Defining
the Left
By David Horowitz
FrontPageMagazine.com
| March 2, 2005
If
you visit the Individuals search page in DiscoverTheNetwork, you will see that
we have separated the individuals into five columns, which we identify as
“totalitarian radicals,” “anti-American radicals,” “leftists,” “moderate
leftists” and “affective leftists.” (The latter includes mostly entertainment figures
whose politics are emotionally rather than intellectually based in a way I will
get to below.) We have arranged the grid this way, even though we think it
feeds certain illusions, to accommodate those who expressed anguish over
the grid in its original format where there were no such distinctions made.
This anguish has focused on the
fact that the original grid contained radicals who held a spectrum of views
from the totalitarian left to the democratic left, and that it included Islamic
radicals along with
Sami
al-Arian ran Palestinian
Islamic Jihad (whose most recent feat was the assassination of the former
premier of
On the other hand, there was an
element in the criticisms that could not be so easily dismissed. Moderate
leftists – Barack
Obama was singled out – who were also included in the grid are obviously
patriotic Americans with no relation to Islamic radicals. It did seem unfair to
include him for this reason. On the other hand, we were trying to make a point
that politicians who are usually referred to as “liberal”
or “populist” are left. They are redistributionists and statists, and their
networks of support extend into the heart of the so-called “progressive”
movement.
The answer to these dilemmas came
to me in a conversation with John Gorenfeld, a writer assigned to cover
DiscoverTheNetwork by his editors at Salon.com. Salon, despite its
lamentable defense of Sami al-Arian and similar lapses, is part of what we
describe in the new grid as the “left” sans the adjectives “totalitarian” and
“anti-American.” Not quite moderate, but not quite radical either. The editors
of Salon, in other words, according to our taxonomy, are leftists who
are patriotic and democratic in intent.
I used to write a column for Salon for two years (and would do so again
if invited). I assure you such a relationship would not be possible with hard
left venues like CounterPunch.org,
alternet.org, The Progressive, or The Nation.
In the convention political
lexicon of today, the term “moderate leftist” is equivalent to “liberal.” We
have not used this designation because part of the agenda of DiscoverTheNetwork
is to challenge the use of the word “liberal” in this way, a way that obscures
the network of the left. Redistributionism, support for racial preferences, and
a complacent acceptance of the existing political monolith on academic
faculties are not attitudes that can reasonably be called liberal. They are the
product of a successful campaign by leftists to conduct “a long march through the
institutions” – to assume the political coloration of liberalism in order to
escape accountability for the leftist past and in order to more easily advance
their radical agendas in the American mainstream.
The leftist lurch of the Democratic
Party, which has set up alarm bells in circles that actually are
liberal (e.g., The New Republic) is a by-product of this campaign.
Another ambition of the DiscoverTheNetwork website is to unmask the radical
agendas of faux liberal organizations and individuals like the misnamed Center for
Constitutional Rights. This
organization was founded by totalitarian radicals, and has since merged with
the National
Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, communist fellow-traveler whose
politics are aligned with Castro’s
The term “affective leftist”
requires some explanation, and I am grateful to my comrade-in-arms Peter
Collier for the description that follows. “These are people who are often in
positions of influence, the media in particular, who are bien pensant in
the extreme. In spite of their social status, they see themselves ‘in
opposition’ – a legacy from the 60s when the notion of ‘The System’ as a malign
code word for
Those who are now still
unconvinced about the principle of inclusion that governs this database are
invited to read my book, Unholy
Alliance: Radical Islam and the American Left, which was written
alongside the construction of this database, whose political taxonomy reflects
its perspective. Unholy Alliance describes the “mind of the left” in its
evolution from Stalinism to the present day. It sets this analysis within the
frame of 9/11 and the war in
The purpose of DiscoverTheNetwork
is informational – not polemical, it seeks to illuminate and describe the
political left, and to clarify the terms of the political debate. For example,
it is impossible to understand the recent leftward turn of the Democratic Party
if entire left from Noam
Chomsky to Jimmy
Carter is subsumed by the term “liberal,” which is the way the culture’s
arbiters – e.g., the New
York Times and the network news bureaus – currently frame this subject.
If Noam Chomsky and Angela
Davis are referred to as liberals – as they are in these media outlets –
how does one understand the politics of Joe Lieberman or John
Kerry or Howard
Dean? This conflation of liberal and radical agendas, of leftwing politics
and liberal dispositions, is a tall order of obfuscation that makes clarity on
crucial political issues and developments impossible. There is a battle raging
in the Democratic Party between a moderate left and a radical left, between an
authentic centrism and impostor “progressivism,” which cannot be detected, let
alone understood, when viewed through a lens as undefined and differentiated as
“liberalism” in its current perception. Joseph Lieberman is a liberal; MoveOn.org
is not.
Having revised our database to
reflect the variegated spectrum of the left, we welcome further comments and
observations. On the other hand, there is an aspect of this revision that may
lead to results that are not entirely positive and that may even support
familiar delusions of the left, which function as fail-safe mechanisms for its
complacency in the fact its regrettable record of the last fifty years.
The progressive left supported
freedom’s Communist enemies in the Cold War, and did so for more than forty
years. Many progressives did so “critically,” deploring the lack of freedoms in
the Soviet bloc countries, while explaining this lack of freedom as the result
of
We have some concern that the
attitudes reflected in this false innocence are encouraged by descriptions that
distinguish factions of the left as in our new grid. We have created the
categories of leftists who are neither anti-American radicals nor totalitarians
as though this might absolve those who are not from their responsibilities for
the consequences of their actions when they work in coalitions with radicals
who are anti-American and totalitarian, and when they fail to reject them.
The left in other words is not
only a movement and perspective formed by its ideals and political hopes, but
also by its oppositions. Anti-war leftists of the Sixties may have described
themselves as “anarchists” and democratic socialists, but the effect of their
anti-war activities was to establish brutal police states in
One of the conclusions reached in Unholy
Alliance is that contemporary leftism is, in fact, largely a nihilism.
Since the collapse of socialism – and really since the collapse of the
international Communist monolith after the Khrushchev Report – the left hasn’t
had a coherent unifying agenda. It has been split into many protesting factions
with no common remedies for the ills they see, a left balkanized by “identity
politics.” This is a consequence of the decline of Marxist class politics,
which subsumed all radical agendas in regard to race, gender and ethnicity,
into universal formula of socialist revolution. The elimination of private
property and the rule of the working class would create a universal brotherhood
of man that would resolve also serious social conflicts. Few leftists, even,
believe this destructive illusion anymore.
What is left is nihilism –
anti-globalization, anti-racism, anti-sexism, anti-homophobia form the legions
of the left in our time. As a result, as a recent
article on the devolution of the left by an academic Marxist concludes, the
“twin pillars” of leftwing unity now are its hostility to
The importance of the negative in
understanding the construction of the left can be seen most clearly in regard
to the war
in Iraq. Most leftists who are not of a totalitarian persuasion deplored
the Saddam
regime. Nonetheless they acted to save it. But the bottom-line in politics is
not what your good intentions are, but what are the consequences of your
actions. Opposition to the war, if it persists through the war, and despite the
fact that it is a liberating war, links leftwing critics of Saddam with Islamic
radicals who supported him. As Osama
bin Laden himself put it in a fatwa on al-Jazeera
TV just before American and British troops entered Iraq: “The interests of
Muslims and the interests of the socialists coincide in the war against the
crusaders.”
In sum, the current revision to
the Individuals grid on DiscoverTheNetwork stresses the intentions of leftists,
which, as this example shows, can be misleading. In the war for democracy in
the Middle East so far, the left – and this means the entire left,
totalitarian, anti-American, sans adjective and “moderate,” – has either been
AWOL or pulling for the wrong side. Against the liberation of Iraq, and
therefore against the establishment of democracies in the Middle East. There
are some exceptions. Christopher
Hitchens and Richard Gephardt both qualify as moderate
leftists who supported the war against Saddam and thus the war to make the
Iraqi elections possible. There were many others. But the majority of leftists
– the majority of the Democratic Party – were on the wrong side of this battle.
In politics, it is the side you’re on that matters. That is why even though we
have provided a grid that shows these important distinctions, we have not
considered it necessary to remove from the database any of the individuals we
originally included.