In my latest reading of Pat Buchanan's The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to the Gods of the Global Economy,
 Buchanan agrees with the insights of people who are considered to be 
villains by a number of conservatives, even as he criticizes the 
thoughts of one whom several conservatives regard as a hero.
Let's
 start with the villains.  Karl Marx said that protectionism is 
conservative, whereas free trade erodes nations and exasperates tensions
 between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.  Because free trade 
accelerates revolution, in Marx's eyes, Karl Marx says that he supports 
it!
Buchanan, although he disagrees with free trade, says that 
"Karl Marx is right", for protectionism is conservative, whereas "free 
trade is raising the levels of antagonism in Europe and the United 
States----between working families and falling standards of living and 
national elites reveling in the Global Economy" (page 198).
Another
 villain in the eyes of the Right is the British economist John Maynard 
Keynes, who advocated government spending as a way to stimulate the 
economy.  According to Buchanan, Keynes started out as a "free-trade 
purist", but he became more of a protectionist during the Great 
Depression.  Buchanan speculates that "the hard reality of dying 
factories and foreign danger" contributed to Keynes' change of mind 
(page 205).  Buchanan actually admires Keynes for standing up 
for protectionism because he did so when free-trade was practically 
considered to be an item of economic orthodoxy: "It takes 
fortitude for a renowned man to concede that he has been wrong, that his
 critics were right, and then to adopt a 
position----protectionism----his contemporaries would decry as retarded 
if not immoral" (page 204).
Meanwhile, Ludwig von Mises is 
heralded as a hero by many on the Right, especially those who lean 
towards libertarianism.  Buchanan quotes von Mises as saying that free 
trade is good because it leads to people living and working wherever 
they desire as well as eliminates frontier boundaries, thereby getting 
rid of any need for one country to attack another country.  That means 
that, as a result of free trade, there would be neither war nor a need 
for a military, plus the state would not be a "metaphysical entity" (von
 Mises' words) but simply would protect the peace.  Buchanan 
scoffs at von Mises' utopianism and appeals to G.K. Chesterton: "When 
men cease to believe in God, said G.K. Chesterton, they do not then 
believe in nothing; they believe in anything" (page 201).
I
 have to admire Buchanan (a conservative) for being willing to see some 
good in the thoughts of those who are considered to be villains by a 
number of conservatives.  I used to read right-wing literature 
that loved to criticize people for being communists or communist 
sympathizers, and saying something positive about Karl Marx could land a
 person on a right-wing blacklist.  But acknowledging that Karl Marx had
 some valid observations and insights about what went on in the world 
does not mean that a person supports communism, especially as it was 
instituted in communist dictatorships.
What Buchanan said
 about Chesterton stood out to me because it reminded me of the dilemma 
that was presented before those of us who were in Armstrongism: You 
either trust in Christ to come to earth and establish a perfect 
political system, or you trust in human beings to set up their own 
utopias, which will fail because human beings are sinful and corrupt.  
But, according to Armstrongism, you cannot do both.  Whether Chesterton 
had that mindset or not, I'm not sure.  This article says that he was a Distributist,
 and Distributism is a political ideology that is critical of both big 
government and also big business.  A friend of mine, who is a 
Distributist, said that Distributism is not exactly a political program 
that is executed from the top down, but it's something done from the 
bottom up----if more people buy their own property, for example, then 
there will be less property for big business to get its hands on.  I 
have much to learn about Distributism.  I will say, though, that 
Chesterton----even if he may have disagreed with political 
utopianism----did not seem to advocate throwing up our hands and waiting
 for Jesus to come back, but he thought that there are things that we 
can do to make the world a little better.
 
 
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