James Burnham | |||
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Born | November 22, 1905 Chicago, Illinois | ||
Died | July 29, 1987 Kent, Connecticut[1] | ||
Spouse | Marcia Lightner[2] |
James Burnham (November 22, 1905 - July 29, 1987) was a leading American conservative of the 1950s, and an editor of National Review magazine.
He is best known as a proponent of Rollback against Soviet Communism, which he promoted in the late 1940s. Opponents warned it would lead to nuclear war. It was adopted by Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, and Soviet Communism collapsed.
In the 1930s he was a Communist of the Trotskyite anti-Soviet variety, but was attacked by Trotsky himself and expelled by the Socialist Workers Party in 1940.
James Burnham was born in Chicago, Illinois, on November 22, 1905,[4] his parents were Claude George Burnham and Mary May (Gillis) Burnham.[5] His father was a prominent executive with the Burlington Railroad Company.[6] He went to university at Princeton and Balliol, and among his professors were J.R.R. Tolkien and Martin D’Arcy.[7]
During the early and mid 1930's, Burnham was a committed Trotskyite Communist,[8] and helped to found the American Workers Party[9] with A. J. Muste and Sidney Hook.
His beliefs in Trotskyism were short lived. By 1940's, he had openly resigned from the communist movement.[10]
After rejecting Trotskyism in 1940, Burnham continued to develop his beliefs, until in the 50's he was a conservative.[11] It was during this time period, that Burnham wrote some of his most important books, such as The Managerial Revolution. Also, in the 1940s Burnham worked for the Office of Strategic Services.[12]
In 1941, Burnham published one of his best known books, The Managerial Revolution, which created "quite a stir" in both England and the United States.[13] In The Managerial Revolution, Burnham lists four Managerial Ideologies:[14]
The book was (and still is) unusual for its focus on the underside of the Administrative State, or managerial state, as Burnham makes the case that "Under the centralized economic structure of managerial society, regulation (planning) is a matter of course".[14] Commonly, writers separate the various ideologies apart based on the nature of their master plans without examining their core use of Central planning. George Orwell's book 1984 is based in large part on Managerial Revolution and contains many of the same themes.[15]
Another of Burnham's better known books is Suicide of the West: An Essay on the Meaning and Destiny of Liberalism, to which he makes the case of "Liberalism as the Ideology of Western Suicide."[16] In Suicide of the West, Burnham wrote:
Liberals, unless they are professional politicians seeking votes in the hinterland, are not subject to strong feelings of national patriotism and are likely to feel uneasy at patriotic ceremonies. These, like the organizations in whose conduct they are still manifest, are dismissed by liberals rather scornfully as ‘flag-waving’ and ‘100 percent Americanism.’ The national anthem is not customarily sung or the flag shown, unless prescribed by law, at meetings of liberal associations. When a liberal journalist uses the phrase ‘patriotic organization,’ the adjective is equivalent in meaning to ‘stupid, reactionary and rather ludicrous.’ The rise of liberalism to predominance in the controlling sectors of American opinion is in almost exact correlation with the decline in the ceremonial celebration of the Fourth of July, traditionally regarded as the nation’s major holiday. To the liberal mind, the patriotic oratory is not only banal but subversive of rational ideals; and judged by liberalism’s humanitarian morality, the enthusiasm and pleasures that simple souls might have got from the fireworks could not compensate the occasional damage to the eye or finger of an unwary youngster. The purer liberals of the Norman Cousins strain, in the tradition of Eleanor Roosevelt, are more likely to celebrate UN day than the Fourth of July.[17]
James Burnham helped William Buckley found National Review in 1955,[18] being its first editor.
On February 23, 1983, President Reagan awarded Burnham with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.[19] Reagan gave the following short remarks: "As a scholar, writer, historian and philosopher, James Burnham has profoundly affected the way America views itself and the world. Since the 1930's, Mr. Burnham has shaped the thinking of world leaders. His observations have changed society and his writings have become guiding lights in mankind's quest for truth. Freedom, reason and decency have had few greater champions in this century than James Burnham."
Burnham passed away from cancer on July 29, 1987.[1] Upon his passing, William F. Buckley and Ronald Reagan both expressed deep sadness.[20][21][22]
Historian George H. Nash argues that Congress and the American Tradition is "one of the most penetrating works of political analysis produced by conservatives since World War II."[23]
Categories: [Conservatives] [Cold War] [Former Leftists]