Irving Kristol and Conservatism's Future

They called him the godfather.  That's because in the 1970s Irving Kristol, who died September 18, 2009 aged 89, seemed to be the conservative at the center of the "family," pulling the strings.


But he wasn't making people offers they couldn't refuse.  "Billy's" dad was just Mr. Kristol, according to Bill Kristol's school chum James Warren.

Irving Kristol was first called "neo-conservative" by lefty Michael Harrington, and, as usual with our lefty friends, the epithet was not meant as a compliment.   Kristol retorted that a neo-conservative was a liberal mugged by reality. 

Kristol's heyday was the late 1970s when a number of separate political and intellectual ocean currents mysteriously combined into the super El Nino that brought Ronald Reagan to the White House.  As editor of the quarterly The Public Interest and as a regular on Bob Bartley's Wall Street Journal editorial page, and as a promoter of young conservative talent, Kristol did as much as anyone to make Ronald Reagan happen.

The conservatism that Kristol championed, I maintain, was a man-centered conservatism.  It showed America how to rediscover the manly virtues of liberty and independence in politics and the free economy.  But Irving Kristol also knew what had to come next.  He articulated it clearly in his last great speech, given at the American Enterprise Institute in 1991:

Bourgeois society is [Adam Smith's] legacy, for good and ill. For good, in that it has produced, through the market economy, a world prosperous beyond all previous imagining -- including socialist imaginings. For ill, in that this world, with every passing decade, has become ever more spiritually impoverished. That war on poverty is the great unfinished task before us.

The life work of Kristol's wife, Gertrude Himmelfarb, has been to explore and understand this spiritual poverty.  In The Demoralization of Society and One Nation, Two Cultures and Poverty and Compassion and many other books she has investigated the cultural inflection point in the modern era.  It was the moment when the moral order of the 19th century began its collapse into modern nihilism.  It was the social ethos trampled underfoot by the march of the welfare state.

The conservatism that Himmelfarb points to, I argue, is a woman-centered conservatism.  It would rediscover the womanly virtues of compassion and connection and teach that the social safety net is a web woven by women in their relationships and not by helping professionals in the administrative state.

Man-centered conservatism champions the market economy over socialism.  Woman-centered conservatism has a different battle to fight.  It champions a fruitful domestic tranquility over barren feminism.  It calls the bluff of Simone de Beauvoir's celebration of the independent woman. 

There can be no such thing as an independent woman.  The proof is the huge government apparatus that supports single women and their children.  Women are born instead for connection and caring, as that liberated woman George Eliot wrote at the end of Middlemarch. She describes how her heroine Dorothea spent her "full nature" not in ardent plans for social improvement but "in channels which had no great name on the earth."

But the effect of her being on those around her was incalculably diffusive: for the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.

Gertrude Himmelfarb's latest book is The Jewish Odyssey of George Eliot.

Today, in another century, we live at another inflection point.  All of a sudden in the last few months the people of the Anglosphere have turned against ever larger government.  Americans are taking to the streets to protest bailouts and deficits and waste.  In Britain Prime Minister Gordon Brown has suddenly discovered the need to "cut costs, cut inefficiencies, cut unnecessary programmes and cut lower priority budgets." 

President Obama and his Dems-in-a-bubble will be the last to know, but he too will soon be talking cuts.  He'll talk cuts for a simple reason: the American people will be insisting upon it.

But if the great tide of government spending starts to ebb then we must keep the boats afloat in with a flood tide of woman-centered conservatism.  We must cherish once again the "unhistoric acts" of women who live faithfully a hidden, yet "incalculably diffusive" life.  We must honor them as they reweave the textured web of relationship that has frayed into the government's squalid safety net.

The great truth of man-centered conservatism over socialism is that men can best thrive on this earth if you surrender yourself and serve your fellow humans in the market.  The great truth of woman-centered conservatism over feminism is that women thrive better connecting and caring in a web of relationship than in posing as independent women or repining as government dependents.

Let us call it the Kristol legacy.

Christopher Chantrill is a frequent contributor to American Thinker. See his roadtothemiddleclass.com and usgovernmentspending.com.  His Road to the Middle Class is forthcoming.
If you experience technical problems, please write to helpdesk@americanthinker.com