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Leading Leftist Editor: "Liberalism Is Dead"

It is corrupt, it is pompous, it is shackled to tyrants and cynics. Liberalism now needs to be liberated from many of its own illusions and delusions.

Guest Author
Feb 18, 2005
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Marty Peretz and the Neoliberal Reckoning | The Nation

Not Much Left

by Martin Peretz
The New Republic
February 18, 2005

I think it was John Kenneth Galbraith, speaking in the early 1960s, the high point of post-New Deal liberalism, who pronounced conservatism dead. Conservatism, he said, was "bookless," a characteristic Galbraithian, which is to say Olympian, verdict. Without books, there are no ideas. And it is true: American conservatism was, at the time, a congeries of cranky prejudices, a closed church with an archaic doctrine proclaimed by spoiled swells. William F. Buckley Jr. comes to mind, and a few others whose names will now resonate with almost nobody. Take as just one instance Russell Kirk, an especially prominent conservative intellectual who, as Clinton Rossiter (himself a moderate conservative) wrote, has "begun to sound like a man born one hundred and fifty years too late and in the wrong country."

At this point in history, it is liberalism upon which such judgments are rendered. And understandably so. It is liberalism that is…

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