What are left-liberals really?

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matis

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I've just read a short history and brilliant analysis of leftist politics, especially in the United States.

This article describes the values, motives, world-view and modus operendi of the exceedingly dangerous movement in our midst.

They are dedicated to carving us into their ideal, "socialist man (and woman)" that the Soviets spilled so much blood working for.

You're worried about our gun rights? Read this and see what may really await us.

Warning: it's a bit long -- but this guy is brilliant and I think you'll you'll be glad you read this article.

Matis


Taking On The Neo-Coms, Part I
By David Horowitz
FrontPageMagazine.com | May 1, 2003


(Part II: Neo-Communism Made Simple, will run tomorrow in our Friday weekend edition)

How to identify the political left? Current usage refers to everyone left of center as "liberal." Yet what are currently identified liberals liberal about except hard drugs and sex? In regard to everything else, they are determined to intervene, regulate and control your life, or redistribute your income. Obviously, when terror-hugging radicals like Ramsey Clark and Communist hacks like Angela Davis are referred to as "liberals" – as they routinely are – the obfuscation works to their advantage and against the interests of veracity and democracy. The term "liberal" should be reserved for those who occupy the center of the political spectrum; those to the left should be referred to as leftists, which is what they are.

This is the easy part of rectifying the political lexicon. There is another more difficult aspect, however, which is how to identify the "hard" left, which is to say, those who are dedicated enemies of America and its purposes? In practice, it easy to identify such leftists and it is not difficult to describe them. They are people who identify with hostile regimes like North Korea, Cuba, and China, or – more commonly -- believe the United States to be the imperialist guardian of a world system that radicals must defeat before they can establish "social justice" on the planet.

Adherents of this anti-American creed variously describe themselves as "Marxists," "anti-globalists," "anti-war activists" or, more generally, "progressives." Their secular worldview holds claims that America is responsible for reaction, oppression, and exploitation across the globe and causes them to regard this country as the moral equivalent of militant Islam’s "Great Satan." This explains the otherwise incomprehensible practical alliances that individuals who claim to be avatars of social justice make with Islamo-fascists like Saddam Hussein.

Among the intellectual leaders of this left are Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Gore Vidal, Edward Said and Cornel West; among its figureheads, Angela Davis and Ramsey Clark; among its cultural icons, Tim Robbins, Barbara Kingsolver, Arundhhti Roy and Michael Moore; among its political leaders, Ralph Nader and the heads of the three major "peace" organizations (Leslie Cagan, Brian Becker and Clark Kissinger); among its electoral organizations, the Green Party and the Peace and Freedom Party; among its elected officials Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-California) and Congressman Dennis Kucinch (D-Ohio); among its organizations, the misnamed Center for Constitutional Rights and the National Lawyers Guild; among its publications and media institutions, The Nation, Z Magazine, The Progressive, Counterpunch, Pacifica radio, Indymedia.org and commondreams.org. Like the Communist Party in the heyday of the Soviet empire, the influence of the hard left –intellectually and organizationally – extends far beyond the institutions, organizations and publications it controls.

Yet what to call them? One of the hard left’s survival secrets has been its ability to embargo attempts to identify it by labeling those who do "red-baiters" and "witch-hunters," as though even to name it is to persecute it. These same people, on the other hand, think nothing of labeling their opponents "racists" and "fascists," or calling the President of the United States a "Nazi" puppet of the oil cartel. Yet their defense strategy is highly effective in the tolerant democracy they are determined to destroy. I myself have been called a "red-baiter" and "McCarthyite" for pointing out that the current "peace" organizations like International ANSWER and Not In Our Name are fronts for the Workers World Party – a Marxist-Leninist vanguard that identifies with North Korea -- and the Revolutionary Communist Party, a Maoist sect. The facts are obvious and unarguable, but their implications are unpleasant and therefore suspect.

Nothwithstanding this difficulty, a more significant concern is that the term "Communist" in the context of the contemporary left can be misleading. While the Communist Party still exists and is even growing, it is a minor player and enjoys nothing approaching its former influence or power in the left. Even in the hard left, the Communist Party USA is only a constituent part of the whole whereas once, along with its front groups, it dominated progressive politics.

In these circumstances, for reasons I will soon make apparent, the best term to describe this left is "neo-communist," or "neo-coms" for short.

The place to begin an understanding of the neo-coms is the period following 1956, when the left sloughed off its Communist shell and became first a "new left" and then what might be called a "post-new left." In my own writings, particularly Radical Son and The Politics of Bad Faith I have shown that the "new left," was in reality no such thing. While starting out as a rejection of Stalinism, by the end of the Sixties the "new left" had devolved into a movement virtually indistinguishable from the Communist predecessor it had claimed to reject. This was as true of its Marxist underpinnings, as its anti-Americanism or its indiscriminate embrace of totalitarian revolutions and revolutionaries abroad.

The new left imploded at the end of the Sixties a victim of its own revolutionary enthusiasms, which led it to pursue a violent politics it could not sustain. America’s withdrawal from Vietnam in the early Seventies, deprived the left of the immediate pretext for its radical agendas. Many of its cadre retired from the "revolution in the streets" they had tried to launch and entered the Democratic Party. Others turned to careers in journalism and teaching, the professions of choice for secular missionaries. Still others took up local agitations and discrete campaigns in behalf of saving the environment, feminist issues and gay rights -- without giving up their radical illusions. In the 1980s, spurred by the Soviet-sponsored "nuclear freeze" campaign and by the "solidarity" movements for Communist forces in Central America, the left began to regroup without formally announcing its re-emergence or proclaiming a new collective identity as its Sixties predecessor had done.

At the end of the decade, the collapse of the Soviet empire ushered in an interregnum of confusion for the left, calling a temporary halt to this radical progress. In the Soviet debacle "revolutionary" leftists confronted the catastrophic failure of everything they had believed and fought for during the previous 70 years. Even those radicals who recognized the political failures of the Soviet regime, believe in what Trotksy had called "the gains of October" – the superior forces of socialist production. But the leftist faith proved impervious to this rebuttal by historical events. Insulated by its religious devotion to the progressive idea, the left survived the refutation of its socialist dreams. Instead of acknowledging their wrongheaded commitment to the socialist cause, they looked on the demise of what they had once hailed as "the first socialist state," as no more than an albatross that providence had lifted from their shoulders.

In short, having defended the indefensible for 70 years, they were suddenly relieved that they would no longer have to defend it. Turning their backs on their own past, they pretended it was someone else’s. They said, "The collapse of socialism doesn’t prove anything because it wasn’t real socialism. Real socialism hasn’t been tried." This subterfuge rescued them from having to make apologies for abetting regimes that had killed tens of millions and enslaved tens of millions more. Broken eggs with no omelet to show for it -- not a workable socialist result. Better yet, there was no need to acknowledge that the country whose efforts they had opposed and whose actions they had condemned had liberated a billion people from the most oppressive empire the world had ever seen. They had no need for second thoughts about what they had done. They just went on to the next destruction, the newest incarnation of the radical cause.

This act of cosmic bad faith was the foundation of the left’s revival in the decade that followed. It was the necessary premise of its re-emergence as leader of the anti-globalization and "antiwar" movements that came at the end of the Nineties and the beginning of the millennium. The hard left was now ready to resurrect its internal war against America at home and abroad.

If one looks at almost any aspect of this left – its self-identified intellectual lineage (Hegel, Nietzsche, Marx, Heidegger, Fanon, Gramsci -- in sum, the totalitarian tradition), its analytic model (hierarchy and oppression), its redemptive agenda (social justice as state-enforced leveling) and its enemies – imperialist America and the American "ruling class" -- one would be hard put to find a scintilla of difference with the Communist past. Of course leftists themselves will have none of this. Most of them will proclaim their anti-Stalinism (even as they embrace its practices); and will not defend the Communist systems that have in any case collapsed. But so what? The Soviet rulers denounced Stalin. Were they any less Communists for that?

It seems appropriate, therefore, to call the unreconstructed hard-liners, "neo-communists" --a term that accurately identifies their negative assaults on American capitalism and their anti-American "internationalist" agendas. It may be objected that the term "neo-communist" does not describe a group, which itself identifies with the term, but then neither does "neo-conservative." There is, for example, no current movement calling itself "neo-conservative," nor do the individuals so designated refer to their own ideas as "neo-conservative." "Neo-conservative" is, in fact, a label that was imposed by the left on a group of former Democrats, loosely grouped around Senator "Scoop" Jackson who left the party fold at the end of the Seventies to join and support the Reagan Administration. It was accepted out of necessity for a while, because the left so dominates the political culture that resisting it was futile. But it is no longer used by neo-conservatives because, as Norman Podhoretz long ago observed, "neo-conservatism" is indistinguishable from conservatism itself. No "neo-conservative" that I am aware of has challenged Podhoretz’s conclusion. Yet others insist on describing conservatives – particularly those whom they regard as "hard-line" conservatives -- with this label. If the "neo" shoe can be made to fit conservatives, why not the hard-line left?


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
David Horowitz is the author of numerous books including an autobiography, Radical Son, which has been described as “the first great autobiography of his generation,†and which chronicles his odyssey from radical activism to the current positions he holds. Among his other books are The Politics of Bad Faith and The Art of Political War. The Art of Political War was described by White House political strategist Karl Rove as “the perfect guide to winning on the political battlefield.†Horowitz’s latest book, Uncivil Wars, was published in January this year, and chronicles his crusade against intolerance and racial McCarthyism on college campuses last spring. Click here to read more about David





Matis
 
Matis - very good article. Thanks for posting it.

CZ-75: No, not scum... The tragedy of this situation is that those involved in this movement actually, truly BELIEVE in what they're doing. They are misguided to the point of ludicrousness (perhaps even insanity in some cases), but they really are "true believers", in a religious sense (although most of them have no time for religion whatsoever). They're on a crusade, and they welcome the kind of opposition that calls them "scum", because then they can feel oppressed, and that reinforces their beliefs about the corruption and worthlessness of a system that would allow others to be oppressed.

I submit that the only way to deal with these folks is to keep a very sharp eye on what they're doing and saying, and put as many civilized, democratic roadblocks in their path as we can. Thereafter, ignore them! Don't call them names, don't denigrate them, don't even speak to them - just ignore them. There's nothing more galling to them than to be ignored.
 
They are also your neighbors, the people down the street, many hardworking, sometimes your friends, family, fellow Americans, who have the right to beleive what they want, just like we do..

Amazing how ppeople talk leftists to task for hurling invective, yet then hurl the same themselves.

WilcivilityisniceAlaska
 
Fundamentally dishonest, evil people who want to enslave others.

Preacherman: You are describing the enablers, the useful idiots who allow the irretrievably evil ones to do their damage.
 
The tragedy of this situation is that those involved in this movement actually, truly BELIEVE in what they're doing.

So did many of the Nazis.

I'll stand by my assertion.

There's nothing more galling to them than to be ignored.

I'm ahead of the curve, then. I ignore all the ones at work with a vengeance. I don't find this hard b/c, from personal experience, I've found the large majority of folks who openly profess a "liberal" or "progressive" ideology are beneath contempt in their daily behaviors.

I'm guessing pretending to "care" more and being morally superior assuage their troubled consciences. All armchair psychoanalysis on my part, though.

They are also your neighbors, the people down the street, many hardworking, sometimes your friends, family, fellow Americans, who have the right to beleive what they want, just like we do.

And when they act on what they believe, they become criminals. Their ideology couldn't flourish w/o usurping the rights of individuals. What's the difference between taking someone's wallet at gunpoint or having the govt. do it for you?

SteveallwetagainCochran
 
BigG, CZ, don't forget that we're on the same side! I'm not saying these leftists should be allowed to get away with riding their agenda rough-shod over those who don't agree with them. However, in our democratic society, they have the right to believe whatever they wish, and to speak about their beliefs, and to attempt to convince others to join them in supporting their beliefs. If we demand the right to do this with regard to Second Amendment issues, we have to concede the same right to them. It's only when they step outside the law and the Constitution in their efforts that we can justifiably demand that they be stopped.

I accept that there are indeed fundamentally evil and dishonest people in this movement - but then, wouldn't you agree that there are fundamentally evil and dishonest people on "our side" as well? Timothy McVeigh comes to mind... before Oklahoma City, many would have regarded him as a right-wing patriot in the mold of some of our more extreme Founding Fathers! (There was a good article about this some years ago: unfortunately, I can't recall where I saw it. If anyone can post a link, please do.)

In his article, Horowitz does a great job of analyzing the leftists in our midst. I look forward to the second instalment. I will also read an article by a Leftist source describing the rightists in our midst, and try to learn from that too... Balance is important, guys, even if only on the principle of "Know your enemy"!
 
What are Left-Liberals really? The exact same thing, but with a different presentation, as Right -Conservatives. Make no mistake, they all want to take away your liberty and impose their morality on you.
 
they all want to take away your liberty and impose their morality on you.
Yep! The difference is what kinds of control they believe are legitimate. It wouldn't be so bad if one party would dismantle legislation put out by the other party as power shifts, but instead we have a ratcheting effect where we're seeing advances on both fronts with each year, and we never win back ground we lost.

We're just getting squeezed in the middle. :(
 
Preacherman: Of course we are on the same side, buddy!

Bikeguy: What you wrote is so far from the truth you must consider yourself a libertarian. :neener:
 
I'd have to say

that the essence of conservatism today is that people should be maximally free to make their own decisions. That used to be liberalism.

Conversely, the essence of today's liberalism is that people should be made to do what's best for them, as determined by the elite enlightened ones like Hillary, Schumer, et. al.

The most vicious tyranny is that which does things to you for your own good.
 
What are Left-Liberals really? The exact same thing, but with a different presentation, as Right -Conservatives. Make no mistake, they all want to take away your liberty and impose their morality on you.

The difference is what kinds of control they believe are legitimate. It wouldn't be so bad if one party would dismantle legislation put out by the other party as power shifts, but instead we have a ratcheting effect where we're seeing advances on both fronts with each year, and we never win back ground we lost.

I'm with you boys.
 
that the essence of conservatism today is that people should be maximally free to make their own decisions. That used to be liberalism.
Unless you're talking about abortion. Or religion (Wicca, anyone?). Or alcohol. Or recreational drug use. Or medicinal drug use. Or pornography. Or language and violence in film/music. Or the right of gays to marry. Or...

I'd argue that the closest thing to an 18th century "liberal" is a libertarian.

Conversely, the essence of today's liberalism is that people should be made to do what's best for them, as determined by the elite enlightened ones like Hillary, Schumer, et. al.
Where the "right" is concerned with issues of "pollution," the left is concerned with the best way to spend your money for you (likely on causes you're not in agreement with). Of course, it helps if those nasty right-wingers have less say in the world, and no-one really needs the means to defend themselves against us. We're goooooooooooooood.

The most vicious tyranny is that which does things to you for your own good.
Yep, but we're getting it from both sides. That is, in those areas where the Democrats and republicans actually disagree...
 
I'd argue that the closest thing to an 18th century "liberal" is a libertarian.
Maybe so, but neither actually exist in nature. They are 1) historical, and 2) a theoretical construct. :neener:
 
BigG - spoken like a true, blinded right winger. You probably think that the Democratic filibuster to block the nomination of Bush appointees is unconstitutional, yet snickered with delight when the Republicans have done the same thing in the past.

"I think I am right and you are wrong, therefore I am good and you are evil!"

I am a civil libertarian. So is everyone else who believes in the entire Constitution.
 
I think Mike Savage said it best when he described liberalism as not so much a political persuasion as much as it is a form of mental illness.

Great article.
 
Big G -

how is a libertarian a theoretical construct?

I agree that the main difference between a lot of conservatives and liberals is merely how they want to control you.

That said, there are some neoconservatives who are basically indistinguishable from libertarians on political issues (even if their ethical systems differ from mine)
 
how is a libertarian a theoretical construct?

Drop me a line when the first one wins one of the 535 seats on the hill or one of the 50 governorships. Then it will be a historical reality like an eighteenth century liberal.
 
a true, blinded right winger
Mebbe so, but as long as I've paid taxes I've abhorred the use they have been put to by the Democrats far more than the worst of the Republicans. Third party antics like Perot gave us the likes of Clampett, er Clinton.
 
Chris, your observation could well be applied to the individual as to which persons/groups he would like to destroy if he were free to exercise his will. Govt is necessary to curb EVERYBODY'S impulses. That's why it is a NECESSARY EVIL.
 
Mebbe so, but as long as I've paid taxes I've abhorred the use they have been put to by the Democrats far more than the worst of the Republicans. Third party antics like Perot gave us the likes of Clampett, er Clinton.

Taxes are just one of a myriad of issues. And if you think Republicans are responsible with your tax dolars, you are not paying much attention. They may not throw it around like Dems do, but they sure as heck like to spend it whenever it suits their fancy. I sure have not seen a bunch of huge budget cuts from this Congress. As a matter of fact, they seem to want to throw money at things like a Federal Amber Alert and new Federal Kiddie Porn laws. Things the the FEDERAL government does not have any busines messing with anyway.

And if taxes are your main concern, then you should be a Libertarian.

By the way, I am not a Libertarian, nor Dem., nor Rep.
 
Curious... BigG, were you free to indulge your impulses, which groups would you destroy?

Me, I wouldn't destroy anyone. Save, of course, for those who would attack me without provocation.

I don't need government to restrain my impulses. If other people do, that is their problem. They have no moral right to impose their vision of a perfect society on me.

- Chris
 
With good intentions we will all begin as tolerant, Chris. When somebody crosses us, cuts in front of us, decides to help themselves from our goods, we will become a little more intolerant.

We are not talking about YOU or ME individually we are talking about whenever TWO or more are gathered - GROUPS. Then we have to agree on rules. Since nobody agrees there needs to be an arbiter so people do not come to blows or worse. For better or worse everybody needs government, some to restrain them and others to keep predators from preying on them.
 
If I was free to impose my impulses, I would make putting cilantro in any food a capital crime punishable by summary execution.

But thats it, I swear! ;)
 
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