Off the Rails

Posted By on May 12, 2005 at 6:10 pm

Stephen Green at VodkaPundit reviews the post-WW2 historical record and uses it to demolish Pat Buchanan, who is alleged to be smart enough to have a syndicated column, and further alleged to be a conservative. I think neither allegation could be proven in a court of law. With Stephen, I would agree that PB has gone right round the bend. Or rather, I would say that his train has jumped completely off the track.
To reiterate what I said in his comments, I note that Stephen used the expression “the slippery slope from Young Turk conservative columnist to Nazi Apologist troglodyte” which, to me, seems to imply that both states can be found on the same political continuum.
I think that one would have to leave that continuum (I’d label it “Rationality”) entirely to become a Jew-hating Nazi apologist, as Buchanan apparently has become, just as one would have to do in order to turn from, say, a “Scoop Jackson” Democrat into a Stalin apologist.
That minor gripe notwithstanding, I agree with Stephen. It is a wish-fulfillment fantasy of the most deluded kind to believe that in the Summer of 1945 the western Allies could have prevented the Soviets from doing exactly however they pleased in the Eastern European nations they had “liberated” from the Nazis. Yes, it would have been technically possible, particularly given America’s soon-to-be-revealed atomic weapon capability, but the price would have been far too high to pay.
It’s long past time that serious people at any place on the aforementioned Rationality spectrum listened with anything other than revulsion (or at least, disgusted curiosity) to what Buchanan says.

Quote of the Day

Posted By on May 11, 2005 at 8:32 pm

Contrary to all the bloviating jackassery about how conservatives are more dogmatic than liberals we hear these days, the simple fact is that conservatives don’t have a settled dogma. How could they when each faction has a different partial philosophy of life? The beauty of the conservative movement. . . is that we all get along with each other pretty well. The chief reason for this is that we all understand and accept the permanence of contradiction and conflict in life.

Jonah Goldberg, in What Is a “Conservative”?