Saturday, November 29, 2014

My Attack of Neo-Conservatism and my Recovery




A few decades ago, I made a mistake. I went temporarily insane, politically speaking. I became a neo-conservative. I supported Ronald Reagan. I subscribed to and wrote in the Wall Street Journal.

As a professor of sociology, I had reached the point of nausea with academia’s group think and political correctness, most virulent in the social sciences. I was a liberal, of course, like everyone else. While hardly anyone in the academe is a conservative, neither were most of my colleagues anarchists, Trotskyites, Stalinists, Soviet apologists, anti-Semites or extremists in other ways. However, there were some, and they were intimidating. They were rarely challenged. Most of my colleagues settled into a lazy group think and dialogue ceased. THAT is what began to bother me.

My background:
I grew up as a member of a respectable left-liberal European family. My grandfather was a (Jewish) social-democratic history professor in Budapest. My mother was briefly in prison at age sixteen when she participated in Communist demonstrations against Hungary’s fascist regime. My father was a hero in the Hungarian resistance during World War Two.


At the same time, my family experienced the Communist rape of Hungary, the confiscation of our house, the death trials and mass executions of the late 1940s. We experienced first-hand the evils of Soviet imperialism and Stalinism.

In 1948, we fled to Western Europe, first spending eight years in Paris and then nine years in Amsterdam. As a teenager and young adult, I was always a Western European-style social democrat.

I then moved to America in my early twenties, just in time for the sixties counter cultural revolution. True to myself, I became very active in the anti-war movement and in the civil rights movement. I published many articles and I marched in Washington and elsewhere, along with Ralph Abernathy, Jessie Jackson and thousands of others.

I became a university professor at twenty-six and I got my PhD a year later.

Conflict and Error:
By the mid seventies, I was becoming uncomfortable with some of the excesses to which some university campuses were carrying the cultural revolution.

There were two  political phenomena which I had difficulty abiding: (1) anti-Semitism and (2) anti-Americanism. Without getting into the nitty-gritty of when legitimate criticism of Israel becomes blind anti-Semitism, and when justified criticism of US imperialism and militarism becomes vicious irrational hatred of Americans and their culture, let me say this: Anti-Semitism and anti-Americanism exist not only because Israel and America sometimes misbehave (which country or government never does?), but also as pathological psychological conditions that are widespread in many parts of the world.

(1) Currently, European anti-Semitism is on the rise again, as some parts of Europe are sliding back into their old racist habits. In my own neck of the woods, I increasingly disagreed with many of my colleagues due to my support of Israel during the Munich Olympics massacre (1972), the Yom Kippur War (1973), the Ma’alot massacre (1974), the Kampala rescue mission (1976) and other events.

(2) As to anti-Americanism, it fluctuates, depending on who symbolizes the country to the outside world. During the Bush years, things got so ugly in Europe that many American tourists - shamefully and cowardly - lied and told Europeans that they were Canadians. Reading the obscene and irrational utterances of vicious hate-mongers like the British playwright Harold Pinter made my blood boil.

On 9-11, I personally witnessed Europeans who were jubilant, danced in the streets and shouted “we finally won this time!” at the news that 3,000 innocent Americans had been incinerated, some jumping to their death from the 80th floor of the world trade center.

Anti-Americanism was also strong on the domestic front. Noam Chomsky has been Pinter’s American counterpart - irrational, vitriolic, over the top. I have known several homegrown America-haters. Some of them were downright Stalinists, brainwashing their students and lecturing about the greatness of the Soviet Union. But I could never forget that America had given me everything I have, that it had saved Europe, and that it remained a generous country. I knew better than my Stalinist colleagues.

During the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979, all hell broke loose for me at the University. It began when I published an article urging President Carter to take a firm stand. The consequence for me personally was traumatic. Had I not had tenure, I would surely have lost my job. As it is, I was ostracized, threatened, called a McCarthyist, a racist and a fascist. Articles were published attacking me, petitions were circulated and signed by dozens of my colleagues, denouncing me and demanding that I be censored and punished. For a detailed account of this conflict, see my autobiography, A Tale of Survival.

I got angrier and I reacted by moving politically rightward, in part perhaps to aggravate my obnoxious colleagues. I began to support Ronald Reagan.

Of course this was a mistake. Yet, there was also some DISTINCTION in what I was doing. “Distinction” means not only “difference,” but also something that EXCELS. For one thing, it takes courage to swim upstream, to demur from widespread group think.

Furthermore, the climate was radically different from what it is today. Misguided as I was, there was some justification in questioning the indolent, left-wing conformity, the clichés, and the extreme political correctness that increasingly dominated the social sciences, the humanities and much of the rest of academia.

Even though Ronald Reagan was sowing the seeds of a nefarious economic revolution whose terrible consequences are becoming clearer every day at this time, his rise back then seemed like a breath of fresh air, something new, a wholesome resurgence of American self-confidence after the Vietnam doldrums.

But I was wrong. I know.

Recovery: I have changed my mind a couple of times in my life. Toying with neo-conservatism was one of them. Recognizing my error and returning to my progressive roots was another.

To those who feel that inconsistency and changing one’s mind are signs of weakness or confusion, I say: Quite the opposite. Consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds. To change one’s mind indicates open-mindedness and maturity.

How wrong I was, has become clearer and clearer as we move further into the 21st century. By now, the country has returned to the way it was in the 1920s or the 1950s. During the presidencies of Harding, Coolidge and Hoover(1921-1933), the country became profoundly conservative, pro-business, retrograde, materialistic, selfish and unjust. This culminated in the Great Depression. During the McCarthy era (1950-1956), the country once again moved sharply to the right, gripped by anti-communist paranoia. Today, we are experiencing a similar rightward drift. The Republican party is dominated by the wacko Tea Party, fear of Muslim terrorism dictates our foreign policy, and the concentration of wealth has created a plutocracy reminiscent of the 1920s.

Whether it was ever so or not, calling oneself conservative today can hardly be seen as a mark of “distinction. ” It is neither distinct, nor different, nor unique, nor rare, nor superior.

It’s the opposite. It is being a LIBERAL which is now a mark of distinction, for the simple reason that avowed liberals have become rare. The Right has managed to soil that label, to make it something pejorative.

If you don’t agree, just tell me: how many of us dare to call ourselves unequivocally liberal anymore? Some of us now contort ourselves, preferring to say that we are “centrists,” that we don’t believe in labels, that we favor bipartisan cooperation, that we are against all bias, be it conservative bias or liberal bias. Fewer among us are now likely to simply say: sure, I am a liberal. Period. This is testimony to the great success of America’s conservative counter-revolution.

Don’t misunderstand me: I am fully aware that being a liberal or a conservative must be based on substantive issues and not on which position is more “distinguished.” I have published hundreds of articles on my blog and elsewhere showing the substantive reasons why I am a liberal.

I’ll just conclude with a witticism by a former Marxist economics professor of mine at the University of Amsterdam: “In the end,” Dr. S. Kleerekoper said, “the Left is where the heart is.”

 © Tom Kando 2014

leave comment here

14 comments:

EllenMM said...

Brilliant piece of writing. I never danced with the right-wing, but can understand your inclinations and (thankfully) your recovery.

LJK said...

I absolutely love the honesty of this piece.

Having the pluck to examine populist thinking in the University, and then to change your own mind as the political pendulum swings in directions with which you don't agree, is the mark of the strong and intelligent.

That you suffered for bravely rejecting cliche, and instead searching for truth, is shameful. Neither end of the ideological spectrum has all the answers, and both major bureaucratic parties make salient and valuable points.

Tom Kando said...

Ellen and LJK,

thanks for your comments, and for reading through this somewhat long post. It may not interest everyone to the same degree, but I wanted to get it off my chest.

Roy Staton said...

A leftist colleague of yours at Sac State told me that I "harmed my wifes race by mixing it with my predominantly white race". The insanity of extreme leftist of academia in the social sciences, ethnic & gender studies or the humanities would shock most Americans, and a purging of those professors whose classes are no more than radical leftist brainwashing devoid of critical thought or any academic value is required. That being said that doesn't mean I'm on board for corporate monopolies who's oppression wouldn't be any better than Communism or the social Darwinist ideology. Reagan was a single minded pragmatist bend on destroying the Soviet system, which in the whole was good. Conservatives forget he gave us the biggest tax increase in history. In whole I trust the conservative problem solver over the liberal idealist. The left stand to prevent any increase in energy because that strengthens the U.S economy not for the environmentalism they claim. Which makes me curious of what they will do when we have nuclear fusion.

Tom Kando said...

of the several errors in Roy’s comment, I’ll just react to one: purging leftist professors would be as wrong as it would have been to purge me when I was (mistakenly) supporting Reagan, and as wrong as what the Inquisition and the Soviet regime used to do. Fortunately, America has the First Amendment, freedom of speech, academic freedom, and tenure.

Roy Staton said...

Tom they need to be purged because there is only one very extreme side presented to youth in colleges in universities in 99% of the time. You don't want them purged then how about some professors that aren't going to teach such as Burke told me that whites shouldn't reproduce & mixing their white DNA with minorities has irreparably harmed that minority race. That's insanity & has no academic value, nor is a counter ideology presented. I'm sure there are professors today teaching that the honor student Michael Brown was gun downed by a kkk member with ZERO other Counter discussion presented or allowed.. If most of America was aware of what was being taught in universities you'd see a tsunami of conservatives elected to change that situation which would make the last election seem only a minor victory. And that would not be good to have only an extreme right view represented in government any more than it's healthy to have such an insane radical left represent the ideology in higher education. How long do you think it will take for proffesors like Burke to be caught on cell phone cameras saying racist comments about whites & hateful comments about America shocking most Americans to go viral causing a tidal wave a change?

Steve said...

Honest and thoughtful. One of u or best.

I spent the later half of the Reagan Bush the 1st years as an insurance exec. In those circles the heated debates in the university sounded like a fly buzzing in the distance.

The dominant impression in the bisiness world was that if Academics are too lazy to think for themselves, they are of little value.

Perhaps this explains the unfortunate trend of too many undergrads in business school.

trolls suck said...

Anonymous, you find this blog article too narcissistic? Dr. Kando asks for guest articles ALL the time, welcoming topics written by others...why not come out from behind your anonymous handle and contribute, instead of trolling while refusing to be honest about who you are?

Carol said...

I respect your honestly and courage to pursue the truth as you see it. We can all fall victim to prejudice, left or right. It takes humility and strength to correct one's course. Another great blog.

Scott said...

A good and important piece.

daniel said...

You remain one of my new heroes. Thanks, thanks, and thanks again.

Tom Kando said...

Thank you all for your comments.

"Troll sucks" responds to a slightly offensive ad hominem comment by anonymous which has been removed...

Don said...

Tom, you mentioned something here that many conservatives either conveniently forget or deny entirely, and definitely do not want to talk about. Ronald Reagan was the beginning of our wildly insane national debt. He intended to cut spending and cut taxes, but of course he cut taxes and increased spending. The national debt was relatively low when he was elected but mushroomed during his two terms and during George H. W. Bush's subsequent term. The rest is unfortunate history, and the democrats get blamed.

pcgrad said...

Hi Tom, your life is an inspiration! I wish I could as clearly recount my evolving political consciousness. I remember being disillusioned by the Left when the Revolution failed, then becoming a power-dressing yuppie in a neoconservative SF thinktank in the 70s. But having owned a biz w/ my husband & also my own for decades afterwards, reading your great, informative, insightful blogs are making me think all over again about my political de-volution. Now that I'm retired, I have time! Thanks for the prodding, probing posts!

Post a Comment

Please limit your comment to 300 words at the most!