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Superstar
This past July, Tablet, a centerright online magazine that covers Jewish life but also general culture and ideas, ran an essay by journalist and author Liel Leibovitz titled “It’s the Liberalism, Stupid.” Its point was to challenge the common view that the excesses of modern American progressivism, including identity politics and speech suppression, are rooted in rejection of liberalism. The real villain, Leibovitz argues, is liberalism itself—and not just liberalism as understood in American political discourse (i.e., support for a strong domestic role for government) but in a broader sense that includes small‐government conservatism; that is, the classical liberalism ushered in by the Enlightenment. Leibovitz concedes that this idea seems preposterous to most people given “the many bounties” of the Enlightenment era, “from stable democracies to lifesaving science,” but this rosy view, he insists, ignores the vices of the liberal order.
Once consigned to marginalized extremists, this root‐and‐branch rejection of Enlightenment liberalism is gaining ground on both sides of the political spectrum. It’s a worrying trend for anybody who cares about freedom, and it’s rooted in bad history and even worse reasoning.
In Leibovitz’s narrative, the Enlightenment replaced the once‐prevailing view that humans are capable of both great good and great evil and therefore need moral instruction and tradition to keep them in line with the notion that humans are born good and that evil comes only from oppressive and corrupt institutions; instead of tradition and faith, society should be held together through the social contract. We did all right as long as liberalism was held in check by still‐potent forces of tradition— mainly family and religion—but those forces began to lose ground in the modern era, allowing radical individualism to triumph. The result: plummeting birth rates, broken homes, and “detached and uprooted people” who turned lonely, quarrelsome, and paranoid. “Call it woke culture if you’d like, but it’s nothing more than the Enlightenment’s apotheosis,” Leibovitz concludes.
Leibovitz’s snark‐laden critique of Enlightenment liberalism is so shoddy that one may question whether it warrants a response. (Among other things, Leibovitz dubiously ascribes to Benjamin Franklin a belief in the innate goodness of the noble savage and conflates the Hobbesian concept of a social contract in which people irrevocably “sign away a host of [their] innate rights” to the state with the Lockean principle—espoused in the Declaration of Independence—that legitimate government requires ongoing consent of the governed.) And yet this essay, which appeared in a mainstream intellectual magazine, is part of a larger trend of explicitly anti‐liberal, anti‐Enlightenment rhetoric in conservative quarters.
This conservative attack is matched by an increasingly visible strand of progressive discourse that is stridently hostile to the Enlightenment and the liberal tradition. This discourse ranges from serious critiques to muddled polemics. Thus, when Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted in the shooting of three people during the 2020 riots in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on the grounds of self‐defense, a piece by journalist Barrett Holmes Pitner on the leading left‐of‐center website, The Daily Beast, used the occasion to attack the Enlightenment philosophy of John Locke and its role in the American Founding. Locke’s formula of life, liberty, and property as fundamental rights, wrote Pitner, not only excuses the use of deadly force to protect property but also originally served to validate slavery as a form of property ownership. In the process, Pitner erroneously argues that Locke attempted to justify the institution of slavery in his seminal work, Second Treatise of Government.
In an age of widespread concern that liberal democracy is increasingly embattled around the world, the twin attacks on Enlightenment liberalism from the right and the left—and not just from the fringes—represent a worrying trend.
PINING FOR THE ANCIEN RÉGIME
While anti‐liberal discourse on the right is not new, it gained a new prominence with the success of the 2018 book Why Liberalism Failed by University of Notre Dame political scientist Patrick Deneen. Deneen’s indictment of liberalism is far more sophisticated and civil than Leibovitz’s diatribe, but it makes essentially the same argument: that Enlightenment liberalism, with its emphasis on personal autonomy, leads to the dissolution of communal and familial bonds, atomization, moral nihilism, political alienation, and the hollowing out of culture and education. “Liberalism has failed—not because it fell short, but because it was true to itself. It has failed because it has succeeded,” Deneen wrote in the book’s introduction. Provocatively, he was upfront about the fact that he was blaming the Founding Fathers for liberalism’s pernicious effects in the United States.
The following year, the religious conservative magazine First Things published several broadsides against Enlightenment liberalism and old‐style American conservatism overly attached to liberty, individual autonomy, tolerance, and pluralism. Perhaps most notable among them was the essay “Conservative Democracy” by U.S.-born Israeli political scientist Yoram Hazony, author of the controversial 2018 book The Virtue of Nationalism and the intellectual leader of the national conservatism movement. Like Deneen, Hazony proclaims the failure of liberalism. But where Deneen offers only vague and localized alternatives, Hazony proposes an alternative version of democratic government that explicitly repudiates the liberal Enlightenment tradition based on reason, “the free and equal individual,” and “obligations arising from choice.” Instead, the core values of conservative democracy include state‐sponsored majority religion and immigration restrictionism, while individual freedoms are embraced only if they are rooted in national tradition and customs. Interestingly, Hazony wants to reclaim the American Founding for conservatism, mostly by enlisting some of the Founders into conservative ranks. He does this by reducing the Lockean roots of the American Revolution to some mere “Enlightenment‐rationalist phrases in the Declaration of Independence.”
Once consigned to marginalized extremists, this root‐and‐branch rejection of Enlightenment liberalism is gaining ground on both sides of the political spectrum. It’s a worrying trend for anybody who cares about freedom, and it’s rooted in bad history and even worse reasoning.
In Leibovitz’s narrative, the Enlightenment replaced the once‐prevailing view that humans are capable of both great good and great evil and therefore need moral instruction and tradition to keep them in line with the notion that humans are born good and that evil comes only from oppressive and corrupt institutions; instead of tradition and faith, society should be held together through the social contract. We did all right as long as liberalism was held in check by still‐potent forces of tradition— mainly family and religion—but those forces began to lose ground in the modern era, allowing radical individualism to triumph. The result: plummeting birth rates, broken homes, and “detached and uprooted people” who turned lonely, quarrelsome, and paranoid. “Call it woke culture if you’d like, but it’s nothing more than the Enlightenment’s apotheosis,” Leibovitz concludes.
Leibovitz’s snark‐laden critique of Enlightenment liberalism is so shoddy that one may question whether it warrants a response. (Among other things, Leibovitz dubiously ascribes to Benjamin Franklin a belief in the innate goodness of the noble savage and conflates the Hobbesian concept of a social contract in which people irrevocably “sign away a host of [their] innate rights” to the state with the Lockean principle—espoused in the Declaration of Independence—that legitimate government requires ongoing consent of the governed.) And yet this essay, which appeared in a mainstream intellectual magazine, is part of a larger trend of explicitly anti‐liberal, anti‐Enlightenment rhetoric in conservative quarters.
This conservative attack is matched by an increasingly visible strand of progressive discourse that is stridently hostile to the Enlightenment and the liberal tradition. This discourse ranges from serious critiques to muddled polemics. Thus, when Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted in the shooting of three people during the 2020 riots in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on the grounds of self‐defense, a piece by journalist Barrett Holmes Pitner on the leading left‐of‐center website, The Daily Beast, used the occasion to attack the Enlightenment philosophy of John Locke and its role in the American Founding. Locke’s formula of life, liberty, and property as fundamental rights, wrote Pitner, not only excuses the use of deadly force to protect property but also originally served to validate slavery as a form of property ownership. In the process, Pitner erroneously argues that Locke attempted to justify the institution of slavery in his seminal work, Second Treatise of Government.
In an age of widespread concern that liberal democracy is increasingly embattled around the world, the twin attacks on Enlightenment liberalism from the right and the left—and not just from the fringes—represent a worrying trend.
PINING FOR THE ANCIEN RÉGIME
While anti‐liberal discourse on the right is not new, it gained a new prominence with the success of the 2018 book Why Liberalism Failed by University of Notre Dame political scientist Patrick Deneen. Deneen’s indictment of liberalism is far more sophisticated and civil than Leibovitz’s diatribe, but it makes essentially the same argument: that Enlightenment liberalism, with its emphasis on personal autonomy, leads to the dissolution of communal and familial bonds, atomization, moral nihilism, political alienation, and the hollowing out of culture and education. “Liberalism has failed—not because it fell short, but because it was true to itself. It has failed because it has succeeded,” Deneen wrote in the book’s introduction. Provocatively, he was upfront about the fact that he was blaming the Founding Fathers for liberalism’s pernicious effects in the United States.
The following year, the religious conservative magazine First Things published several broadsides against Enlightenment liberalism and old‐style American conservatism overly attached to liberty, individual autonomy, tolerance, and pluralism. Perhaps most notable among them was the essay “Conservative Democracy” by U.S.-born Israeli political scientist Yoram Hazony, author of the controversial 2018 book The Virtue of Nationalism and the intellectual leader of the national conservatism movement. Like Deneen, Hazony proclaims the failure of liberalism. But where Deneen offers only vague and localized alternatives, Hazony proposes an alternative version of democratic government that explicitly repudiates the liberal Enlightenment tradition based on reason, “the free and equal individual,” and “obligations arising from choice.” Instead, the core values of conservative democracy include state‐sponsored majority religion and immigration restrictionism, while individual freedoms are embraced only if they are rooted in national tradition and customs. Interestingly, Hazony wants to reclaim the American Founding for conservatism, mostly by enlisting some of the Founders into conservative ranks. He does this by reducing the Lockean roots of the American Revolution to some mere “Enlightenment‐rationalist phrases in the Declaration of Independence.”