I have actually heard of John Gray before, but that was a really interesting article, crackerjack. Thanks for that.
Good bits:
Antiutopianism is the deep consistency in all his thought. It led him to support Thatcher in her efforts to save the British economy from the near-anarchy of the late 1970s, but mostly in her resistance to communism, that supremely lethal utopian project. Yet he also observed the agonies of liberalism in her deluded attempt to impose free-market reforms and intense social conservatism, nostalgic for the bourgeois discipline of the 1950s. “It was an impossible task. She produced a society that was almost the opposite of the one she intended. The free market dissolved the very values she espoused. I think our society is better for having escaped the tightness and oppression of the 1950s. But it left conservatism incoherent. It has still not recovered.”
This is very true. Although Conservatives might be the strongest allies of libertarians/liberals in the battle for free markets, they will probably not be very pleased with the different and radical directions that the free market takes society in. Capitalism is inherently unconservative and destructive of tradition (as gek-opel notes), hence much of the opposition to and anxiety surrounding globalisation (and inspiring what Brink Lindsey calls the "collectivist counter-revolution" - still being fought by the Islamists - against industrialisation).
That 20th-century amnesia, Gray says, led to new, faith-based utopian cults, but this time the primary one, neoconservatism, was of the right rather than the left. He shows, in Black Mass, how many of the neocon prophets were originally Trotskyists, a clear sign of the utopian linkage between Marxism and the neocons. And, most hilariously – though the comedy is very black indeed – he demonstrates the quite fantastic depths of neocon irrationality.
This is true to an extent. The link between Trots and neocons has been obsered before (e.g. Hitchens has noted it approvingly), and the name "neocon" (and its description: "a democrat mugged by reality") suggest as much:
new conservatives, having previously been liberals. The neocon right is indeed more idealistic than the liberal left and the old paleocon, isolationist, "old school" nationalist right. It wants to change and is prepared to act to support that change.
However, are the necons really this century's Communists? I don't think so. Although stuff like "The Power of Nightmares" tries to portray the neocon movement as the equivalent of al Qaeda, it should be noted that they are not fighting to radically revalue society, not aiming to place all social relations under the power of their ideology and not aiming to enslave people, but to enable democracy and properity in a region sufering from a dire deficit of both. They are not a totalitarian movement and they are not waging war against liberal society.
Perhaps Gray’s most controversial point is that the roots of modern terror lie in the western Enlightenment. Before the 18th century, he argues, wars and terrorist campaigns were not conducted as if they were mechanisms of general improvement. It was the French revolution that introduced the idea of terror as a tool of progress, and we have been living with – and dying from – that legacy ever since. Al-Qaeda, he argues, is a very modern organisation, precisely because it has learnt the lessons of the West.
I agree with this as well.