared to
defend a
classical,
ancient
notion of
universal
moral right,
many did not
notice that
he was
actually
discrediting
respect for
tradition.
Strauss and
his
disciples
advocated an
anti-historical,
un-conservative
notion of
moral
universality.
According to
Strauss, no
real
philosopher
gives any
credence to
"the
conventional"
or "the
ancestral,"
to use his
terms. To
respect them
represents
the greatest
of all
intellectual
sins,
"historicism."
Inherited
ways are, he
insisted,
mere
accidents of
history.
Respect is
owed solely
to "the
simply
right,"
which is
ahistorical
and
rational.
Strauss
sharply
criticized
Edmund
Burke, who
saw the
possibility
of moral
universality
acquiring
historical
form.
Strauss’s
abstract
notion of
natural
right ruled
out the idea
that a
particular
tradition
might,
despite
inevitable
flaws,
embody the
quest for
moral
universality
and be, for
that reason,
worthy of
allegiance.
Strauss’s
ideas were
blithely
absorbed by
many
Christians,
not least
philosophically
unsophisticated
and naïve
Roman
Catholics,
who
perceived
him as a
defender of
moral right.
They did not
realize that
his
conception
of
universality
was markedly
different
from that of
Christianity
and related
philosophical
currents.
They did not
understand
or care that
in rejecting
tradition as
a proper
source of
guidance
Strauss was
attacking
one of the
pillars of
their faith.
They did not
comprehend
that by
sharply
separating
the
universal
from the
particular
Strauss
ruled out
universality
becoming
selectively
incarnate in
history and
was striking
at the very
core of
their
professed
beliefs.
Specifically,
he was
denying the
possibility
of the
Incarnation,
of the Word
becoming
flesh.
Straussian
political
philosophy
has sought
to detach
Americans
from their
historically
existing
tradition of
constitutionalism
with its
deep and
distinctive
roots in
history and
to make them
loyal
instead to
abstract
principles
of
Straussian
design that
have been
attributed
to the
founders.
Straussians
are not all
alike – in a
few, the
anti-historical
prejudice is
diluted to
some extent
by respect
for
America’s
actual past
– but
prominent
disciples of
Strauss such
as Allan
Bloom, Harry
Jaffa, and
Walter Berns,
who differ
in some
ways, all
agree that
what is
admirable
about
America is
not its
concrete,
historical
self but the
abstract
principles
of the
founders. In
the last few
decades,
Straussian
conceptions
of
Americanism,
patriotism
and virtue
have been
widely
advocated in
academia,
including
America’s
military
academies.
That terms
like these
can be given
a distinctly
anti-traditional
meaning has
been little
noticed.
By
propagating
a
rationalistic,
anti-historical
notion of
moral right
Strauss and
his
disciples
have created
a deep
prejudice
against
cherishing
America’s
distinctive,
historically
evolved
Christian
and British
past. But
this was the
cultural
heritage
that
nurtured the
inner and
outer
restraints
of American
constitutionalism.
Because
Straussian
anti-traditionalism
has confused
and weakened
so many who
wanted to
defend that
heritage, it
has been in
some ways
more
destructive
of it than
standard
liberal
anti-traditionalism.
Despite
plentiful
ceremonial
praise for
the
Constitution
and virtual
orgies of
constitutional
legalism, we
are living
through the
progressive
dismantling
of America’s
proudest
political
achievement.
One sign of
the
precarious
condition of
the
Constitution
is that many
imagine that
it could be
restored by
electing
more
politicians
sympathetic
to its
tenets and
by having
more "strict
constructionists"
appointed to
the U.S.
Supreme
Court.
But the old
American
constitutionalism
is
inseparable
from the
moral-spiritual
and other
culture that
gave it
birth.
Limited
government
and liberty
were made
possible by
people who,
because of
who they
were, put
checks on
their
appetites,
ran their
own lives
and
communities,
and behaved
more
generally in
ways
conducive to
freedom
under law.
Restoring
American
constitutionalism
would
presuppose
some kind of
resurgence
of that old
culture.
Americans
would have
to begin
viewing life
rather
differently
from how
they are
viewing it
now. They
would have
to rearrange
their
priorities
and start
acting
differently,
placing more
emphasis on
family,
private
groups and
local
communities.
They would
have to want
to take back
much of the
power ceded
to
politicians.
Is that
likely to
happen? If
not, the
Constitution
may not be
salvageable.
The time has
certainly
come to
consider
what might
take the
place of
American
constitutionalism.
That so many
admirers of
the old
Constitution
are prone to
nostalgic
dreaming and
elaborate
defenses of
what is long
gone is a
sign of
moral and
intellectual
paralysis.
But there
are people
who have
thought for
a rather
long time
about what
should
replace the
Constitution
of 1789.
They include
leading
Straussians
and
neoconservatives
who have
masked their
agenda by
pretending
to defend
what is
being lost.
It is only
fair to add
that the
strategic
designs of
secretive
and
obfuscating
leaders are
not always
obvious to
the rank and
file.
Straussians
and
neoconservatives
have warned
against the
consequences
of
abandoning
America’s
"founding
principles,"
but they are
not
referring to
the ways and
beliefs of
the founders
but to
abstractions
of their own
devising
that they
falsely
attribute to
revered
historical
figures.
Those
principles
are more
reminiscent
of the
French
Jacobins
than of the
founders.
Straussians
and
neoconservatives
have also
warned of
the
consequences
of the
"closing of
the American
mind" – the
title of
Allan
Bloom’s 1987
best-selling
book – but
the mind
that they
want kept
open is not
the old
American
mind but
what they
would have
preferred it
to be, their
own version
of the
Enlightenment
mind.
The same
people have
warned of
American
cultural
decline, as
measured
some years
back by
William
Bennett’s
"cultural
indicators,"
but what
they want is
not the old
American
virtues of
neighborliness,
localism,
self-control,
compromise,
and the rule
of law, but
the
purported
virtue of
vigorously
asserting
universal
principles
in the
world. The
new Jacobins
disdain
moral
hesitation
and
ambiguity,
demanding
what they
call "moral
clarity."
You are
either on
the side of
good,
spreading
"democracy"
or
"freedom,"
as they
understand
them, or you
are siding
with the
enemy.
The new
Jacobins
have a
double
message. On
the one
hand, they
tell
Americans
that their
society is
in great
danger: It
is
threatened
domestically
by
fragmentation
caused by
lack of
virtue and
patriotism,
by moral
nihilism,
historicism,
and
multiculturalism.
It is
threatened
from abroad
by Terrorism
and
"Islamofascism."
But, on the
other hand,
the new
Jacobins
want to be
reassuring:
Be not
afraid! We,
the
patriotic
champions of
American
principles,
are here to
protect you!
We promise
you order
and security
and an
America
committed to
right in the
world.
Their notion
of America
reveals its
alien
origins even
in
strange-sounding
language, as
in the name
"Department
of Homeland
Security."
They are
popularizing
un-American
ideas of
governance,
notably the
so-called
"unitary"
executive –
the notion
of the
preeminence
of the
president,
who is to be
as little
constrained
as possible
by checks
and balances
and the rule
of law.
Their goal
is wholly at
odds with
the
constitutionalism
of the
framers.
Lest too
many worry
about the
expansion
and
centralization
of federal
power, the
neo-Jacobins
do not let
Americans
forget even
for a day
the great
and acute
danger of
Terrorism. A
country that
spends
almost as
much on its
military and
national
security as
the rest of
the world
put together
has to
tremble
continuously
before
possible
threats.
People who
resist the
progressive
erosion of
American
liberties
are
portrayed as
unpatriotic
and a threat
to national
security.
Those who
would
protect us
are
advancing
the coup
from within
by teaching
us to
associate
American
security and
virtue with
the
leadership
of a strong
man. Here,
as in other
ways,
Straussian
and
neoconservative
ideas have
blended with
and hardened
standard
liberal
thinking. In
the mid-20th
century it
was
academics
like James
MacGregor
Burns who
inspired a
cult of the
presidency.
Burns, who
eventually
became
president of
the American
Political
Science
Association,
was the
quintessential
modern
American
liberal. He
advocated
popular rule
through
strong
presidential
leadership
in the
Roosevelt-New
Deal mode.
He knew well
that this
notion
flatly
contradicted
the framers.
They opposed
"democracy"
and assumed
that if any
branch of
the U.S.
government
were
preeminent,
it would be
the
Congress.
Now it is
Straussians
and
neoconservatives
who most
extol strong
executive
leadership
and more
generally
muscular
federal
government.
They see the
powers of
the
executive as
trumping the
powers of
the other
branches,
especially
at a time of
national
emergency.
Then the
president
must embody
and express
the will of
the nation
as he sees
fit.
Harvard’s
Harvey
Mansfield is
the
intellectual
figurehead
of those
attempting
to justify
the creeping
coup from
within. In
The Wall
Street
Journal (May
2, 2007) he
has stressed
that, now
more than
ever,
America
needs a
"strong
executive."
Basing his
argument on
a strained
and
transparently
unhistorical
interpretation
of the
framers, he
contends
that the
rule of law
has
drawbacks,
"each of
which
suggests the
need for
one-man-rule."
For one
thing, the
law can
produce only
what is
mediocre,
"an average
solution
even in the
best case."
For another,
the law
lacks
"energy." In
a crisis,
government
must put
forth
"energy,"
and "the
best source
of energy"
is "one
man." What
America
needs today,
Mansfield
declares, is
"a wise man
on the spot"
with freedom
to act for
the whole.
To
"subordinate"
the
president to
law and the
legislature
is
"dangerous."
Then "he
could not do
his job."
Not only is
a strong
executive
needed to
deal with
emergencies,
Mansfield
contends. It
must also be
able to
overpower
domestic
opposition,
"oppose a
majority
faction
produced by
temporary
delusions in
the people."
Americans
admire
strong
presidents
not just in
politics but
also in
corporations,
he argues.
If it is
suggested
that there
is a
connection
between a
strong
executive
and
imperialism,
Mansfield
regards it
as better to
err on the
side of
imperialism
than
isolationism.
The
difficulties
of the war
in Iraq
arose, he
writes,
"from having
wished to
leave too
much to the
Iraqis, thus
from a sense
of
inhibition
rather than
imperial
ambition."
It seems
apposite
that
Mansfield,
the advocate
of muscular
executive
power
capable of
enforcing
its will at
home and
abroad,
should also
be a
champion of
what he
calls
"manliness,"
the topic of
his recent
book.
The many
proponents
of the
theory of
the
"unitary"
executive
include John
Yoo, now a
professor of
law at the
University
of
California,
Berkeley. As
a Justice
Department
lawyer in
the Bush
administration,
Yoo,
formerly at
the American
Enterprise
Institute,
famously
defended
broadly
discretionary
presidential
power and
the use of
torture in
the war
against
terrorism.
Michael
Goldfarb,
previously
at the
Weekly
Standard and
now deputy
communications
director for
the McCain
for
president
campaign,
has asserted
that the
framers
"sought an
energetic
executive
with near
dictatorial
power in
pursuing
foreign
policy and
war."
Voices
calling for
unleashing
allegedly
virtuous
American
power have
long been
heard in the
electronic
media, the
major
newspapers –
Washington
Post and New
York Times
prominent
among them –
the big news
magazines,
and the
leading
opinion
periodicals.
Long before
9/11 Charles
Krauthammer
wrote in the
Washington
Post that
America must
take
advantage of
being the
only
superpower
to create a
world to its
liking. How
should it
accomplish
this goal?
"By
unapologetic
and
implacable
demonstrations
of will"
(March 5,
2001). Why
should
virtuous
America not
be
"implacable"?
Robert Kagan
wrote in the
same
newspaper
that
"America . .
. can
sometimes
seem like a
bully on the
world
stage." "But
really, the
1,200-pound
gorilla is
an
underachiever
in the
bullying
business"
(November 3,
2002).
The
handwriting
is all over
the wall. It
is becoming
clearer with
each passing
day that
neo-Jacobinism
and related
currents,
which may
have seemed
innocuous
and "merely
academic" to
some, have
provided
ideological
cover for an
ever more
grasping and
ruthless
pursuit of
power.
People of
great
ambition who
want to
exercise the
power being
abdicated by
Americans
are trying
to make us
accept and
even welcome
the final
disappearance
of American
constitutionalism
and its
culture of
modesty and
self-restraint.
As already
mentioned,
some earlier
assaults on
traditional
Western
civilization
were
launched by
openly
radical
agitators
who saw
themselves
as on the
outside of
their
societies.
Their
justifications
for seizing
power were
revolutionary
doctrines
like those
of Marx and
Trotsky.
Today’s
rolling,
gradual coup
is
engineered
by already
powerful
people who
want to
consolidate
and expand
their power.
Wishing not
to
antagonize
too much
those who
still
identify
with an
older
America and
still wield
some power,
they try not
to appear
too radical
and so often
present
themselves
as
"neoconservatives"
or even
"conservatives."
As should be
clear from
their own
words, that
does not
make them
friends of
traditional
America.
Needless to
say,
neo-Jacobin
ideology,
though long
a potent
force, is
not the only
way of
justifying
the coup
from within.
Those
working to
centralize
power are
strongly
entrenched
in both
major
parties and
in other
influential
American
institutions,
and they
employ
different
ideas and
symbols to
woo and
co-opt
different
constituencies.
Given the
growing
problems of
the United
States, why
not welcome
these
efforts to
rethink the
ways of
traditional
America?
Because they
are inspired
by highly
dubious
motives that
color the
proposals
for change.
Though those
trying to
impose a new
power
structure
often speak
in the name
of America
and their
rhetoric is
sometimes
faintly
conservative,
they are not
inspired by
a desire to
protect and
reconstitute
the best of
the Western
tradition.
By changing
the meaning
of words,
they are
rather
trying to
reconcile us
to the
demise of
that
heritage and
its
replacement
with their
own
enlightened
and virtuous
regime.
Their
response to
the crisis
is
aggravating
the
crumbling of
the American
constitutional
order. Their
prescriptions
contain the
outlines of
tyranny and
must fill
the friends
of
traditional
American and
Western
civilization
with
trepidation.
What is
ominous
about these,
our
purported
saviors, to
repeat, is
not that
they want
power. It is
that they
represent a
conceited
and
self-absorbed
special
interest and
have an
obsessive
desire to
rule others
– a desire
that cannot
be concealed
by feigned
benevolence
toward
Americans
and all
mankind. It
is necessary
to expose
their false
solutions to
what are
real
problems and
to explore
by what
measures the
best of our
civilization
might,
despite
daunting
odds, be
given a new
lease on
life.
Claes G. Ryn [send him mail], professor of politics at the Catholic University of America, is chairman of the National Humanities Institute and editor of Humanitas. He also is president of the Academy of Philosophy and Letters. He is the author of America the Virtuous.
Copyright © 2008 Claes G. Ryn