OPINION
JAMELLE
BOUIE
Tucker Carlson Has a New Hero
Aug. 6,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/06/opinion/tucker-carlson-viktor-orban.html
Jamelle
Bouie
By Jamelle
Bouie
Opinion
Columnist
Tucker
Carlson is only the latest — and most famous — American conservative to find
inspiration in the autocratic government of Hungary under Viktor Orban. The Fox
News personality is hosting his show, one of the most popular on cable news,
from the capital, Budapest, and on Saturday will deliver a speech, advertised
as “The World According to Tucker Carlson,” to a conference of far-right
activists.
To critics,
Orban’s Hungary is corrupt, repressive and authoritarian, a place where
democracy is little more than window dressing and the state exists to plunder
the public on behalf of a tiny ruling elite. To Carlson, it’s a model for the
United States, a showcase for anti-immigrant policies and reactionary cultural
politics.
“If you
care about Western civilization and democracy and families and the ferocious
assault on all three of those things by the leaders of our global
institutions,” he told his audience on Monday, “you should know what is
happening here right now.”
Carlson is
not alone. “Orban’s fans in the West include notable writers at major
conservative and right-leaning publications like National Review, the American
Conservative and the New York Post,” Zack Beauchamp wrote in a piece for Vox
last year.
Orban’s
American admirers include the political philosopher Patrick Deneen; J.D. Vance,
the author of “Hillbilly Elegy,” who is now running for the Republican Senate
nomination in Ohio; and Rod Dreher, a popular conservative blogger and author.
“Which is
the only power capable of standing up to Woke Capitalists, as well as these
illiberal leftists in academia, media, sports, cultural institutions, and other
places? The state,” Dreher wrote on Wednesday. “This is why American
conservatives ought to be beating a path to Hungary.”
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At this
point, students of American political history — and specifically students with
a working knowledge of the history of the conservative movement — will
recognize something familiar about this story. Here we have prominent
conservative writers and intellectuals using their platforms to support or
endorse regimes whose politics and policies align with their preoccupations,
even as the values of those regimes stand in direct opposition to the ideals of
American democracy.
We’ve seen
this before. Many times, in fact.
In 1957,
William F. Buckley Jr. published a “Letter from Spain” in the pages of his
magazine, National Review. An admirer of the Spanish dictator Francisco Franco,
Buckley did not hesitate to praise him in the most effusive terms he could
muster:
General
Franco is an authentic national hero. It is generally conceded that he above
others had the combination of talents, the perseverance, and the sense of
righteousness of his cause, that were required to wrest Spain from the hands of
the visionaries, ideologues, Marxists and nihilists that were imposing on her,
in the thirties, a regime so grotesque as to do violence to the Spanish soul,
to deny, even Spain’s historical identity.
Five years
later, in 1962, Buckley traveled to Mozambique — then under Portuguese colonial
rule — where he wrote favorably of the status quo and condemned the United
Nations for its anti-colonialism.
Its
influence on the West is disastrous. Its influence is also disastrous on the
peoples in whose name it allegedly speaks: the Egyptians dictated to with more
finality by Nasser than by Farouk; the Ghanaians, imprisoned by Nkrumah as they
never were by the Colonial Secretary; the Congolese, under the chaos of Adoula
where once they had order and, slow though it was, progress — more progress
than they had made in the thousands of years during which they were governed by
tribal despots.
And in
1963, Buckley had these sympathetic words for the apartheid government in South
Africa:
They may be
wrong, as we may be: but we should try at least to understand what it is they
are trying to do, and deny ourselves that unearned smugness that the bigot
shows. I cannot say, “I approve of Apartheid” — its ways are alien to my
temperament. But I know now it is a sincere people’s effort to fashion the land
of peace they want so badly.
Buckley was
not the only writer at National Review to defend and express admiration for
Western-aligned autocracies. In 1975, Robert Moss wrote an extended defense of
Augusto Pinochet and the military coup in Chile for the magazine called The Tribulation
of Chile. Moss downplayed the brutality of Pinochet’s newly minted military
dictatorship and urged Americans to support his so-called reforms:
No one
pretends that it will be easy, and with so many people going short, it is hard
to be optimistic about the prospects for Chile’s new-style capitalism in the
near future. There are men in the armed forces who are far from enthused about
it. But all in all, it is a brave attempt that deserves more understanding —
and active support — from what remains of the capitalist world.
And in
1977, James Burnham, a staunch anti-communist and one of the most influential
conservative political theorists of the postwar years, wrote a brief defense of
the apartheid government in the former Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe).
“Although
under the present Rhodesian government only 5 percent of the population
possesses a considerable degree of democracy, that is of itself enough to put
Rhodesia well up on the democratic scale,” he said, dismissing American and
international critics of the apartheid state. To the charge that the “Rhodesian
government is white racist,” Burnham was blunt:
Mere racism
is no crime; is, rather, a common human impulse, almost as integral as hunger,
aggression and sexual desire.
Whatever
its source, conservative defenses of, and even affection for, foreign
autocracies — of which enthusiasm for Orban’s Hungary is only the latest
example — is too consistent to ignore. It is also, at the same time, a
phenomenon of conservative elites, too niche to attribute to the entire
movement or its rank-and-file.
Rather than
treat it as a pathology of conservatism writ large, I am inclined to follow the
lead of Jeet Heer, a columnist at The Nation, who sees this enthusiasm as a
form of “transferred nationalism,” a term borrowed from George Orwell’s famous
1945 essay “Notes on Nationalism.”
“In
societies such as ours,” writes Orwell, “it is unusual for anyone describable
as an intellectual to feel a very deep attachment to his own country”:
Public
opinion — that is, the section of public opinion of which he as an intellectual
is aware — will not allow him to do so. Most of the people surrounding him are
sceptical and disaffected, and he may adopt the same attitude from
imitativeness or sheer cowardice: in that case he will have abandoned the form
of nationalism that lies nearest to hand without getting any closer to a
genuinely internationalist outlook. He still feels the need for a Fatherland,
and it is natural to look for one somewhere abroad. Having found it, he can wallow
unrestrainedly in exactly those emotions from which he believes that he has
emancipated himself.
“Transferred
nationalism” isn’t an exclusively conservative phenomenon. The Soviet Union,
for example, was a source of fascination for many American leftists through the
1930s and into the Second World War.
But at this
moment in American life, it’s conservatives who have set their sights abroad.
Parts of the movement have even adopted a kind of anti-Americanism, a contempt
for the United States as it exists. These conservatives still call themselves
“patriots” — and disdain their opponents as “traitors” — but theirs is an
abstract loyalty to an idealized country. “When they contemplate the actual
United States,” Beauchamp wrote in Vox, “they are filled with scorn.”
It makes
sense that as this tendency develops, so too does the yearning for a country
that can be hailed as a model and a lodestar — the soaring and gilded
counterpoint to our fallen and decadent society.
But that
too is projection. And sooner or later, the conservatives who hail Hungary
under Orban as an attractive alternative to the United States will see that
their vision of that country is as false as their image of this one is.
Jamelle
Bouie became a New York Times Opinion columnist in 2019. Before that he was the
chief political correspondent for Slate magazine. He is based in
Charlottesville, Va., and Washington. @jbouie
A version
of this article appears in print on Aug. 7, 2021, Section A, Page 17 of the New
York edition with the headline: Tucker Carlson Has a New Hero, and the
Admiration Is Mutual. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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