OPINION
ROSS
DOUTHAT
Why Hungary Inspires So Much Fear and Fascination
Aug. 7,
2021
Ross
Douthat
By Ross
Douthat
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/07/opinion/sunday/hungary-orban-conservatives-free-speech.html
For the
last few years, Hungary, a country of fewer than 10 million people, has
occupied an outsize place in the imagination of American liberals and
conservatives. If you think the American right is sliding toward
authoritarianism, you cite Viktor Orban’s nationalist government as a dark
model for the G.O.P. If you think an intolerant progressivism shadows American
life, you invoke Orban as a figure who’s fighting back.
In this
running debate, sharpened by the recent Tucker Carlson visit to Budapest, I was
struck by an observation from The Atlantic’s David Frum, a fierce critic of the
right’s Orban infatuation. As part of a Twitter thread documenting corruption
in Orban’s inner circle, Frum wrote: “I visited Hungary in 2016. Again &
again, I witnessed a gesture I thought had vanished from Europe forever: people
turning their heads to check who was listening before they lent forward to
whisper what they had to say. They feared for their jobs, not their lives — but
still …”
This is a
useful tweet for thinking about the fears motivating Hungary-watching
Americans, left and right. On the one hand, there’s the fear that Trumpian
populism will someday gain enough power to make its critics fear for their
livelihoods. On the other, there’s the fear that progressivism already exerts
this power in the United States, and that what Frum describes in dire terms,
the cautious sotto voce conversation, is an important part of American life
right now.
You can
document this fear of sharing strong opinions, especially ones that conflict
with progressive orthodoxy, by looking at opinion polls. For example, a 2020
survey conducted by the Cato Institute found that 62 percent of Americans felt
uncomfortable sharing their views because of the political climate, and “strong
liberals” were the only ideological group where the majority felt free to speak
their minds. To the question, “Are you worried about losing your job or missing
out on job opportunities if your political opinions became known?” highly
educated Americans were the most anxious, with 44 percent of respondents with a
postgraduate degree and 60 percent of Republicans with a post-grad degree
saying yes.
Alternatively,
you can document this fear by just keeping up with the ever-lengthening list of
people who have had careers derailed for offenses against progressive norms.
(Often they are heterodox liberals rather than conservatives, because
conservatives are rare in elite institutions and less interesting to
ideological enforcers.) Or by observing the climate of denunciation and
abasement in various cultural spaces, from academic journals to law schools to
the publishing industry. Or just by having everyday conversations in
professional-class America: I’ve experienced more versions of the speak-quietly
move — or its “don’t share this email” equivalent — in the last few years than
I have in my entire prior adult life.
This fear
is different from the fear that Frum discerned in Hungary, in the sense that
nobody in the United States is afraid of criticizing the government. The
censorious trend in America is more organic, encouraged by complex developments
in the upper reaches of meritocratic life, and imposed by private corporations
and the ideological minders they increasingly employ. If this is
left-McCarthyism it lacks a Joe McCarthy: If you pushed your way into the inner
sanctum of the Inner Party of progressivism, you would find not a cackling
Kamala Harris, but an empty room.
For anyone
on the wrong side of the new rules of thought and speech, though, the absence
of a McCarthy figure is cold comfort. Whatever his corruptions, Viktor Orban
might lose the next election, if the fractious opposition stays united. But
where can you go to vote for a different ruling ideology in the interlocking
American establishment, all its schools and professional guilds, its
consolidated media and tech powers?
One answer,
common to old-fashioned libertarians, is that you can’t vote against cultural
forces: You just have to fight the battle of ideas, at whatever disadvantage,
with a Substack if your media colleagues force you out, or from suburban Texas
if you feel uncomfortable in the groves of academe.
For others,
though, this seems like a naïve form of cultural surrender: Like telling a
purged screenwriter during the Hollywood Blacklist, “Hey, just go start your
own movie studio.” Which is part of how a figure like Orban becomes appealing
to American conservatives. It’s not just his anti-immigration stance or his
moral traditionalism. It’s that his interventions in Hungarian cultural life,
the attacks on liberal academic centers and the spending on conservative
ideological projects, are seen as examples of how political power might curb
progressivism’s influence.
Some
version of this impulse is actually correct. It would be a good thing if
American conservatives had more of a sense of how to weaken the influence of
Silicon Valley or the Ivy League, and more cultural projects in which they
wanted to invest both private energy and public money.
But the way
this impulse has swiftly led conservatives to tolerate corruption, whether in
their long-distance Hungarian romance or their marriage to Donald Trump,
suggests a fundamental danger for cultural outsiders. When you have demand for
an alternative to an oppressive-seeming ideological establishment, but
relatively little capacity to build one, the easiest path often leads not
toward renaissance, but grift.
Ross
Douthat has been an Opinion columnist for The Times since 2009. He is the
author of several books, most recently, “The Decadent Society.” @DouthatNYT
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