Yesterday's
ideological divide extends into the present.
The
last sentence is nonsense of course:
"Is
it any wonder that we find fans of former
KGB officer Vladimir Putin within
neoconservatism’s circles?"
Meet
The Father Of Neoconservatism: Leon Trotsky
10
December, 2015
When
neoconservatism stormed onto the national stage, sweeping the GOP
into power in 1994, it took many pundits by surprise.
Founded
in the 1950’s by
intellectuals such as James Burnham, Max Shactman, Leo Strauss,
Suzanne LaFollette, Willmoore Kendall, and Irving Kristol, it had
remained on the fringe of our nation’s politics for
decades. With its own pool of intellectuals, neoconservatism grew
until it began to dominate right-wing thought in the halls of
power, with the presidency of George W. Bush pointed to as their most
triumphant moment.
The
irony of course is that Neoconservatism is not conservative at all,
but is in fact a branch from theanti-Stalin
Communist movement,
led by Leon Trotsky. By taking on the rhetoric of the
anti-Communist right, the Trotskyists created a new
paradigm that came across as more palatable to the American
public. By doing so, the neoconservative
movement began its climb
to power without any disruption, unlike those who followed Lenin’s
ideologies, such as Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong and Enver Hoxha. Having
rebranded the anti-Stalinist
Left,
the Trotskyists had the clean break they needed to help
develop, and deliver, their ideology.
Trotsky’s Heirs.
It
may sound strange to hear, but history is what it is. The founding
fathers of the neoconservative movement came from Trotsky’s
circles, from the anti-Stalin communists.
Many
may ask how neoconservatism can derive from communism.
What one needs to keep in mind is that during this period, we had a
major break within the Communist sphere of influence. Below this
schism however, we find an underlying thought process. Trotsky, like
Stalin and Lenin before them, did not believe that the workers or the
poor were organized enough to function in a purely communist
society. In addition, like Stalin and Lenin, Trotsky did not trust
the middle-class, and felt that the moneyed interests would
transform into petty dictators disguised as democracy.
But,
while Stalin and Lenin believed in the use of bureaucracy for
enabling Communism by giving a rigid structure of controls and
regulations combined with education and organization, Trotsky instead
argued that a bureaucracy would only give the middle-class too
much power and oppress the working class.Trotsky argued that
an empowered
feudal state,
at the expense of the middle class, would ultimately be what led to
communism. Of course, it would have been Trotsky and his circles of
elites who would serve as these new feudal lords.
While
Trotsky and Lenin put aside their differences for the October
Revolution, they never did share many of the same ideals. After all,
in 1913 Trotsky said of Lenin that:
“The entire edifice of Leninism at the present time is built on lies and falsification and bears within itself the poisonous elements of its own decay.”
In
a similar vein, Lenin wrote
at length of Trotsky’s issues,
without similarly turning to broad statements and generalizations.
And with Stalin continuing Lenin’s work — having been Lenin’s
right-hand man for nearly two decades — Trotsky had found
himself cut off from the movement he had hoped to dominate.
Indeed, a major factor behind split between Stalin and Trotsky was
over Trotsky’s brutality
of leadership,
with Trotsky calling Stalin too
soft.
It
is telling that the great purges within the Soviet Union only ended
after the death
of Trotsky at
the hands of Ramon Mercader, along with the expulsion or execution of
Trotsky’s allies within the Soviet
government and military.
At the time of Trotsky’s death, the sole remaining supporter of his
within the Soviet government was future
Premier Nikita Khrushchev,
who survived because he called his support of Trotsky a
“Deviation.”
Communists No More.
With
the ousting of Trotsky and his followers from the mainstream
communist community, they found a ready market for their ideas in
western audiences. The ideas of Trotsky further
developed within
the western world. As mainstream communism had rejected Trotsky’s
theories, and with anti-Communist rhetoric on the rise following
World War II, it was not safe for any kinds of communists — even
anti-Stalinist communists — in the U.S. Following a page from
numerous other efforts of the past, the Trotskyists set out
to rebrand
themselves.
During
the era of the ‘red
scare‘
if you were against Stalin, you proudly called yourself a
conservative. So, the Trotskyists did just that: They took on the
rhetoric of Joseph
McCarthy along
with the John
Birch Society, and with
the support
of the CIA,
the former Communists thrived, and so did their rebranded
ideology of neoconservatism.
The
ideology of neoconservatism lends itself well to right-wing rhetoric.
In Trotsky’s view, freedom
came with economic power. By
having a rich oligarchy able to drive the economic engine, the
thought was that it would promote freedom for the masses. And by
stripping away the bureaucracy, while taking apart the
government, the transition to full communism as Trotsky understood
it — nowrebranded as
Libertarianism —
could happen. And with the rise of the reactionary right, which
sought allies without questioning their motives, it was the perfect
marriage.
Neoconservatism Triumphant.
With
the collapse of the Soviet Union, the neoconservatives now had their
opportunity. They could point
to the collapse and proclaim that
their ideas had worked, that they had triumphed over Stalin’s
state. They could claim that it was Communists who were
proclaiming victory over Communism, which was an irony not
missed by some.
And with that claim came renewed efforts to push neoconservatism into
the halls of power.
The merging of
these differing ideas together brought about neoconservatism as we
know it today. Having abandoned the rhetoric of the worker, and
outwardly embraced the “Free
Market,”
neoconservatism is the end result of decades
of evolution from
anti-Stalin Communist thought. Is it any wonder that we find fans
of former
KGB officer Vladimir Putin within
neoconservatism’s circles?
While
Trotsky still has adherents who have not abandoned
his rhetoric,
they are on the fringes even within the Communist sphere of
influence. But while the roots are the same, the bastard fruits of
Trotsky and McCarthy has fallen far from the revolutionary tree from
whence it sprung.
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