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No, This Won't Do.

Christopher Buckley in his sit-down with Deborah Solomon (perhaps the most predictable interview of the year):

Solomon: In the past few weeks you've been pilloried by the right for a column you contributed to a Web site, "Sorry, Dad, I'm Voting for Obama."

Buckley: What I mounted in The Daily Beast was an argument. It was not an attitudinal riff - it was not "John McCain is an old snarly-pants." I presented a thoughtful argument, and it was viewed as apostasy.

Full stop.

I think I may have missed this thoughtful argument. It was certainly nuanced, because I don't recall the policy positions Buckley decried. Instead, it was a discussion on temperament. What is the compelling policy position of Obama? The author doesn't even get into it.

So, no, it's not a thoughtful argument, nor is it a powerful argument. As for the apostacy, it's hard to make the case that someone is an apostate when he refrains from defining himself. At least, this is what I thought when I was relieved that Buckley decided not to call himself a conservative on the Daily Show a few days ago.

Stewart: You are a famous conservative

Buckley: No, no, I'm the son of a famous conservative.

Stewart: Okay, you are the son of a famous conservative, who is in fact a famous, let's say libertarian? Is that good? You wanna go label? What label do you want? 

Buckley: I'm not...

Stewart: Hip? How about hip?

Buckley: Yeah!

Then he goes and says this:

As a small-government conservative, I think it is all quite saddening. Here we are, a de facto nationalization of the banking industry. I don’t know where that fits into any conservative notion of government.

Look, I have no real beef with those who dissent from conservative orthodoxy, and I even commend them when they say that they're not conservatives. But he needs to firm up where he stands. This is all very post-modern, isn't it, to suggest that conservatism is whatever you make it out to be. But it's also tiresome.

View all comments (4) | Leave a comment

diana| 10.27.08 @ 1:11AM

why is the this lawsuit questioning Obama's place of birth not beeing brought to the atention of the voters?

Addison| 10.27.08 @ 5:10AM

I think we are seeing the rise of intellectualism: conservative "intellectuals" voting for a perceived "intellectual" simply because they perceive him to be an "intellectual" (I've seen no evidence that he actually is, by the way). Advancing one's outative beliefs are no longer important in comparison to the attainment of social prestige within one's status group by voting for the "right "person.

Paul Zisserson| 10.27.08 @ 7:07AM

Although all his eulogies were on the mark in terms of the great influence he had in helping to shape the modern conservative movement, I always thought that WFB was essentially a "wise-guy," albeit a very well informed one. His son is just a wise-guy.

JPB| 10.27.08 @ 9:29AM

JP--

As far as I can tell, Buckley the Younger has only claimed to be a writer/humorist, who is fiscally conservative and has a civil libertarian streak. I don't know that he has ever claimed to carry the mantle of his father, nor, to my knowledge, has he ever aspired to.

He wrote the back column for National Review , yes, but a devout spokesman for the right he never was nor claimed to be. He's a writer promoting a book and that is all.

JPB

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More Blog Posts by J.P. Freire

http://spectator.org/blog/2008/10/26/no-this-wont-do
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