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Home Current Affairs

The Nixon Thesis of Conflict

by Dana Blankenhorn
November 18, 2006
in Current Affairs, history, political philosophy
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Nixon_6
I have been remiss in not describing,
in detail, the political myth and values that now dominate American
politics.

I call it the Nixon Thesis of Conflict,
because most of it originated with Richard M. Nixon. Its assumptions
include the ideas that political adversaries are enemies, that
politics is a form of war, that attack is always better than defense,
and that the system is always under threat from outside.

As with most Political Theses in
American history, the Nixon Thesis is made from bits of the old
AntiThesis, combined with the character of the leader and the nature
of the crisis he rode in on. The AntiThesis in this case was
McCarthyism, the character of the leader is Nixon’s personal myth of
the Great Man, and the crisis was what we called the 1960s.

It’s the crisis that ties all this
together, and the political crisis of the 1960s was misunderstood for
a long, long time. Seeing the 60s from the point of view of the
anti-war movement is a lot like seeing the Civil War from the point
of view of the South. Culture makes it the popular view. But that’s
not how it went down.

Middle class Americans felt threatened
by the changes of the 1960s. By constantly conjuring up the threat
(whether or not it exists) leaders under the Nixon Thesis can get the
political knees to jerk, and impose their will. It’s the equivalent
of Republicans in the late 19th century “waving the
bloody shirt,” calling all Democrats potential traitors because
they either fought against the Union or urged peace with the
Confederacy.

All this mixed in the character of
Nixon himself. His early achievement was to make McCarthyism
legitimate. He used it strategically, targeting only specific
individuals who stood in the way of his own drive for power.
Eisenhower brought Nixon into national politics because he believed
he could give him the energy of McCarthy’s troops without the
craziness, the assumptions of the movement yoked to the necessities
of the Cold War.

Spiro_agnew_1
But the craziness was always there,
hidden behind a mask of affability. In was unleashed in the form of
Nixon’s Vice President, Spiro Agnew, and Agnew’s speechwriter,
William Safire. Groups to be cowed were chosen carefully –
students, the media, intellectuals. The purpose was to place these
groups on the other side of the political divide but to show
potential members of those groups a way to salvation, subordination
to the will of the Movement.

The Movement in this case was the
Goldwater Movement. Nixon himself always had an arms-length
relationship to Movement Conservatives. He had come from a different
time and was not one of “them.” But he could bring them to power
– he could “win” — and the Movement would inherit that power.

Power was Nixon’s aim, the power to
change history by manipulating ideology. He fed the Movement
rhetoric, but in many ways leaned against the previous regime, as an
AntiThesis politician will. The results were a host of liberal
initiatives – the EPA, OSHA, the CPSC, judges who seemed
conservative but accepted liberalism’s premises. Nixon left the
Movement with a generation’s worth of work to do, which I think was
his intention. .

Nixon_farewell_1
Watergate and Vietnam may be the most
misunderstood elements of the Nixon Thesis. They were personal
failures for the man, but for the Movement they were, and remain,
causes to be overcome. To adherents of the Nixon Thesis these were
merely failures of nerve. This is expressed explicitly by Vice
President Cheney, in the case of Watergate, and by President George
W. Bush himself, in the case of Vietnam. Destroy the evidence, refuse
to retreat, and any aim can be achieved.

The Nixon Thesis worked. It brought the
Movement to power. In the form of Reaganism, that movement triumphed
in its ultimate aim, which was to win the Cold War through
confrontation. But once that war was won, the assumptions of the
Thesis continued to work, always seeking new enemies, and building
those enemies into dire threats.

George W. Bush, whose Administration
represents the Excess of this Thesis, is not an idiot. He is a
believer in what he was taught, an acolyte of the Nixon Thesis and
the conservative Movement it brought to power. In this he is no
different from Lyndon Johnson, who believed in the FDR Thesis, or
Herbert Hoover, who believed the Teddy Roosevelt Thesis, or even of
James Buchanan, an adherent of the Andrew Jackson Thesis.

Bush_in_2004_1
Any political movement, born in crisis,
becomes obsolete when a new crisis emerges it is not designed to
handle. The Jackson Thesis of balancing regions could not stop the
Civil War. The Teddy Roosevelt Thesis of measured change could not
deal with the Great Depression. The FDR Thesis of unity cracked under
the strains of the 1960s. And so the Nixon Thesis has expired in Iraq
and Katrina.

The Nixon Thesis, like all these theses
of the past, collapsed because history moved on, creating new crises
it was not built to handle.

That’s where we are today, seeking a
new Thesis that can deal with the environmental, and energy crises
that threaten, not just the suburbs, not just the United States, but
the whole world.

Tags: 19682008conservative movementconservative valuesgenerational politicsGeorge W. BushNixonNixon Thesispoiltical valuespolitical mythspolitics
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 14

  1. Ken Larson says:
    18 years ago

    You make many good points in your article. I would like to supplement them with some information:
    I am a 2 tour Vietnam Veteran who recently retired after 36 years of working in the Defense Industrial Complex on many of the weapons systems being used by our forces as we speak.
    If you are interested in a view of the inside of the Pentagon procurement process from Vietnam to Iraq please check the posting at my blog entitled, “Odyssey of Armements”
    The Pentagon is a giant, incredibly complex establishment,budgeted in excess of $500B per year. The Rumsfelds, the Adminisitrations and the Congressmen come and go but the real machinery of policy and procurement keeps grinding away, presenting the politicos who arrive with detail and alternatives slanted to perpetuate itself.
    How can any newcomer, be he a President, a Congressman or even the Sec. Def. to be – Mr. Gates- understand such complexity, particulary if heretofore he has not had the clearance to get the full details?
    Answer- he can’t. Therefor he accepts the alternatives provided by the career establishment that never goes away and he hopes he makes the right choices. Or he is influenced by a lobbyist or two representing companies in his district or special interest groups.
    From a practical standpoint, policy and war decisions are made far below the levels of the talking heads who take the heat or the credit for the results.
    This situation is unfortunate but it is ablsolute fact. Take it from one who has been to war and worked in the establishment.
    This giant policy making and war machine will eventually come apart and have to be put back together to operate smaller, leaner and on less fuel. But that won’t happen unitil it hits a brick wall at high speed.
    We will then have to run a Volkswagon instead of a Caddy and get along somehow. We better start practicing now and get off our high horse. Our golden aura in the world is beginning to dull from arrogance.

    Reply
  2. Ken Larson says:
    18 years ago

    You make many good points in your article. I would like to supplement them with some information:
    I am a 2 tour Vietnam Veteran who recently retired after 36 years of working in the Defense Industrial Complex on many of the weapons systems being used by our forces as we speak.
    If you are interested in a view of the inside of the Pentagon procurement process from Vietnam to Iraq please check the posting at my blog entitled, “Odyssey of Armements”
    The Pentagon is a giant, incredibly complex establishment,budgeted in excess of $500B per year. The Rumsfelds, the Adminisitrations and the Congressmen come and go but the real machinery of policy and procurement keeps grinding away, presenting the politicos who arrive with detail and alternatives slanted to perpetuate itself.
    How can any newcomer, be he a President, a Congressman or even the Sec. Def. to be – Mr. Gates- understand such complexity, particulary if heretofore he has not had the clearance to get the full details?
    Answer- he can’t. Therefor he accepts the alternatives provided by the career establishment that never goes away and he hopes he makes the right choices. Or he is influenced by a lobbyist or two representing companies in his district or special interest groups.
    From a practical standpoint, policy and war decisions are made far below the levels of the talking heads who take the heat or the credit for the results.
    This situation is unfortunate but it is ablsolute fact. Take it from one who has been to war and worked in the establishment.
    This giant policy making and war machine will eventually come apart and have to be put back together to operate smaller, leaner and on less fuel. But that won’t happen unitil it hits a brick wall at high speed.
    We will then have to run a Volkswagon instead of a Caddy and get along somehow. We better start practicing now and get off our high horse. Our golden aura in the world is beginning to dull from arrogance.

    Reply
  3. proquest digital dissertations says:
    16 years ago

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  4. proquest digital dissertations says:
    16 years ago

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    16 years ago

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    16 years ago

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  7. Dick Davies says:
    15 years ago

    “Any political movement, born in crisis, becomes obsolete when a new crisis emerges it is not designed to handle.”
    Explains a lot, especially when you add that no one wants to be removed from power.
    I find your meme of development of successive thesi very hopeful.
    Thanks, Dana!

    Reply
  8. Dick Davies says:
    15 years ago

    “Any political movement, born in crisis, becomes obsolete when a new crisis emerges it is not designed to handle.”
    Explains a lot, especially when you add that no one wants to be removed from power.
    I find your meme of development of successive thesi very hopeful.
    Thanks, Dana!

    Reply
  9. Cheap Essay Writing says:
    13 years ago

    Missing MR.BUSH….
    🙁

    Reply
  10. Cheap Essay Writing says:
    13 years ago

    Missing MR.BUSH….
    🙁

    Reply
  11. IT Consultants says:
    12 years ago

    I agree with most of the points you make within this content.

    Reply
  12. IT Consultants says:
    12 years ago

    I agree with most of the points you make within this content.

    Reply
  13. Peter Jacson says:
    12 years ago

    I agree with most of the points you make within this content.

    Reply
  14. Peter Jacson says:
    12 years ago

    I agree with most of the points you make within this content.

    Reply

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