By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 11.23.05 @ 12:07AM
Why so little coverage of William F. Buckley's 80th birthday gala?
WASHINGTON -- There was a grand event in New York City last
week. One of the most consequential figures of the last half of the
twentieth century observed his 80th birthday in the glamorous
Pierre Hotel with several hundred of the most influential members
of the political movement that he helped to found, the modern
conservative movement. The consequential figure was, of course,
William F. Buckley, Jr. Close students of the American scene will
thus understand why no organs of major media covered the event.
Major media used to cover what were called "public intellectuals."
They stopped covering them when conservatives joined the ranks of
public intellectuals and then overwhelmed the ranks.
What claims the attention of major media today is a phenomenon
called Kultursmog. It is the popular culture of the United
States, polluted utterly by a weird politics, a politics that is
often called liberal but is actually simply leftish and adolescent.
It has no fixed values or ideas other than to disturb the peace,
which the legally attuned will recognize as a misdemeanor in most
jurisdictions of the civilized world. Kultursmog is a
culture that mixes rock stars in with fashion models and the ideas
of Al Gore. Occasionally the smog actually includes the
Hon. Gore, along with those other "rock star" personalities, the
Clintons. The Kultursmog is always politically correct,
ever sensitive to the whims of the Democratic National Committee,
and increasingly anti-intellectual.
What makes it anti-intellectual is that the ideas behind public
policy today are almost completely derived from Buckley, Milton
Friedman, Irving Kristol, and other less well-known conservatives
and neoconservatives. In fact I think I can argue successfully, if
ironically, that Buckley is personally responsible for the
anti-intellectualism that has spread throughout major media over
the past 25 years. There once was a time when the late night
television shows, the morning chat shows, and the personality
sections of print journalism would occasionally feature the likes
of Buckley and his most frequent liberal opponents, John Kenneth
Galbraith and Gore Vidal. The time is long past. Buckley finished
off his opponents years ago, and no young egghead was up to taking
on his wit or erudition.
The wit has been quick and lethal. The other night at the Pierre
episodes of Buckley from his television show Firing Line
and from interviews on major media, most memorably 60
Minutes, demonstrated his debating skills and reminded me that
no one in the many decades of Buckley's career ever got the best of
him, at least not for more than a few minutes.
Buckley in his 80 years founded one of the most important
intellectual magazines in American history, National
Review. He was there at the founding of New York's influential
Conservative Party, which utterly transformed New York politics,
leaving a one-party state with two very competitive parties, the
old minority party now on top. He was friend and advisor to Barry
Goldwater, modern conservatism's first presidential contender, and
Ronald Reagan, the man who brought modern conservatism to
Washington where it has pretty much dominated since 1980. Forget
not Bill Clinton's line "The era of big government is over."
Buckley also ran for office, lectured and debated weekly, and wrote
scores of books and thousands of newspaper columns, all so
stylishly that the left came to reject stylish writing. Writers on
the left seem to think stylish writing is the mark of the "elitist"
conservative. That is another mark against Buckley. He encouraged
anti-intellectualism on the left and bad writing.
The Kultursmog may be anti-intellectual, vulgar, and
politically out of touch, but it remains very influential. To a
vast degree, it decides what the members of the chattering class
talk about and are aware of. Its most effective instrument in
influencing them is omission. It simply omits what it does not want
to acknowledge. When Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan died a few
years ago nowhere was it reported in major media that in the 1960s
and early 1970s he was associated with neoconservatives such as
Kristol and Jeane Kirkpatrick. At the Pierre the other night Henry
Kissinger, Mike Wallace, Tom Wolfe, and scores of other notables
paused to celebrate Buckley. In the Kultursmog the event
never took place and eventually Bill Buckley will never have
existed. But Buckley helped create what in politics has become the
winning side, and in time the Kultursmog will not exist at
all.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Television, Books, NATO, Conservatism