“Conservatism is about power besieged and power protected. It is an activist doctrine for an activist time. It waxes in response to movements from below and wanes in response to their disappearance” (p. 52)
The problem facing modern American conservatism is that it defeated all of its enemies. Communists, social liberation movements of the 1960s, New Dealers, and others were all handled and defeated by the 1980s. While reactionary movements might spawn and dissipate rapidly, they really have no real goals left to attain. This is exemplified in Trump, who once elected really accomplished no real goals promised to his constituents and did nothing radically different than what even Obama did in power. Even the January 6th riots were just that: a short dissipation of rage without any real goals or objectives.
At its heart, conservatism is the “felt experience of having power, seeing it threatened, and trying to win it back.” (P. 27). It is an “animus against the agency of the subordinate classes” (p. 30) When the subordinate peoples and classes of the world try to contest their subordination this angers their superiors. The superiors love freedom for themselves, but see any extension of this freedom to the lower classes as a loss of their own freedom. If people are provided with the resources to make their own choices, whether this be a worker in a factory or a woman in her own home, they will be more free to disobey their employer or husband. The conservative identifies and defines itself by their power over others; any attack on this power is therefore an intimate attack on the conservative themself. “The conservative may or may not be directly involved in or benefit from the practices of rule he defends; many… are not - the conservative position stems from a genuine conviction that a world thus emancipated will be ugly, brutish, base, and dull. It will lack the excellence of a world where the better man commands the worse.” (P. 39). And who is this “better man”? He is a warrior; one who has either proved himself through conquest on the battlefield or in the marketplace.
“Historically, the conservative has sought to forestall the march of democracy in both the public and the private spheres, on the assumption that advances in the one necessarily spur advances in the other.” (p. 38) The reaction to this is based off the assumption that some are fit to rule others, while the rest are fit to serve those who rule. What distinguishes conservatism from traditionalism, which is the tendency to stay attached to already formed habits like buying the same clothing brand, is that “conservatism is a deliberate, conscious effort to preserve… forms of experience which can no longer be had in an authentic way.” (p. 46). Conservatism only becomes conscious when new ways of life/being appear on the scene to challenge the conservative’s ‘natural order/hierarchy of the world’. The conservative fights for things precisely because “they are being - or have been - taken away.” (p. 46).
It is not simply that the conservative wishes to “conserve” the existing social hierarchy. The conservatives, much like their American incarnation in the 1960s, are inherently radical. “The conservative not only opposes the left; he also believes the left has been in the driver’s seat since, depending on who’s counting, the French Revolution or the Reformation.” (p. 48). The damages of the left must be rolled back and a war must be declared against the culture that the supposed empowered left has created.
As a reaction to certain emancipation movements at a certain time in a certain space, each and every conservative reaction will bear specific traces of the very movements it opposes. The right not only reacts against the left, but also borrows strategies, ideas, and tactics from the left as well. “As the movements of the left change - from the French Revolution to abortion to the right to vote to the right to organize to the Bolshevik revolution… so too do the reactions of the right”. (p. 52)
Conservatism was originally born as a backlash and reaction to the French Revolution. It had two major components that are often little understood: it both critiqued the old regime for its inadequacies and also borrowed the ideas and tactics from the very revolution it opposed. Both of these elements of reaction constitute a major element of conservatism. The French Revolution’s two major reactionary thinkers, Burke and Maistre, both heavily criticized the ancien regime; they believed the greatest enemy of the old regime was, in fact, “the old regime itself or… the defenders of the old regime. They (lacked) the ideological wherewithal to press the cause of the old regime with the requisite vigor, clarity, and purpose.” (p. 65). Conservatives often believe the regime of the old order has grown fat and complacent, and therefore it has withered away its political muscle and willpower. While they despise the inept weakness of the old regimes, conservatives often learn strategies and tactics from their left wing enemies. “Sometimes, their studies are self-conscious and strategic, as the look to the left for ways to bend new vernaculars, or new media, to their aims” (p. 70). An example of this would be Nixon’s southern strategy, where, as Republican strategist Lee Atwater pointed out, in the 1950s the political strategy was to be as openly racist as possible. By 1968 this was not socially acceptable, so instead you use coded, more abstract terms like “states rights” and “school busing” to push the same message: that “blacks get hurt worse than whites.” (p. 71). Sometimes this results in the unintentional education of the conservative. They spend so much time engaging with left wing arguments and disguising their intentions through language that “the disguise has seeped into and transformed the intention.” (p. 72).
From studying their revolutionary opponents conservatives harness and improve their abilities as populists. They find ways to win over the masses and harness their political energy in order to reinforce or restore the power of the elites. What section of the masses does the conservative most appeal to? It is those who feel like they have lost something: the dispossessed. Conservatism takes their loss and “threads the strands of that experience into an ideology promising that that loss, or at least some portion of it, can be made whole… it may be a landed estate or the privileges of white skin… as material as money or as ethereal as a sense of standing… even so, it is a loss, and nothing is ever so cherished as that which we no longer possess.” (p. 79).
According to the father of Conservatism, Edmund Burke, the conservative craves power which is both terrifying and awe inspiring; sublime power, a “delightful horror”. This can be found in hierarchy, but also in violence. Most sublime of all is when violence is used to reinforce hierarchy. But the conservative should keep at a distance from the violence. “Distance and obscurity enhance sublimity; nearness and illumination diminish it.” (p. 84). Life and health are pleasurable, and pleasure makes us weak and susceptible to becoming a complacent, easily toppled regime. Pain, danger, and death are elicitors of the strongest, most sublime emotions. Therefore pain and danger are “generative experiences of the self” (p. 88). Social hierarchies allow people, excluded those on the very top and very bottom, to both experience that pain of being dominated by those above while also administering pain to someone on the lower rung of the hierarchy.
A counterrevolutionary conservative always faces the same issue: how do they defend an old regime that has been or is being destroyed? To try and use the ideological “truths” that once held up the regime is no longer viable, as many of these truths helped get the regime into trouble in the first place. New “truths” must be invented. An example of this can be seen in the works of the original great counterrevolutionary thinker Thomas Hobbes. During the English civil war of the 1640s Hobbes vehemently defended the monarchy over the democratic ideals of the ‘democraticals’. He took the ideas of freedom championed by the democraticals and turned it on its head, thus creating counterrevolutionary ideology out of revolution itself. In his work “Leviathan” Hobbes explains that freedoms include “the Liberty to buy, and sell, and otherwise contact with one another; to choose their own aboad, their own diet, their own trade of life” so that “To whatever degree the sovereign can guarantee the freedom of movement, the ability to go about our business without hinderance of other men, we are free. Submission to his power, in other words, augments our freedom. The more absolute our submission, the more powerful he is and the freer we are. Subjugation is emancipation.” (p. 126)
We can see the seeds today's dominant neoliberal ideology being conjured as early as in the writings of Burke. Burke rejects the labor theory of value, claiming: “the value of money must be judged like everything else, from its rate at market.” (p. 139). The market doesn’t just settle values, it makes them. Capital is the “thinking and presiding principle to the labourer” (p. 149) and therefore “Labor needs a principle of reason to guide it; that principle is to be found in capital. It is thus critical that the hierarchy between capital and labor be maintained” (p. 150). The Austrian school of economics, the true brains behind many of the ‘theories’ underpinning neoliberalism, built upon this elitist view of value, the market, and labor. Friedrich Hayek, in his writing “The Constitution of Liberty”, developed a top-down view of economics. Instead of a market of consumers dictating what the producers would make, it was the wealthy that determined the tastes of the masses and the culture resulting from this. “The working stiff is a being of limited horizons. Unlike the employer… (who is) dedicated to “shaping and reshaping the plan of life”, while the worker’s orientation is “largely a matter of fitting himself into a given framework.”” (p. 183). To Hayek the freedom of these elite trend-setters is more useful than the freedom of the masses. “We may never know what serendipity of knowledge and know-how will produce the best results… will yield the greatest advance. For that reason, individuals - all individuals - must be free to pursue their ends, to exploit the wisdom of others for their own purposes…What is important is not what freedom I personally would like to exercise but what freedom some person may need in order to do things beneficial to society.” (p. 181-182). Great wealth allows one to see above the horizon in a way the working man can not, and therefore it is imperative for progress that the men of great wealth have the freedom to pursue their goals and therefore further progress society. All men may have the same freedoms, but only those of the ruling class have the means at their disposal to fully make use of those freedoms. With great wealth also comes the freedom to pursue other goals than obtaining money. The wealthy are “cultural legislators” who “liberated from the workplace and the rat race, the “idle rich”… can devote themselves to patronizing the arts, subsidizing worthy causes like abolition or penal reform, founding new philanthropies and cultural institutions.” ( p. 185). To Hayek those born of wealth are “beneficiaries of higher culture and nobler values that have been transmitted across generations” (p. 185) and therefore should be given any freedoms necessary, including the right to pass their fortunes on to their children for generations, so that they may push society in a better direction. Otherwise we risk living in a “seriously lacking” society “in which all the intellectual, moral, and artistic leaders belong to the employed classes” (p. 185).
Ayn Rand, the pseudointellectual right-wing hack, helped bring the hyperindividualistic elitism of the Austrian school into the cultural mainstream. Von Mises heaped copious praise upon her seminal work, “Atlas Shrugged”, saying: “you have the courage to tell the masses what no politician told them: you are inferior and all the improvements… which you take for granted you owe to the effort of men better than you.” (p. 206). Beloved by the Hollywood elite and the average conservative alike, Rand’s works still sell massively today, yet her ideology is essentially akin to fascism. Rand justified capitalism as both rational and fair because “men prosper or fail, survive or perish in proportion to the degree of their rationality… It is the basic, metaphysical fact of man’s nature- the connection between survival and his use of reason- that capitalism recognizes and protects… the exceptional men” (p. 203) much in the same way that Hitler justified private property: “people are not of equal value or ethical importance… (private property) can be moral and justified only if we admit men’s achievements are different” (p. 204). This social Darwinism which connects Rand and the Nazis runs strong, as both use it to justify the hierarchical nature of private property as a moral necessity. To Rand, “exceptional minorities” lift up all of society very much in the same way that Hayek claimed an intellectual elite dictated production and culture, or like how Hitler claimed that all achievements can be “solely attributed to the importance of personality… All the worldly goods we possess we owe to the struggle of a select few.” (p. 203).
So now we come to the heir of all these reactionary movements and intellectuals: Donald Trump. Like the right of old Trump sneers at convention, norms, and rules as part of his appeal. He refuses to be constrained by ‘political correctness’. His racism is nastier than his recent predecessors; no longer is the right content with mere dog whistles, Trump has amplified nativist resentment and laser focused it on Muslims and Mexicans. Where “conservatism is an elitist movement of the masses, an effort to create a new-old regime that, in one way or another, makes privilege popular” (p. 266) Trump signifies that the white right is no longer content with their racial and imperial privileges. Although the right has crushed many of the gains of the civil rights movement “African Americans in the South attend (schools) today that are more segregated than they were under Richard Nixon; the racial wealth gap has tripled since 1984; and… voting rights for African Americans are under attack” (p. 266) these victories no longer satiate the right. The combination of neoliberalism's ills (stagnant wages, rising debt, increasing precariousness) combined with the symbolism of a black president has exacerbated the right’s anxieties and led to Trump. Rhetorically Trump has turned his back on Reagan and Reaganomics; instead of “morning in America” Trump says we are “mourning in America”. Yet, economically and political, Trump has neither accomplished or even marginally pushed forward any goals of a new economic system or political order. While there are strings of weak emancipatory movements (Occupy Wallstreet, BLM, Bernie, LGBTQ campaigns) none of them are strong or organized enough to discipline the right into more coherence. “Without a formidable enemy on the left, without an opponent to discipline and tutor the right, the long-standing fissures of the conservative movement are allowed to deepen and expand.” (p. 268). Like all right wingers Trump is a social Darwinist who believes that economic life is a struggle for power, where the best men win and the weak men lose. To Trump the victory of “the deal” is both his all consuming source of libidinal pleasure and “an unexpected sigh of emptiness, even boredom” where Trump states “if you ask me exactly what the deals… all add up to in the end, I’m not sure I have a very good answer” (p. 278). In fact, trump has no answer at all. He sees through the veneer and falsity of capitalism. He breaks the rule and says the quiet part out loud: it’s all a gamble, and there is no difference between luck at a casino and success on the stock market. The only true goal is habitual, constantly depleting hedonistic pleasure. The core at the center is emptiness and endless accumulation. While often called a fascist, Trump does not fit the mold. Where previous political leaders like Nixon used anger as a political tool, without a viable enemy Trump’s rage just comes across as the narcissistic “ranting and raving of an old man.” (p. 293). Fascism was an invigorating movement spurred by the youth. It was original and harnessed the energy of a young political base to fight off a genuinely powerful left. The MAGA movement is a movement of old, unoriginal boomers screaming at the emptiness of a system they have no real desire to reconstruct, whose only real enemy resides in their minds.