… the words ‘never again’ are little more than a hollow slogan
deplores
Ed Kozak.
For if we refuse to accept, and more importantly challenge, the
ideological origins of a movement that culminated in the systematic
murder of millions of innocent human beings, there is absolutely no way
we can prevent the same from happening again.
The easiest way of proving that the origins of Nazism are in no way
remotely conservative is to start by looking at some defining features
of conservatism itself, specifically the European variety.
These include: the belief that a society rooted in monarchy and
aristocracy is preferable to mass democracy; that there is a
transcendental moral order (what Kirk called the Permanent Things) which
in Western Civilization has been preserved and passed down through the
Christian Church; that property rights are the very foundation of
ordered liberty; and, of course, the universal conservative belief that
any necessary societal change must occur slowly and without structural
damage to ancient and proven institutions – that problems in society
come not from broken traditions and institutions but from broken men and
morals.
It should go without saying that Nazism had no love of monarchy or
aristocracy. Hitler didn’t reinstate the House of Hohenzollern; he made
himself dictator. The notion that the son of a minor civil servant
(Alois Hitler himself born a bastard and of peasant stock) had a right
to rule over Germany can hardly be called traditionally conservative.
Moreover, his great dislike of the aristocratic military establishment
is well known; the lack of a ‘von’ in front of his surname was a
permanent chip on Hitler’s shoulder. Granted, Himmler liked to play
feudal lord with the SS, but his was a ‘feudalism’ based on a
half-cocked interpretation of a quasi-mythical pagan past.
This brings us nicely to defining conservative feature number two:
Christianity. Himmler’s obsession with paganism is very well-documented.
Hitler may have viewed the SS as his personal bodyguard, but Himmler
viewed them as a pagan Knights Templar, destined to recreate a utopic,
pre-Christian Teutonic society.
Furthermore, the ‘official’ religion of Nazism was positive
Christianity, a doctrine that can hardly be called positive or
Christian. This ‘Christian’ ideology rejected the Jewish bible in its
entirety, rejected Jesus’ Jewish origins, and wished to wipe Catholicism
off the face of the earth (stalwart defender of tradition it is) and
create a united Nazi protestant church.
Nor can it be said that the Nazis had any respect for traditional
property rights. They nationalized industries, advocated progressive
taxation schemes, and were virulently anti-capitalist. Now, that’s not
to say that conservatism must necessarily be in favour of pure,
unrestricted laissez-faire capitalism (see Kirk, Chesterton, etc.), but
whereas the traditionalist objection to capitalism is at its heart an
objection to the disastrous spiritual and moral effects of
industrialisation, the Nazis’ objection to capitalism was rooted firmly
in post-industrialist, Marxist interpretations of economics.
The conservative argues that socialism isn’t a cure for the disease of
industrial society, but a symptom of the same sickness. As we all know,
Nazi property violations weren’t limited solely to estate, they also
infringed upon life and liberty with spectacular zeal, especially the
life and liberty of those they deemed sub-human.
‘Aha’, says the skeptical reader, ‘this is where I have him! This crazy
conservative doesn’t know what he’s talking about. He just wrote it
himself, the Nazis were a bunch of racists, surely that means they were
right wing!’ Now, unlike you, my dear liberal reader, I understand that
man is fallen, so I’ll forgive you your ignorance on the matter. First,
let’s briefly get this ‘right wing’ thing out of the way, shall we?
Yes, fascists and Nazis were almost from the start called ‘right wing’,
but this was a slander employed by other socialists, meant to discredit
these socialists of a distinctly nationalist bent in the eyes of fellow
radical travelers. If they were ‘right wing’ at all they were the
‘right wing’ of the left.
As Jonah Goldberg explains in his brilliant (and apparently woefully under-read) Liberal Fascism, this
is why street fighting between fascists and communists was so vicious
in Germany; these people were fighting for the same hearts and minds,
the same segment of middle class voters susceptible to revolutionary
nonsense. The godfather of fascism himself, Mussolini, was a member of [the Internationale], and the term ‘national socialist’ was in use in
leftist circles well before the Nazi party was created.
Now, let me be as clear as possible on this subject: ethnic
nationalism, let alone racism, is in no way conservative. The scientific
racism of the Nazis, so popular across Europe from the beginning of the
twentieth century until the devastating and inevitable result of its
assertions, would never have developed if not for nationalist movements.
Nationalism as we know it was one of the earliest leftist ideologies,
and remains fundamentally left wing, going hand in hand with identity
politics. It was forged, as almost all ideological poisons that plague
us today, in the fires of the French Revolution, and developed as a
means of undermining the old European order, specifically the grand and,
more importantly, multi-ethnic empires of Austria-Hungary, Germany,
Russia, and, to an extent, Britain.
The idea that countries should be based on single ethnic groups – the
promotion of nation states – is an ideologically radical position. To a
conservative, culture, not race, is what matters. The cry of the
National Socialist is blood and soil, race and nation. The cry of the
conservative is king and country.
Thus do the intellectually honest arrive at the inescapable conclusion:
Nazism is not conservative. And if it is not conservative, it cannot be
truly called right wing. It is a product of the French Revolution, just
another bastard child of Rousseau’s love affair with himself, simply
one more in a long line of deformed, monstrous political creatures to
slither its way out of the primordial Jacobin soup.
The fact that Central and Eastern Europe (really all of Europe for that
matter) have a long and at times vicious history with anti-Semitism is
well known, and frequently referenced when discussing collusion with
Nazis in occupied countries.
What is noted with far less frequency, and is far more important,
however, is that fact that not until the dissolution of the Christian
monarchies and the introduction of mass democracy was there an
organised, systematic attempt to wipe out European Jewry (if you think
the Holocaust is in any way comparable to the Inquisition in premise or
scope, you comprehend neither). In fact, between the time the
Christianization of Europe was completed and the French Revolution,
there were really no organised, systematic attempts to wipe out anyone
in Europe.
This is the obvious truth we ignore when we censure and censor people
who would accurately link Nazism with leftism. Political theorist Erik
von Kuehnelt-Leddihn articulated this truth brilliantly:
The fatal year is 1789, and the symbol of iniquity is the Jacobin
Cap. Its heresy is the denial of personality and of personal liberty.
Its concrete realizations are Jacobin mass democracy, all forms of
national collectivism and statism, Marxism producing socialism and
communism, fascism, and national socialism, leftism in all its modern
guises and manifestations to which in America the good term
'liberalism,' perversely enough, is being applied. The issue is between
man created in the image of God and the termite in a human guise.
Only a German people ripped from tradition, a German people starved of
Judeo-Christian morality, drugged with the false promise of a better
future, and subjected to the authority of those who have no right to it,
could stand by and watch, at times cheer even, as millions of human
beings – precious, living, breathing human beings – were systematically
herded up like cattle and sent to be exterminated like termites.
Make no mistake. There is little difference, if any, in principle
between fascism, communism, and progressivism – between Soviets, Nazis,
and today’s UK Labour Party or US Democratic Party. The difference lies
only in the degree to which those ideological principles are followed
through.
All promise a utopian future, to be attained by sacrificing tradition
at the altar of progress. All deny class distinctions as well as the old
order, politically rooted in Feudalism, morally rooted in Christianity.
They deny individual liberty, responsibility, and property rights. And
most importantly, perhaps not to be counted among the ideological
tenants listed above, but as a result of them, they inevitably end up
denying the sanctity and value of human life.
In Nazi-occupied Poland, an elderly Jewish rabbi becomes nothing more
than a germ, merely to be cleansed. In Soviet-occupied Lithuania, a
respectable businessman becomes an enemy of the people, merely to become
part of a statistic.
Students across the globe rhetorically ask how people could participate
in something as evil as the Holocaust. The answer is simple: It is the
easiest thing in the world to commit evil when one doesn’t believe it to
be such, when one exists in a society governed by moral relativism. The
choice is indeed between man created in the image of God and the
termite in a human guise. Those who would obfuscate the ideological and
philosophical origins of Nazism have made their choice known.
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