NB Antonio Gramsci was the chief theoretician of the communist party. Alexis de Tocqueville was a Frenchman who admired the America of the Nineteenth Century. It is worth knowing something about Marx and others of that ilk. People tend to think that when the Berlin Wall came down in 1989 the Soviet Empire was finished and that we had won. That is what the BBC wanted us to think. But it was not true; far from it; communist subversives have infiltrated Western governments, universities, the media and other centres of power. Know thine enemy; it is a government near you. Professor Radosh is not very incisive but he was on the left so he understands what they are about.
This article was taken from Free Dominion
Gramsci vs. Tocqueville
or
Marxism vs. the American Ideology
FrontPageMagazine.com 4 January 2000
by Ronald Radosh
CONSERVATIVES HAVE BEEN LAX in
dealing with the question of ideology, leaving this terrain most often
to the academic Marxists and to the remnants of the 60's New Left. While
we have had an outpouring of articles and books criticizing the
fashionable views on issues such as multiculturalism, affirmative
action, the mythology surrounding race in America and the like, there
have been few attempts to deal with the reasons surrounding the
widespread acceptance of the new shibboleths in deeper philosophical
terms.
Finally, an attempt has been made in an important new article written by
historian
John Fonte, "Why There Is A Culture War: Gramsci and Tocqueville in
America", which appears in the new issue of the Heritage
Foundation's monthly magazine, Policy
Review. What Fonte attempts to establish is that, beneath the
surface of our political world, there has been a fight between competing
worldviews, a fight which Fonte rightfully calls "an intense ideological
struggle."
Fonte begins by summarizing the thesis of the late Italian Communist
intellectual, Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937), who developed the thesis of
"hegemony," which became the starting point for his entire worldview.
From Gramsci's perspective, a social system- in our case, capitalism -
is sustained when the majorities of its inhabitants internalize and
accept the system's values and premises. Revolution could not succeed,
he hypothesized, until a cultural "war of position" had been waged to
undermine the hegemonic values that sustained the system. That demanded
the creation of a new value system through a struggle waged in the
organs of civil society by the Left - the schools, the churches, the
media and all voluntary organizations. Only then, when the dominant
ideas had been discarded, could steps be taken to transform the social
system.
The decisive struggle to undermine middle-class liberal democracy, Fonte
notes, would be fought primarily at the level of consciousness. The
necessary first step for handing power to previously subordinate groups
was the rejection of the old social order by its citizens on
intellectual and moral grounds, through the creation of
counter-hegemony. What John Fonte goes on to argue is that the Left has
in fact been pursuing the Gramscian approach, perhaps unaware that they
are doing it. From arguing that the critical attention has to be given
to race, ethnicity and gender, to the claim that "the personal is
political," to the arguments for so-called jury nullification, to the
doctrine of "critical theory" developed in our major law schools - Fonte
convincingly shows how the underlying philosophical approach can be
traced back to Gramsci.
One example he gives will suffice. Critical legal theory, he writes,
"could hardly be more Gramscian; it seeks to 'deconstruct' bourgeois
legal ideas that serve as instruments of power for the dominant groups
and 'reconstruct' them to serve the interests of the subordinate
groups." In practice, therefore, its advocates claim that when black
jurors vote to acquit a guilty black criminal, they are merely
empowering previously powerless defendants who might have been driven to
crime by the real guilty party - American racism and its controlling
body of white males.
Countering Gramsci is what Fonte calls the basic American ideology, that
of Alexis de Tocqueville, based on the understanding that Americans are
individualistic, religious and patriotic, as well as committed to a
dynamic entrepreneurial energy that demands the acceptance of the
equality of individual opportunity, rather than special rewards given to
the "oppressed" based on their perceived group affiliations. American
exceptionalism, Fonte writes, is based on dynamism, religiosity and
patriotism. Its adherents include intellectuals such as Gertrude
Himmelfarb, William Bennett, but also liberal intellectuals such as
former Clinton advisor William Galston, a supporter of the Progressive
Policy Institute and the Democratic Leadership Council. In terms of
action, it includes the work of Michael Joyce of the Bradley Foundation,
whose self-described "Tocquevillian" approach includes support to
associations and individuals that seek to infuse moral and religious
underpinnings to civic action. Indeed, he notes that, in an article,
Joyce called for challenging the "political hegemony" of those who run
what the late historian Christopher Lasch called the "therapeutic
state." Again, those who support this stance include both Democrats and
Republicans, including the pre-campaign Joseph Lieberman and, of course,
President-elect George W. Bush.
In theory, as in life, all is not so black and white. Fonte notes that
some intellectuals support one and reject another aspect of the
Tocquevillian ideology. Paleoconservatives oppose modernism and the
Enlightenment; secular patriots like Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. support
American nationalism but balk at anti-statist American traditions and
Catholic social democrats like journalist E.J. Dionne accept the
religious part of the Tocqueville approach but want to put curbs on the
entrepreneurial spirit. Fonte might have added the anomaly posed by the
work of the eminent historian Eugene D. Genovese, a self-proclaimed
Gramscian who opposes radical feminism, affirmative action and who has
even praised the work of Judge Robert Bork. I would have particularly
appreciated, given this irony, how Fonte would have explained and fit
Genovese into his paradigm.
It is John Fonte's hope, as he writes, that the Tocquevillians will have
the strength, given their "intellectual firepower, infrastructure,
funding, media attention and a comprehensive philosophy that taps into
core American principles - to challenge the Gramscians with any chance
of success." It is his feeling that the coalition of paleoconservatives,
libertarians, secular patriots and Catholic social democrats do not have
the wherewithal to provide effective resistance to what Fonte terms "the
Gramscian assault." He sees hope in the manifesto "A Call to Civil
Society: Why Democracy Needs Moral Truths," which outlined civic and
moral values that buttress our republic, and which was signed by
political figures and intellectuals of both Left and Right, including
liberals such as Jean Bethke Elshtain and radicals like Cornel West.
The fight has also taken place in Congress, where Gramscian laws such as
the Gender Equity in Education Act, based as it is on concepts of
"institutionalized oppression," vie against Tocquevillian legislation
like the "charitable choice" provision in the welfare reform
legislation. And, of course, it has spread to the Supreme Court, which
has heard cases such as the Violence Against Women Act, in which the
Court has accepted the gender feminist argument that sexual harassment
is a hate crime perpetrated by men to keep women inferior. Fonte writes
that in the case Davis v. Monroe
County Board of Education, the Court endorsed Gramscian and
Marxist assumptions "of power relations between dominant and subordinate
groups and applied those assumptions to American fifth graders." And in
the executive branch of government, the Gramscian view is apparent in
the various attempts to promote group-based equality of result rather
than equality of individual opportunity.
Fonte's article is of importance because until now, few commentators
have tied the growth of political correctness to the advance of Marxist
ideology. Fonte concludes that "the slow but steady advance of Gramscian
and Hegelian-Marxist ideas through the major institutions of American
democracy," taking place while politicians seem to converge in the
political center, reveals the "deeper conflict" of ideology that will
continue into the new century. It will continue, Fonte argues, because
Gramscian Marxism continues, a decade after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, "to challenge the American republic at the level of its most
cherished ideas." That is America's unique exceptionalism, based on
entrepreneurial dynamism, patriotism and a religious-cultural core.
Should Gramsci's view win, Fonte warns, it "would mean the end of this
very 'exceptionalism,'" with America becoming a secular, post-patriotic
and statist social order, in which group hierarchies and group rights
replace the idea of equality before the law. I agree with Fonte when he
says "the historical stakes are enormous." His discussion is, in itself,
a contribution to winning the fight.
___________________
Ronald Radosh is a regular columnist and book reviewer for
FrontPageMagazine.com. A
former leftist and currently Professor Emeritus of History at City
University of New York, Radosh has written many books, including
The Rosenberg File (with Joyce Milton). His soon-to-be-published
memoir is entitled
Commies: A Journey Through the Old Left, the New Left and the Leftover
Left
http://www.frontpagemag.com/archives/radosh/2001/rr01-04-01p.htm
__________________
This important
Policy Review article referred to in this thread can be found at:
Why There Is A Culture War.
Every conservative should read it, to gain an understanding of the
issues at play in today's society, and to really understand the
culture war.