Pat
Buchanan on Ron Paul, the Internet and Ethnic Politics in the 21st
Century
The
Daily Bell
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
True Believer
Introduction:
Patrick Buchanan has been a senior advisor to three Presidents,
a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination,
and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000. From
1966 through 1974, Patrick Buchanan was an assistant to Richard
Nixon, and from 1985 to 1987, White House Director of Communications
for Ronald Reagan. In 1992, Mr. Buchanan challenged George Bush
for the Republican nomination and almost upset the President in
the New Hampshire primary. In 1996, he won the New Hampshire primary
and finished second to Sen. Bob Dole with three million Republican
votes. Patrick Buchanan has written ten books, including seven straight
New York Times bestsellers: A
Republic, Not an Empire, The
Death of the West, Where
the Right Went Wrong, State
of Emergency, Day
of Reckoning, and Churchill,
and Hitler and The Unnecessary War. His most recent book
is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?
Daily Bell:
Everyone knows who you are but let's pretend they don't. Give us
some background on yourself and how you have come to your current
success. Give us a sense of your intellectual development.
Pat Buchanan:
I went to journalism school right after college and went out to
St. Louis where I became an editorial writer for three years. Then
I joined up with Richard Nixon in 1965 and was with him both through
the out years until 1969 and the five years of his presidency up
to August 1974.
Then I became
a syndicated columnist, which I had always intended to be, and ten
years later I went into Ronald Reagan's White House. I spent two
years there and went with him to the summits in Geneva and Reykjavik.
Right after that I went back to writing a column until I challenged
my old friend, George Bush, in the New Hampshire primary in 1992.
We did very well. We closed the gap from about 65 points to about
14 but we didn't win.
I ran in 1996
again and we won the New Hampshire primary and came in second for
the nomination out of a field of ten. In 2000 I ran again, on the
Reform Party ticket, which was unsuccessful.
Since then,
I have been writing books, writing a regular column and appearing
on The McLaughlin Group and MSNBC. We have had success with the
books; we've had seven New York Times bestsellers in the
last seven books. We've had some failures, too, and that is pretty
much my background.
Daily Bell:
Are you more libertarian and less conservative now or vice versa?
What is the difference between a libertarian and a conservative?
Are you surprised at the ascendency of libertarian thought in the
21st century?
Pat Buchanan:
I am more of a traditionalist conservative than I am a libertarian
but I share with Ron Paul the view that America has become an over-extended
empire. After the Cold War we should have downsized the empire dramatically
and returned to become a more normal nation in a more normal time.
I believe government
has gotten too huge. Republicans have colluded with Democrats to
make it so and I am pessimistic that we're ever going to be able
to turn this around.
Daily Bell:
Tell us about your latest book, Suicide of a Superpower.
Pat Buchanan:
Well, the United States is certainly not a failed nation or a failed
state but we are failing. We're unable to control our borders, we
are unable to balance our budgets, we're unable to win or end our
wars successfully and achieve our objectives, and we're unable to
stop the hemorrhaging of American jobs and manufacturing abroad.
I think the
annual deficit of 9-10% of GDP indicates that the American empire
and the massive US government are to be downsized, if not through
political action, then through a de facto default on the debt via
inflation. And I fear we are headed down the road toward the end
of the United States as a traditional nation, which is one people,
one nation, under God, indivisible.
The mass immigration
that is taking place of peoples of every culture, creed, country,
civilization, continent, is converting us into a multicultural,
multiethnic, multiracial, multilingual continent of a country, which
has little or nothing to hold it together. No such polyglot country
has ever existed before and I don't think we are going to succeed
in creating one. I think we are headed for Balkanization and break-up,
not in the sense of a secession of the states or civil war, but
in the sense that we will resemble the Balkan peninsula more than
the country we were under Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy.
Daily Bell:
Would you say that is your main concern about the US today?
Pat Buchanan:
America has many problems and some of the problems that I address
in Suicide of a Superpower, I believe, are beyond the realm of politics
to solve.
One of the
unifying features of the United States was that we were a predominately
Christian and European country. We had an ethno-national core, where
90 percent of Americans hailed from Europe and 95 percent were Christian.
Both of these unifying features are crumbling now, and when the
cradle faith dies in a country the moral consensus disintegrates
and as does the consensus of what is ethical conduct. All these
developments are leading to what I believe will be the disintegration
of the nation and the evolving of something far different.
Daily Bell:
You were recently featured in James Jaeger's film SPOiLER and
in an earlier film called Original
Intent. Cultural Marxism was a big discussion in these films.
Can you expand on that discussion?
Pat Buchanan:
I use the phrase Cultural Marxism to describe what Antonio Gramsci
had in mind for the West, after he went to Russia. He saw Lenin's
Soviet Union as a failure, in that, while the regime had total power
and the obedience of its citizens, the people were terrified of
it and gave it no loyalty, allegiance or love. And eventually the
Soviet Union would and did collapse, as did Mao's China. Gramsci
believed in the cultural approach. He believed that, through a long
march through the institutions of the West, Marxists could overturn
Christianity, the heat shield of the West that made people automatically
reject Marxism. If you could extirpate Christian culture from the
heart of Western man, with the "acids of modernity," destroy
this heat shield, people would embrace Marxist ideas and you could
advance your ideology, and the people would be more receptive to
it.
What we call
Cultural Marxism has certainly been more successful than the economic
Marxism of the 19th century and the Leninism associated with it.
I have used this term Cultural Marxism along with other terms
socialism, secular humanism. Basically it is a political ideology,
a set of ideas, antithetical to traditional, Judeo-Christian beliefs
and ideas predominant in this country up until the middle of last
century.
Daily Bell:
So what happened in the middle of the last century that is accredited
to this change?
Pat Buchanan:
The revolutions of the 1960s. They began within the mainstream of
American thought the civil rights revolution, anti-war protests
but degenerated into more alien ideas. The anti-Vietnam protests
degenerated into anti-Americanism, the belief the United States
was on the wrong side in the Cold War. The marches and demonstrations
began with "Let's get out of Vietnam" and ended with "Ho,
Ho, Ho Chi Minh; the NLF is going to win." The fight for civil
rights ended in demands for quotas, affirmative action, set-asides
and an entirely different country.
The feminist
revolution that began with a desire of women for equal opportunity
in academia and the job market degenerated into a clamor for sexual
liberation and abortion on demand. And all of these things are part
of a great revolution that has put down roots and been extremely
successful in converting a significant slice of the country, and
capturing half of the elite. I don't think we can reverse this revolution.
I think it's divided us permanently and I don't think we are going
back to being one nation and one people again.
Daily Bell:
What do you think of Ron Paul and the strides he has made and the
traction he is getting?
Pat Buchanan:
He has done extremely well. Ron Paul's an old friend of mine and
I like him, admire his consistency and his political courage. He's
a man who is willing to stand up there alone and vote his convictions
when people laugh at him, which is one of the most difficult things
to do in politics.
Some of the
ideas Ron Paul is championing now some of them are
ideas that I championed in the 1990s. For instance, the idea that
the United States has to give up the empire, to cut back and pull
our horns in a bit, that we cannot be the policemen of the world,
that we cannot give orders to the world. This idea is gaining traction
and gaining ground. It's not a majority view yet in the Republican
Party but it is moving ahead.
This idea about
smaller government is obviously consistent with Republican philosophy.
But, candidly, I don't think they'll be able to accomplish a great
deal in the next four years even if the Republicans win. They've
accomplished next to nothing, or very little in the last year when
they had control of the House. On securing the border and halting
mass immigration, I don't have much hope of great progress.
So I think
Ron Paul has done a fine job. But do I think his ideas will be incorporated
into the platform or the policy of a dominant Republican Party in
2013? We have to wait and see but I doubt it seriously. I truly
believe that the American economic problems are going to be solved
by massive inflation wiping out a lot of this debt and wiping
out the real savings of a lot of Americans.
Daily Bell:
Do you still vote? Would you vote for him?
Pat Buchanan:
Well, I'm in Virginia so I can only vote for Ron Paul or Mitt! (LOL)
And that leaves out Perry and Newt and all the others, so I'll wait
for the primary to get here but I can't endorse any candidate because
I'm on television and we are not allowed to.
Daily Bell:
Ron Paul is getting some press now but why does he get such bad
press or no press? We know mainstream media is controlled but what
are your thoughts about it and if you agree it is controlled, by
whom?
Pat Buchanan:
The mainstream media is deeply hostile to Ron Paul's ideas. The
mainstream media is caught up with the idea of globalism, caught
up with the idea that America should be the dominant force in virtually
every region of the world. It is caught up in the idea that government
has the answers to a lot of issues.
Mainstream
media is predominantly left of center, undeniably, and Ron Paul
represents the antithesis of what it believes, morally, politically
and every other way. But I do think they are also getting caught
up in the idea that Ron Paul is growing in strength, and he has
a lot of young people supporting him. So if you see Ron Paul win
Iowa, and go on to win New Hampshire, that will make what happened
to me in 1996 look like a mainstream media endorsement. (Laughing
again).
Daily Bell:
Are you an Austrian, economically?
Pat Buchanan:
No, not really, but I'm obviously not a Keynesian. On trade I disagree
with Ron Paul because I'm a believer in the Economic Nationalism
of Hamilton and Henry Clay and the Republican Party from 1860 to
1928 when the United States was turned from a county that produced
half of what Great Britain produced, into a giant that produced
more than all of what Europe produced. Free traders decide policy
based on what is best for the world and for the consumer. Milton
Friedman wrote that even if other nations don't practice free trade
we should get rid of all tariffs and allow them to dump their goods
in the US market at any price they want because the consumer would
benefit. Libertarians tend to put the consumer first and I put the
country first.
Daily Bell:
What do you feel is government's role in society?
Pat Buchanan:
Government's role in society is to keep the peace and protect the
inherent rights of the people, especially the minority, but to allow
the majority to build a society that reflects its views, values
and beliefs, and to pretty much get out of the way. In a country
of 300 million you need more government controls than you would
need in a country of 3 million. One consideration is, for instance,
we have highways spanning the country and you've got to have speed
limits. Here's where I disagreed with my old friend Ronald Reagan,
who told me in 1976 that he wondered why we needed driver's licenses.
I told him I grew up in DC, and thought they were necessary. (Laughing)
But he used to drive a tractor without a license. And I understood
that in Dixon, Illinois but we were a different world by the 1950s.
Daily Bell:
Should the American federal government be pruned back?
Pat Buchanan:
Many of the Great Society programs were a terrible mistake. In 1965
we weren't starving in Washington, DC, but there was nobody on food
stamps. Now, one in every five citizens in DC is on food stamps.
Nationwide there are about 47 million on food stamps at a cost of
$77 billion. Do I think all that is necessary? Of course not. As
I say, no one was starving and if anyone were at the local level
we could handle it. We have all kinds of private programs for food,
but once you get these things written into law they're hard to get
rid of.
When I was
a kid my mother made us sandwiches and we took them to school. Milk
was a nickel but the Buchanans had nine kids. We didn't buy milk
and get milk at lunch. We were to drink water. It wasn't hardship
but when I see how much money they spend on school breakfasts and
school lunches and the eligibility runs up to middle class....All
these things are added, one on another.
Let me say
this. You have four elements of the budget. One is the interest
on the debt. The second is what you might call the empire
the wars, the defense budget, the CIA budgets, the nuclear budgets,
all the intelligence agencies, and that amounts to about one trillion
dollars. Third, you've got the big entitlement programs, Social
Security and Medicare, which are even larger together, I think,
than the empire budget. Fourth is the Great Society budget, where
food stamp programs, unemployment insurance, all these programs
school lunches, earned income tax credits, basically massive
income transfer programs, redistributive programs, and all those
elements.
I don't see
the two parties getting together and rolling back any one of these
four. The Democrats aren't going to let you touch the Great Society
programs or the entitlement programs. Republicans aren't going to
let you raise taxes or go after the empire, and you can't touch
interest. I don't know how you succeed in making serious cuts. So
I think we continue down the road we are on, which is the path that
the Italians are trotting on today and they are trotting right after
the Greeks.
Daily Bell:
How does America make changes with this mentality? What would you
do if you could start an education program to change American thinking
now?
Pat Buchanan:
You know, people who read my book say, "Pat, you are not a
roaring optimist," and I'm not. Look at the education system.
We have dumped trillions of dollars into it in the last 45 years,
since 1965, and what do we have to show for it? We have test scores
that continue go down until they revise the tests to make them easier,
so the scores will stop going down. You are getting no real progress
there. The United States as a country has fallen into the middle
level of Western countries in terms of its test scores, and it's
headed toward Third World status.
To turn that
around, you have to reject certain conventional beliefs about education
and introduce ideas that are unacceptable. Do I think we are going
to to this? No, I don't. I think our politics are getting increasingly
to the point where anyone who suggests we are going in the wrong
direction is so demonized and is called so many names that it's
intimidating. People simply refuse to face up to the truth.
The country
is in the grip of an ideology that seeks to lead us toward some
sort of Utopia . But that's a country that's never existed before.
We had a successful country in 1960, and it was still successful
in the 1980s when Reagan was there. But we have since embraced ideas
that preclude our succeeding and those ideas have changed the mindset
of the American people.
Daily Bell:
Is America too militaristic?
Pat Buchanan:
I don't know that it's too militaristic, but America is very interventionist.
Why? Because we've convinced ourselves that we have found the solutions
to history's great questions. Some Americans are almost neo-Trotskyite.
Trotsky believed he had the right idea about how men should be ruled
and the Communists should impose those ideas on the world. And the
world democratic revolution that Bush was preaching, and that many
of his followers still preach is the mirror image. They believe
we have some right to interfere in the internal affairs of countries
all over the world since we have found the Rosetta Stone to solving
all the world's problems. If only these backward peoples will embrace
democracy and human rights and all these ideas that we have embraced,
the world will be a far better place. We are seeking some grand
utopian goal and we are going to fall short. The whole world is
resisting us now. Do I know how to stop this or change this ? No,
I don't.
Daily Bell:
Is the US headed toward martial law?
Pat Buchanan:
Well, down the road I think the US is headed toward a much more
militarized domestic society. I notice that half a million people
got a gun for Christmas this year (LOL)! That tells me there are
a lot of people that agree with Pat Buchanan about where we are
going.
Daily Bell:
Where do you stand on the war on terror? Is al Qaeda still a real
threat to the US?
Pat Buchanan:
When we were attacked, we were victims of terrorism. It was an outrage
and we went after the people that did it and rightly so. We did
the right thing in dumping over the government in Afghanistan, and
going in and trying to kill Bin Laden and his collaborators, and
running them down around the world because of what they did.
What astonishes
me is that people don't understand why they did what they did. Americans
didn't read the fatwa, the declaration of war against the United
States. So I don't think we properly understand their motives. Their
motives are really not that exceptional. People say our enemies
don't like what Hollywood is producing. But our enemies didn't bomb
Hollywood. My view is that the main reason they attacked us is because
they believe that we are infidels, and that we are imperialists,
and that we are interfering in their affairs, and that we are all
over their world and they want us to get the hell out. They are
using the same tactics that Algerians and Viet Cong and the other
organizations have used. They use terror attacks even against civilians
to convince imperial powers to get out of their country. They want
us out of their part of the world.
Some may want
to create their own caliphate. I don't think those guys could organize
one. They detest us, mainly because we are over there. They were
over here because we were over there.
In that sense,
Ron Paul was correct. He was not saying we were responsible for
9/11 but he is saying that 9/11 happened because these folks are
protesting - not just our existence or our Constitution. They didn't
sit in some cave and say, "Hey did you see how the Americans
have a constitutional right to bear arms?" They saw us moving
into Saudi Arabia, they saw what we were doing to the Iraqis, they
saw our support for what the Israelis were doing to the Palestinians
and they said, 'We have to get these people out of our countries,
out of our civilization, and out of our lives. We are tired of it.
We detest their culture, we detest their presence and the way to
get them out is through acts of terror. And if we can wave a red
flag in front of the American bull, it will come charging over here.
And the same thing will happen that happened to the Soviet Empire.'"
And they are right.
Daily Bell:
Give us your thoughts on Global or One World Order?
Pat Buchanan:
We have been fighting the new world order ever since Bush declared
it in 1991. That was one of the issues I ran on. I said we are Americans
first and we are a separate and unique country and we don't want
to disappear in any new world order. We need to preserve our sovereignty
and independence.
This is behind
my belief in economic patriotism. You want the country to be self-sufficient
the way it was before WWI and WWII. We could have stayed out of
both wars. Nobody was going to bother us; we produced everything
we consumed, except I think for tea, coffee, bananas, and chrome,
or something like that. And that's the kind of country I believe
in.
But I do believe
this. The new world order is in crisis. Take a look at what's happened
to the Kyoto protocol. The Canadians walked out. They said we aren't
taking any part. That's it. The Chinese are taking that stance,
too. The Doha Round of trade negotiations failed. The Americans
are not going to pay the $20 billion annually to the Third World
to prepare for global warming that Hillary Clinton promised. That's
out the window.
The European
Union is in trouble and the Eurozone is on the cusp of disaster.
You see the small nationalist parties, anti-immigrant parties in
Europe sprouting and some of them are already in power or approaching
power. You see those forces and they are all against this new world
order, this federation of mankind, and all the rest of it. Those
ideas go back to Emmanuel Kant and Woodrow Wilson. And the movement
forward toward that, which was dramatic between 1990 and 2010, I
see halted and moving in reverse. The Eurozone could come crashing
down. In those times you see people who are more nationalistic saying,
"Let's take care of ourselves and let's not worry about this
globalism." The globalist and anti-globalist forces are more
evenly matched now.
Daily Bell:
Will you run for president again?
Pat Buchanan:
Nope, I don't think so. (Laughing). No, the answer is no.
Daily Bell:
We believe that the Internet has spawned a kind of "Internet
Reformation" and have been preaching this paradigm for about
a decade. Where do you stand on this?
Pat Buchanan:
I think the Internet is a neutral thing. Like dynamite, it can be
used for good and bad. The fact that the major economic driver of
the Internet and the most commonly visited sites are pornography
I'm not sure that's a reflection of a real progress. It's
like the telephone and the telegraph.
Of course,
it improves the access that we have to news and information, thoughts
and ideas, but it also provides an opportunity for every idiot in
the world to put out insults and slurs. I view it as an advance.
But you don't change the character of people with inventions like
this, which can be used for good or ill. There's no question but
that it's been used to undermine tyrannies and despots, but my guess
is they will eventually find ways to use it to maintain themselves.
Daily Bell:
As we've just closed one year and ascend into another, would you
share your thoughts for the coming year?
Pat Buchanan:
The politicians and the political classes everywhere are losing
control. "Events are in the saddle and ride mankind,"
as Emerson wrote. That's what I said in a year-end column. People
now accept the idea that the people shall rule themselves one
man, one vote. But I think democracy of that kind is going to turn
into an enabler of the more powerful forces in the world.
In my book,
Suicide
of a Superpower, I argue that this force is ethno-nationalism.
Ethnic majorities all over the world are trying to create countries
where their own culture, language and religion are predominant and
where they themselves rule over their minorities and, if necessary,
expel them and create countries which are purely ethno-nationalistic.
Secondarily,
I think religious fundamentalism, certainly of the Islamic variety,
is the most powerful force in something like one-fourth of the countries
in the world today.
And these two
forces are tearing multi-ethnic and multi-cultural nations to pieces.
I think they'll continue to do that and the nations that are very
vulnerable are nations like the United States and India, just like
the old Soviet Union was. Czechoslovakia broke in half and, of course,
Yugoslavia did.
If you see
the one country in Europe that did not break but pulled together,
it was Germany, at the end of the Cold War. And for what reason?
Ethno-nationalism. The West Germans saw the East Germans as people
that belonged with them and so they spent a trillion dollars pulling
them together and bringing them home.
This is the
force that is the predominant force in the world, and some of the
forces that used to be predominant will be overwhelmed by that.
The future divisions and conflicts in the United States, I fear,
will be ethnic and racial.
Let me give
you one example. Right here in our state of Maryland, which is very
liberal, they have to re-district the Congressional seats. And the
Democrats naturally wanted to divide it up so they could get the
maximum number of Democrats. But the African-American Democrats
said, "No, we want to divide it up so we get the maximum number
of African-American Congressmen."
So
you see basically ethnicity and race trumping traditional politics
and I think that's the future. I see us becoming a country of four
major ethno-national groups by mid-century, with all four negotiating
and bidding with one another for shares of the pie rather than as
one nation and one people.
Daily Bell:
Any books or websites you want to mention?
Pat Buchanan:
Well, I have had some medical issues these past few months and have
not been able to get out there and talk more about Suicide
of a Superpower, which is my last book of this kind. It
was doing very well the first two weeks but I had to sort of drop
out for a bit.
Daily Bell:
Thank you, Mr. Buchanan, for your time and for this informative
interview. We have enjoyed speaking with you.
Pat Buchanan:
Thank you. Good luck and happy new year to you.
Reprinted
with permission from The
Daily Bell.
January
16, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 The
Daily Bell
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