Beck and the legacy
posted at 6:30 pm on February 23, 2010 by J.E. Dyer
What’s the point of being annoyed with Glenn Beck? He’s an opinion commentator, not a political decisionmaker.
Beck strikes me in some ways as being a philosophical bellwether of a large segment of the people. That’s one thing that accounts for his popularity. It seems to me that we are seeing him on the same trajectory as many of our fellow countrymen: rediscovering (or discovering for the first time) the great debates that have shaped us as a nation, and understanding for the first time why we are where we are today.
I literally grew up, from my earliest years, steeped in this history and these debates. Fellow conservatives like Bill Bennett and Peter Wehner came to them earlier in life too. But I think anyone of our generation (OK, I’m WAY younger than Bennett) would agree that it was unusual to have that interest and perspective at the time. Glenn Beck is a slightly younger contemporary, and he’s much more like most Americans his age in not having absorbed much history — and certainly not political and philosophical history — in his teens and 20s. He would be the first to admit that; I’m not saying anything about him that he hasn’t said about himself.
It has to be startling and galvanizing to be in your forties and realize that as a kid, you were sold a bill of goods about your country’s origins, the meaning of its history, and what it stands for. That you were taught, for example, that there was a groundswell of sentiment during the FDR years for state dirigisme and collectivism, when in fact FDR had to railroad Congress and the people just as Obama is trying to now, and he excoriated and plotted to undermine the Supreme Court for deeming his agenda unconstitutional. To think of the multigenerational collusion it took, in academia and the media, to subvert and whitewash the actual history – it’s mind-boggling when encountered for the first time.
I grew up knowing that history. I grew up knowing the things Jonah Goldberg brought to public view again in Liberal Fascism, and Amity Shlaes in The Forgotten Man. You couldn’t read James Burnham, Ludwig von Mises, Friederich Hayek, William F. Buckley, Jr., M. Stanton Evans, Whittaker Chambers, Norman Podhoretz, Irving Kristol, and Robert Conquest – and not know them. Long-time conservatives from the Buckley-Goldwater-Reagan tradition have always known these things, and have also been very clear over the years on the divisions and “types” in the Republican Party. The existence of RINOs doesn’t have the immediacy of offense for these “legacy conservatives” that it has for Beck.
I think legacy conservatives need to be understanding of where many Americans are philosophically today. They haven’t spent their sentient lives recognizing how our polity has been deviating from the concept of the Founders, and watching it happen with varying degrees of anger, frustration, prayer against calamity, and resignation. They are seeing it clearly for the first time: the proposition that you can’t have just a little bit of entitlement and dependency, or just a little bit of government intervention, and only against the things you, personally, dislike. They didn’t understand before that liberty can’t, in fact, survive centrally-directed collectivist programs. Nor did they understand that centrally-directed collectivism is exactly what too many of our 20th-century government programs are.
I would give Beck time, because we have to give the American people time. The good news about Glenn Beck is that he is educating himself using largely the right tools. Through educating himself, he is educating millions of Americans – people who would otherwise never see key political propositions examined critically as they are in Beck’s broadcasts.
Conservative commentators fill different roles, and sensitizing his audience to history is – surprisingly, perhaps, for a self-styled rodeo clown – a key element of Beck’s. He gets it right more often than not, and he highlights things no one else with such an audience does, like the history demonstrating the essential, philosophical antithesis of left-progressivism and limited-government constitutionalism – and the fact, known by hardly anyone today, that presidents as revered as Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson were on the side of the former.
The popularizing of rare intellectual insights is never pretty. But it’s necessary. I’d rather it were happening than not, especially in such a time as this. Legacy conservatives cannot, after all, claim to have been so effective over time that we’re the only ones the people should listen to. Whether we enjoy it or not, the blunt, uncompromising attitude that there simply must be less government, and that those who are willing to settle for more cannot be our leaders any longer, is the main thing that is necessary to actually roll anything back. If we could do it without that attitude, blowing across America like a cleansing wind, it would be done already. But we can’t.
Glenn Beck isn’t the Man with the Plan: the one who is ready to step forward and govern when that widespread attitude shift creates the charter we need, to navigate toward government that is once again limited, constitutional, and federal. But neither is Bill Bennett, much as I esteem him. I don’t know that we see that individual on the horizon yet. I do think we’ll know him – or her—when we see him. Until then, I consider it healthy rather than not for conservatives of all stripes to hear from the Beck contingent: the contingent for whom the indignation is still fresh that we have squandered so much of what the Founders labored to endow us with.
Liberty isn’t preserved by the pursuit of intellectual perfection, after all – that’s a luxury that is consequent on liberty. Like anything worth having in life, liberty is gained and preserved through passion, exertion, tenacity; through prioritization and singlemindedness; through the dropping of bad habits and the cultivation of good ones. This doesn’t mean there’s a 12-step program that guarantees liberty, but most of us know through experience that the adjustments we all need to “get it right” in life are very simple ones: not intellectually complex, just hard – and more rewarding than we ever dreamed. That’s a more useful message for many Americans right now than almost any other. I don’t disdain Glenn Beck one bit for being the messenger.
Cross-posted at The Optimistic Conservative.
This post was promoted from GreenRoom to HotAir.com.
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AllahPundit, Ed, there seems to be a slight bug here. I appear to have finished off the first page and now I’m at the top of the second and there are zero comments on it. I have a comment window and the “Comment pages: Previous [1] [2]” page selector shows up twice, both centered on two lines, one immediately below the one above.
Everything seems normal but with no comments on page 2 and there are duplicate page selectors, which I think only seem duplicated because there are no comments between them.
FloatingRock on February 24, 2010 at 2:14 AM
Now there is a comment between them and it appears normal, so the only problem was that it skipped to page 2 with zero comments on it; one comment early.
FloatingRock on February 24, 2010 at 2:17 AM
Exact same thing happened to me the other day as well.
sharrukin on February 24, 2010 at 3:26 AM
+1000
Magnificent (and timely) post.
Bill Bennett needs to be patient with Beck, tolerant even when he thinks Beck doesn’t get it 100% right the first time. This tale will not be told in one sitting. Beck is good at taking bite-size chunks and feeding them to his audience, making it come alive through dramatization and repetition. What at times may seem tedious or even crass to Bennett is actually necessary for some of us in remedial school to absorb this material, and appreciate its significance.
RD on February 24, 2010 at 3:47 AM
Ditto. (It’s how I know my comment is about to appear on the ‘next’ page :). Useful information, though not particularly convenient ;)
RD on February 24, 2010 at 3:52 AM
Again, thank you. — Also, Beck isn’t about you, the adult, but the next generation. “Why is the sky blue?” you’re child asks. How you respond as a parent matters. “Because I said so” doesn’t inspire learning or critical thinking. Much like Rush’s “Don’t doubt me” fails in that regard.
Beck has found a way to converse on and inform conservatisim to his college age daughter, and his audience is benefiting. From visual learners to keeping viewers from using the remote, the chalkboard helps the audience maintain the commentary thread. Dry subject matter and all.
Beck is family viewing and positive conversation over dinner. He is showing parents how to frame the generational theft despite the generation gap. Beck deserves a shiny new apple, not rumors from the cool kid clique. Teacher’s pet; from Rush babies, Levin Reagan holdouts, to Beck 9.12ers. Has picking on a teacher’s pet ever promoted more participation?
FeFe on February 24, 2010 at 5:07 AM
Agreed.
JiyuLife on February 24, 2010 at 8:20 AM
Glenn Beck is teetering on loosing sight of the big picture for his own self-righteousness. He lost credibility as a for me the morning after Scott Brown’s election. Rather than pat the Americans who efforted the greater cause of seat #41, he slammed the electorate for a poor conservative choice. His tone at CPAC was similar. JE, I agree with you, he is not a leader, he does not have the skills to keep Americans motivated toward a cause.
EyesOpen on February 24, 2010 at 8:24 AM
Excellent article.
I went through High School in the mid 80′s, and had one of the last “real” history classes taught at my school. In the years after I graduated, i found friends getting more social theory than history from the same classes I had taken a year or two earlier (different teachers).
For at least 30 years, we have been failing to educate our young, and have instead attempted to socialize them. I honestly had my doubts that we as a society would ever see through the liberal haze.
I’m still pessimistic, but I am seeing the glimmers of an Awakening now.
The American people are something unique in history. We have a heritage of being rugged individualists, but yet the most generous to those truly in need, and supportive of our communities. Only ignorance could keep us in our places, and that appears to be cracking a bit.
NavyspyII on February 24, 2010 at 8:36 AM
Yes, that’s exactly it (though I’m in my 30s). Sold a bill of goods, and a conspiracy of silence. This is why all my history classes always stopped in the ’20s. I always wondered why the semester seemed to end right then, every time. My grandparents were worshipful FDRbots, if only I’d known what that really meant. The entire process is like having ice cold water dumped on your head every day. It’s bracing and shocking. In the end it feels better, but… nothing is ever the same because the old world view was always an illusion.
perries on February 24, 2010 at 10:37 AM
…true…here’s a better definition, more to the point:
…nope…no starry-eyed “irrational” wool-gathering there, either….
…still, the original point: there’s plenty to divide us. What unites us?
Puritan1648 on February 24, 2010 at 11:09 AM
ROFL! And you learn more about Christianity by reading books about the Bible, than the actual Bible itself!
Beck completely shot down what you just quoted, and even went so far to point out that while he did buy a home that already had CFL lights in it… he replaced them all with incandescent light bulbs!
Glenn responds to USA Weekend article
dominigan on February 24, 2010 at 1:01 PM
david2.0 you are an idiot!
first off i am a latter day saint as i stated earlier in this thread…and second off i’ve been married for about 2 years to a beautiful french woman thelikes of which you could never get…oh and i was born an raised conservative but i’m more of a libertarian you bigot hick anti-semite
just because my blood is jewish doesn’t mean theres anything wrong with me you idiot
dirksilver on February 24, 2010 at 4:55 PM
UPSET?? Just the opposite. It’s laugh riot having that village idiot, Glenn “Lonesome Rhoads” Beck, and his cult around to keep one amused.
Bill Blizzard on February 25, 2010 at 2:00 AM
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