By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 12.11.03 @ 12:09AM
The Wall Street Journal's editor emeritus was that rare public intellectual who arrived at his eminence not by self-promotion but by the quality of his work.
WASHINGTON -- My friend Bob Bartley, editor emeritus of the
Wall Street Journal, died at 9:35 Wednesday morning,
December 10. I knew him for over three decades. During that time he
grew from being a quiet slightly enigmatic Midwestern reporter in
the Journal's Chicago bureau to being the most powerful
editor of the most powerful editorial page in the country --
powerful, that is, if ideas change the world, and his did.
In the 1970s Bob, once something of a liberal, became a Cold
Warrior and foresightedly opposed arms control and Mutual Assured
Destruction. By the 1980s he was one of the small band formulating
and promoting Supply-Side Economics. In the 1990s he led an even
smaller band of journalists who recognized the Clintons as reckless
abusers of power and serious threats to the rule of law. By the
turn of the century the Cold War had ended peacefully with the
Soviet Union in history's dustbin, Reaganite prosperity was
flourishing, and President Bill Clinton had been impeached.
Bob's ideas of a strong military and a vigilant foreign policy
had replaced accommodation. His ideas of tax reduction and economic
growth had replaced statist economics. And the Clinton
Administration was increasingly seen in lurid hues, the Democrats'
equivalent of the Harding Administration though without the
innocent consequences. Bob had moved on to champion the Bush
Doctrine, which he with his keen sense of history recognized as a
demarche as significant as 1947's policy of containment.
In his weekly Wall Street Journal column, written in a
fluent style employing lucid English spiced with an occasional dash
of folksiness, he ranged widely across problems recognized by the
nation or not yet recognized by it. Only those who have worked with
him and the historians who will eventually chronicle his times can
appreciate Bob's genius for seeing history's challenges coming
across the horizon. He usually saw them before the rest of us had a
hint of what was coming. Usually he recognized the requisite policy
for dealing with them. By the end of the first half of the current
Bush Administration Bob was speculating that the Forty-Third
President was ushering in a New Establishment to replace the jejune
and rancorous liberal establishment. That is the challenge he
leaves for all thoughtful libertarian conservatives to take up.
Then came the cancer, which he fought gamely and treated
matter-of-factly. Retiring the editorship of the Journal
in 2002, he found himself busier than ever, doing television which
he relished, his column, speaking widely, and planning long-term
intellectual projects to keep the nation's intellectual debates
vigorous. That was not enough. He encouraged me to revitalize
The American Spectator. Despite illness and all his other
obligations he presided over the magazine's redesign, encouraged
new emphases appropriate to the changing times, and took a look at
the business side. His long-time friend, the investment banker Ed
Yeo, believed that along with all Bob's other talents this student
of economics and commerce also had a stupendous aptitude for
business.
He did. Watching him attend to the myriad details of journalism
was an illuminating experience that I know I shall never experience
again. Bob's knowledge was incomparable. He knew how the world
works. How he knew all this is a mystery, genius is a mystery.
To the last there was a twinkle in his eye, at times a
mischievous twinkle. He was a quiet man, punctuating conversation
whether social or editorial, with long pauses, which doubtless
puzzled some people, but his friends understood: Bob was thinking
about the topic at hand. And he often broke his silence with
another unforgettable mannerism. He would roll his head left and
right while uttering a particularly emphatic judgment in his flat
slightly nasal voice intoning the unaccented idiom of the Midwest,
his native region in which he took immense pride.
Bob had a beatific smile, and I never heard him express anger
against anyone. Some of his critics in the Clinton years lumped him
in with what they called the Clinton-haters. His judgments were too
coolly arrived at for hate. Moreover he was deeply yet quietly
religious. At the revitalization of The American Spectator
he prevailed on me to set the record straight on our great
iconoclast, H.L. Mencken. Mencken's angers are not what we admire
in a thinking person. Bob favored the values of a gentleman. He was
confident of the rightness of the positions he arrived at, and
understandably. For over thirty years he was rarely wrong. And one
other point: he is that rare public intellectual who arrived at his
eminence not by self-promotion but by the quality of his work.
The recognition came over the years, for the evidence is
inescapable. Communism is gone. Markets are recognized. Integrity,
the rule of law, and limited government are admired, at least in
America. Bob Bartley was a great man. When the White House got word
that his life was in peril, the Presidential Medal of Freedom for
which he had been nominated was immediately announced after the
President gave Bob a call. He was glad for that call and when a few
days later he died he did so knowing that he, an old artillery
officer, had left formations in the field. The Wall Street
Journal advancing Bob's vision is as formidable as ever. And
he has left The American Spectator and the New York
Sun, founded by Bob's pal Seth Lipsky. All have their guns
trained on the enemy. Who are the enemy? Any force endangering the
heart of Bob's philosophy of "free men and free markets." Bob left
that philosophy ascendant.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Bill Clinton, Television, Economics, Business, Law, Military, Communism