By Ben Stein on 6.25.07 @ 12:09AM
What would the world be like if there had been no William F. Buckley?
What would the world be like if there had been no William F.
Buckley?
I can well recall even as a high schooler that Republicans were
considered Midwestern stolid reactionaries with no ideas except to
oppose generosity and kindness. I can well recall when being a
conservative meant being without ideas and simply in opposition to
those who had ideas. Or if conservatives had any ideas, they were
just that them who had should continue to have and those who had
not should rot.
Then came William F. Buckley, seemingly out of the forehead of
Zeus. He said that conservatives had more ideas and better ideas
than leftists. He said that conservatives' ideas comported better
with the basic dignity of the human personality than did socialism.
He said that man would not only be richer under conservative
principles, but happier, more moral, and prouder of himself.
He said these things when the powers that be laughed at him. He
said these things when the Revolution came (I have always thought
George Wallace played an immense part in that Revolution, but then
that's just me) and Americans started to realize that they, like
the man who had been speaking prose all his life, really were a lot
closer to Buckley's ideas of God and man than to Galbraith's. He
spoke principles of human dignity, human service before the
Almighty, respect for law, respect for life, and he was not afraid
to speak them to whoever was running the show, Republican or
Democrat.
When Democrats did the kowtow to the Soviets, Buckley was not
afraid to say so. When Republicans did the same kowtow to wage
price controls, he was also unafraid.
The amazing thing is that Buckley had these great ideas from
Burke and Hamilton and Jefferson, and then, like a one man band
traveling around the country in a bi-plane, he showed up at any
county fair or cow college or Ivy League sanctum sanctorum where he
could find a room, and talk and talk and talk. Always unafraid,
never wearying.
He preached the human soul, exalted by freedom but always under
God, and he preached it on TV for decades, in lecture halls. In his
columns, in his books, in his commentaries, he never shut up about
how pressing was the need for freedom. And thank God for it.
Like the late immortal Milton Friedman, he would never give up.
He brought the often infantile, feuding, neurotics of the
conservative movement together and lashed them into their finest
work. And he always did it as a gentleman. And still somehow he
sailed around the world, skied like a champion, was a stellar
father and husband, and always came back for more.
Buckley made conservatism intellectually respectable, resilient,
even sexy. He let us know that if James Bond could vote, he would
vote Tory. (The old Tory, not the new, pro-Palestinian Tory.)
I am thinking all these thoughts because I am once again
browsing through John Coyne and Linda Bridges' masterful
Strictly Right, about Buckley and the whole
conservative movement. I keep thinking that if we have a free
republic instead of a socialist people's republic, credit first
goes to our fighting men and women who offered up their lives. But
right up there are the men and women who realized it was a battle
of ideas, were not afraid to fight it, never retreated, and gave us
the legacy of freedom.
The old saw used to be, "If you can read this, thank a
teacher."
The more basic truth would be, "If you woke up in a free society
today, spare a thought for William F. Buckley, a patriot and a
founding father of freedom for all his life."
There never was a truer friend to the human spirit. Long may he
wave and never waver.
topics:
Books, Law, Socialism, Conservatism