Paul Edward Gottfried, born November 21, 1941, has spent six decades writing the history of American conservatism from inside and against it. He taught humanities at Elizabethtown College for twenty-five years, edits Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture, and has produced fourteen books tracing the transformation of the American right from its postwar fusion to its present fracture. He coined paleoconservative with Thomas Fleming in 1986 to name what the neoconservative ascendancy had pushed aside. He coined alternative right with Richard Spencer in 2008 and spent the following decade explaining why he did not want what Spencer made of the term. Few thinkers have watched their vocabulary travel further while their name traveled less.
Gottfried’s father Andrew fled Budapest in 1934 after the July Putsch made the trajectory of Central Europe legible to anyone with eyes. A Hungarian Jewish furrier with a sharp temper and what his son later called fiery courage, Andrew settled in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and rebuilt his business inside the expatriate Hungarian Jewish community there. He voted Republican, admired Franklin Roosevelt for beating Hitler, and refused to draw universal moral lessons from Nazism about American racial or immigration questions. The son inherited the father’s suspicion of moral translations across unlike historical settings, and a lifelong refusal to treat the Holocaust as a template applicable to every political dispute.
Gottfried entered Yeshiva University in New York as an undergraduate. He disliked what he described in his memoir as the clannishness of his outer-borough Orthodox classmates, a prejudice common among Central European Jews toward descendants of the Russian and Polish migrations. The prejudice matters because it shaped his later quarrel with the neoconservatives, most of whom came from exactly those Eastern European Jewish backgrounds. When David Frum dismissed him years later as a solipsistic paleo consumed with professional grievances, part of the wound came from the identity of the man doing the dismissing.
Yale followed. Gottfried took his master’s in 1965 and his doctorate in 1967 under Herbert Marcuse, the Frankfurt School theorist whose analysis of repressive tolerance and administered society shaped the New Left. Gottfried called himself a rapt disciple in method while disagreeing on political conclusions. What he absorbed from Marcuse was the habit of reading dominant moral vocabularies as control systems and looking for the gap between professed ideals and actual coercion. He turned those instruments on the class that had forged them. He read Hegel alongside Marcuse, then Carl Schmitt, then James Burnham. By the end of graduate school he had the equipment he used for the rest of his career.
His dissertation, revised into his first book, treated Catholic Romanticism in Munich in the 1820s and 1830s. Conservative Millenarians: The Romantic Experience in Bavaria by Paul Gottfried. Published in 1979, this study of how German Catholic intellectuals thought about history and providence established the historicist cast of all his later work. Values, for Gottfried, emerge from concrete peoples living through concrete circumstances. Detach them from that soil and you produce abstractions that serve whoever controls the abstraction machine.
Gottfried taught at Case Western Reserve from 1968 to 1971, then New York University from 1971 to 1972, then Rockford College, where he chaired the history department from 1974 to 1986. He moved to Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania in the late 1980s, held the Horace Raffensperger Professorship of Humanities, and taught there until retirement. He won a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1983. He reads ten languages and speaks four proficiently, which gave him access to German, French, and Italian intellectual sources most American academics did not use.
He served as senior editor at The World & I, edited Continuity for the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, and wrote prolifically for journals across the political spectrum. He advised Pat Buchanan during the 1992 and 1996 presidential campaigns. He maintained friendships with Murray Rothbard, Eugene Genovese, Christopher Lasch, and Robert Nisbet, and kept up a correspondence with Richard Nixon after the resignation. He was never cloistered. He was an academic who also did movement work, and the movement work cost him some of the academic standing he might otherwise have kept.
Reagan won in 1980. His traditionalist supporters expected spoils. They proposed Mel Bradford, a Southern literary scholar and student of Richard Weaver, for chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Bradford had written critically of Abraham Lincoln, which any serious Southern conservative of his generation had done. Neoconservatives mobilized against the nomination, framed Bradford’s Lincoln revisionism as disqualifying, and pushed William Bennett as the alternative. Bennett got the chair. Bradford got excluded.
Gottfried read the episode as clarifying. The neoconservatives were not defending American heritage against Southern heresy. They were defending a progressive civil religion built around Lincoln as secular saint. They used moral signaling to purge a dissenter on their flank, and they would repeat the tactic across decades. In 1986, Gottfried and Thomas Fleming coined paleoconservative to name what had been excluded.
The Conservative Movement by Paul Gottfried and Thomas Fleming (1988) argued that paleoconservatism stood for limited government, cultural particularism, non-interventionism, regional and religious identity, and skepticism of mass democracy’s therapeutic pretensions. It was not libertarianism. It was not fusionism. It was a rear-guard defense of the Old Right against a managerial-friendly new elite that had captured the movement’s funding, institutions, and foreign policy apparatus.
Most American conservatives argue from natural right, propositional nationhood, or universal principles discoverable by reason. Leo Strauss taught them the vocabulary. Gottfried rejected the whole enterprise. Drawing on Hegel and the German historical school, he held that moral and political truths cannot be detached from the specific peoples and moments that produce them.
Leo Strauss and the Conservative Movement in America by Paul Gottfried. This 2012 book argues that Straussian universalism mirrors the left’s universalism, and that by defining America as a proposition rather than a historical community, neoconservatives cleared the ground for the managerial state’s globalist projects. Strauss and his followers thought they were defending the West. Gottfried argued they had rewritten the West into an idea any willing convert might enter, which meant the original West could no longer defend itself as a particular inheritance.
The quarrel matters because it explains every paleoconservative position on immigration, foreign policy, and multiculturalism. If national identity is a creedal claim, open borders and democratic crusades follow naturally. If national identity is a specific inheritance, both become attacks on the nation. Gottfried reached the second conclusion in the 1970s and held it for fifty years.
Schmitt and the Political
The three books that established his reputation came between 1999 and 2005.
After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State by Paul Gottfried. This 1999 book draws on James Burnham to argue that liberal democracy is a historical category that expired sometime in the mid-twentieth century. What replaced it looks superficially similar, with elections and parliaments and courts, but the real action happens inside a bureaucratic apparatus that rules through social engineering, credentialed expertise, and the production of therapeutic norms. Elections continue inside a narrowing band of permissible outcomes. Coercion operates through sensitivity trainings, hate-speech codes, licensing requirements, and the pathologizing of dissent.
Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: Toward a Secular Theocracy by Paul Gottfried. This 2002 book extends the analysis. Western societies have built a ritual structure of atonement around historical crimes, organizing the memory of slavery, colonialism, and the Holocaust into permanent obligations that fall asymmetrically on designated majorities. The structure requires ongoing confession, sensitivity training, and redistribution of moral standing. Disagreement registers as pathology rather than argument. Gottfried calls the result a secular theocracy because the system operates with the structure of a confessional religion while claiming the neutrality of a liberal state.
The Strange Death of Marxism: The European Left in the New Millennium by Paul Gottfried. This 2005 book argues that classical Marxism collapsed in Europe but the left did not. It migrated from economic class to cultural identity because cultural management suits the managerial state better than central economic planning ever did. A state that manages the economy is clumsy. A state that manages language, psychology, and social recognition reaches into every private interaction. The new left kept the moralized structure of the old left while dropping the material program that made the old left coherent.
Whatever one thinks of his normative conclusions, the empirical referents of the trilogy are hard to miss. Human Resources departments function as internal police forces at every Fortune 500 firm. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion offices govern speech and hiring at Harvard, Yale, and the University of Chicago. Content moderation at Meta and Google exercises more influence over political discourse than any federal agency. Gottfried named the structure in 1999. The structure grew.
Two later books sharpen the historical edge of his argument.
Fascism: The Career of a Concept argues that Spanish and Italian generic fascism belong to a different genus from German Nazism, and that collapsing them into a single category serves present political needs rather than historical understanding. The word fascism has drifted so far from its interwar referent that it now functions as a floating smear attached to any right-wing politics a speaker dislikes. Gottfried wants to recover the concept for history at the cost of disarming it as a contemporary weapon.
Antifascism: The Course of a Crusade traces how antifascism became a movable accusation applied to any resistance to managerial progressivism. The book reads as the historical companion to his managerial-state books. Once fascism has been unmoored from its historical referent, antifascism can be deployed wherever the managerial apparatus wants a moral pretext for exclusion.
In 2008 Gottfried gave a speech at the H.L. Mencken Club, which he had founded as a forum for right-wing pluralism. Richard Spencer, then an editor at Taki’s Magazine, published the speech under the headline Alternative Right. Spencer later claimed sole authorship of the coinage. Gottfried called it joint.
Spencer built Alternative Right as a website in 2010 and became the public face of American white nationalism. By 2016 he was shouting Hail Trump at a Washington conference while attendees threw Roman salutes. Gottfried spent the Trump years explaining he had not signed up for this, that he opposed white nationalism, that his own family had fled the Nazis. The explanations did not travel as far as the association.
The episode illustrates a recurring risk for dissident thinkers. Once the respectable right excludes you, the only remaining audience is the more radical right. Your frames become available to whoever will read them. You cannot control what they do with your frames. Spencer took the managerial-state critique and the particularist conception of nationhood and ran them through an explicit racialist filter. Gottfried watched his ideas come back in what he called garbled form. He had no good options. Disowning Spencer too loudly looked like capitulation. Disowning him too quietly looked like complicity. He tried the middle path and got attacked from both sides.
Gottfried has contributed to VDARE and spoken at American Renaissance conferences. He worked with Kevin MacDonald on editorial projects. The Southern Poverty Law Center lists him as a far-right thinker and the Mencken Club as a White nationalist venue. He rejects both descriptions and cites his family’s escape from Nazism as evidence that the smears miss their target. He distinguishes consistently between intellectual engagement with heterodox writers and endorsement of their programs. He draws the line at explicit White nationalism and has said so in print many times.
The distinction satisfies few of his critics on the left and some of his admirers on the right. It reflects his temperament. He is a right-wing pluralist who takes seriously the obligation to argue with people he disagrees with, and who refuses to police the boundaries of respectable opinion on terms set by opponents who would never extend him the same courtesy.
At eighty-four Gottfried edits Chronicles, writes for dissident outlets, and lectures on what he calls conscious conservatism. He produced an edited volume in 2023, A Paleoconservative Anthology: New Voices for an Old Tradition, gathering younger writers to show the tradition had not died with its founders. His books remain in print. Citations in respectable venues remain scarce. His frames circulate at second and third hand through National Conservatism, Post-Liberalism, and the Claremont-adjacent press, sometimes with credit and often without.
Gottfried’s central claim has aged well. The managerial state he described in 1999 looks more obvious with each decade. The Iraq and Afghanistan wars discredited democratic universalism. The 2008 crisis discredited technocratic confidence. The 2016 Trump election revealed the depth of the particularist instincts he had tracked for forty years. The COVID response made managerial governance visible. The campus speech wars validated his account of therapeutic theocracy.
Trumpism picked up fragments of his critique without the theoretical discipline. It attacked bureaucratic elites, questioned interventionism, and pushed cultural particularism, but it did so improvisationally, without stable doctrine or institutional plan. The ideas had force. The structure stayed thin.
Gottfried’s limitations are real. His writing can be digressive. His memoir spends more pages on professional slights than the slights warrant. His associations left him vulnerable to guilt-by-proximity attacks that a more careful operator might have avoided. His historicism, carried far enough, makes it hard to explain why any stranger should care about any particular people’s inheritance, which is a problem for a thinker who wants to defend particularism against universalism.
The strengths remain larger than the limitations. He named the managerial state before the name traveled. He identified historicism as the right ground for a conservative critique of American universalism when most conservatives were still arguing from natural right. He read Schmitt and Burnham seriously when most of the profession read them as curiosities. He documented the internal purges that made the postwar right what it became, and he did so from inside the purged faction rather than from the comfortable distance of an academic outsider.
He is a chronicler of the right’s self-betrayals and a theorist of the order that replaced the one he was raised to oppose. His books sit on university shelves. His citations circulate in his opponents’ vocabulary. His name travels slowly. The record he leaves will outlast the reputation, which is the pattern for thinkers who write accurately about the people in charge of assigning reputations.
The Laundered Theorist
“Laundered” in this context means passing something with a problematic origin through legitimating channels so it can circulate in clean markets.
Applied to Gottfried as theorist, the metaphor works in several directions.
Gottfried provides academic respectability to paleoconservative positions that, expressed by less credentialed writers, might be coded as outside American intellectual discourse. He has a Yale PhD in European intellectual history. He has held an academic chair. He has written serious scholarly books on Schmitt, on Strauss, on Marcuse, on the conservative movement, on multiculturalism. He has the apparatus of footnotes, primary sources, German philosophy, archive work. When the same positions are stated by a tabloid columnist or a movement activist, they read differently than when they appear in a Gottfried book with a university press imprint.
The function is laundering. The position is the same. The packaging is different. Gottfried provides the packaging that lets paleoconservative ideas circulate in venues that might otherwise close to them.
The second direction is the Jewish dimension. Gottfried is Jewish. His father was a Hungarian Jewish refugee. The paleoconservative movement he has been associated with has had recurring problems with anti-Semitism, most prominently around Pat Buchanan and Sam Francis. Gottfried’s Jewish identity functions in the ecosystem as a kind of pre-emptive defense against charges of anti-Semitism. He can say things about Jewish influence in American politics, about neoconservative networks, about cultural change, that another paleoconservative might not be able to say without immediate accusation. The Jewish identity launders content that might otherwise be flagged.
The third direction is what happened with the alt-right term. Gottfried coined “alternative right” in 2008 as a label for paleoconservatives and traditionalists who did not fit into neoconservative-dominated mainstream conservatism. The label was academically respectable and intellectually serious. Richard Spencer took the laundered label and applied it to a white nationalist movement that included figures and positions Gottfried did not endorse. The label’s prior respectability made it more useful for Spencer than a fresh, unlaundered phrase might have been. Spencer benefited from Gottfried’s earlier laundering work.
The fourth direction is the broader theoretical move. Gottfried’s books reach for European intellectual history (Schmitt, Pareto, traditionalist conservatives, the German Right) to provide intellectual genealogy for American paleoconservatism. The genealogy launders the American movement by connecting it to thinkers most readers know are serious even when they disagree. Without the European intellectual scaffolding, the American paleoconservative tradition reads as a parochial nativist movement. With the scaffolding, it reads as part of a long, serious conversation about modernity, mass democracy, and the limits of liberal universalism.
Gottfried is the figure whose credentials, identity, and scholarly apparatus do laundering work for a movement whose less credentialed members might be excluded from acceptable discourse.
The Four Questions
Who does he rely on for status, income, and protection?
The base is small and specific. Chronicles magazine and the Charlemagne Institute pay him to edit. His pension from Elizabethtown College covers the floor. Book royalties from Praeger, Cornell, Northern Illinois, and Lexington run at academic-press volumes, which means modest. Speaking fees come from the H.L. Mencken Club he founded, from the Mises Institute where he holds an associated scholar position, and from scattered paleo and dissident-right gatherings. Taki Theodoracopulos’s outlets have paid him for columns. The John Randolph Club provides a platform. Younger writers at The American Conservative, Chronicles, IM-1776, and Compact cite him, interview him, and write appreciative pieces that renew his standing inside the dissident readership.
The protection side is thin. He has no university affiliation to shield him from reputational attacks. He has no major donor patron of the kind that insulates neoconservative and liberal intellectuals from controversy. The Southern Poverty Law Center has him on a list, and no institution with mainstream reach will spend capital defending him against the listing. His protection runs through Jewish biography, which blocks the simplest line of attack, and through his own refusal to take positions that would make the attack easier. He protects himself by staying precise in a way that Spencer and others around him have not.
Income, in short, comes from a paleo and libertarian ecosystem that pays in cultural capital and modest checks. Status comes from readers and younger writers who treat him as a founding figure. Protection comes from his biography and his care.
Who does he need to attract or retain as allies?
He needs the paleo old guard while it still exists: the remaining Chronicles circle, the Rockford Institute alumni, the Rothbardian libertarians at Mises, the John Randolph Club regulars. He needs the post-paleo younger right: National Conservative writers, Post-Liberal Catholics, Claremont Institute-adjacent younger scholars, the Compact and IM-1776 editors, the Sohrab Ahmari and Patrick Deneen adjacents who have read him even when they do not cite him. He needs heterodox academics who will review his books in journals that still publish book reviews, and he needs serious Schmitt scholars who treat his 1990 study as part of the anglophone reception rather than a polemic. He needs libertarians at the Mises Institute and Ludwig von Mises-derived journals.
He needs, usefully, a few Jewish intellectuals who will not join the guilt-by-association campaign. Michael Wyschogrod in life, David Gordon at Mises, and a few others play that role.
He can no longer recover the neoconservatives he has spent four decades attacking. He has no need to retain progressive readers who were never going to read him. He has limited interest in conciliating the libertarian-fusionist center that failed to defend Bradford in 1981.
What beliefs and signals mark membership in his coalition?
Belief that American conservatism was hijacked, not merely redirected, by a neoconservative faction with distinct social and ethnic origins and a distinct globalist agenda. Belief that the managerial state is the real regime and formal democracy conceals rather than constitutes political power. Belief that national identity rests on historical inheritance rather than creedal proposition. Belief that multiculturalism functions as secular theocracy with a liturgy of atonement. Belief that fascism has been unmoored from its historical referent and weaponized as a floating accusation. Belief that Strauss and his students carried liberal universalism into conservative clothing. Belief in the legitimacy of speaking about Jewish intellectual networks, carefully, without the subject becoming off-limits.
Signals include citing Burnham, Francis, Weaver, Bradford, Nisbet, Lasch, Kendall, and Willmoore rather than Kristol, Podhoretz, Himmelfarb, and Kagan. Signals include using managerial state, therapeutic regime, and secular theocracy as working terms. Signals include refusing to treat Lincoln as a saint, refusing to treat the Civil Rights Act as untouchable, and refusing to treat 1965 immigration as settled. Signals include reading Schmitt and Hegel seriously rather than dismissively. Signals include publishing in Chronicles, Modern Age, Telos, and the libertarian journals rather than National Review, Commentary, or The Atlantic.
What would he give up if he changed position?
He cannot change much because he has little left to lose on the respectability side and little left to gain by recantation. That structural fact has shaped his career.
If he repudiated paleoconservatism and endorsed neoconservative premises, he would gain nothing. The neocons do not need an eighty-four-year-old convert. The Commentary circle has no slot for him. He would lose Chronicles, the Mencken Club, the Mises affiliation, the younger dissident readership, and the intellectual identity he has built across fourteen books. He would look ridiculous. Nobody converts at this age in that direction without looking broken.
If he repudiated his heterodox associations more loudly and denounced Spencer, MacDonald, VDARE, and American Renaissance in the strongest terms, he would gain slight marginal approval from centrist conservatives who would still not cite him and would still not invite him to write. He would lose standing with a portion of his current readership that views those repudiations as capitulation. The cost-benefit does not work, and he has not done it.
If he moved the other direction and embraced White nationalism explicitly, he would gain nothing from that faction beyond what he already has, and he would lose the Jewish biographical shield that currently blocks the simplest attack on him. He would contradict positions he has held in print for forty years. He has said repeatedly he will not make this move, and he has structural reasons beyond sincerity to mean it.
The honest answer to the question is that Gottfried long ago paid most of the costs available to be paid. The Bradford affair cost him the mainstream conservative career he might have had. The neocon ascendancy cost him the think-tank sinecures his qualifications would have otherwise commanded. The Spencer episode cost him the last traces of respectable cover. He has spent forty years in a position that pays poorly and carries reputational risk, and he keeps writing the same book against the same targets because he has nothing further to lose by doing so and would gain nothing by stopping.
This is why his late work reads more confidently than his early work. The costs are sunk. The question that disciplines most intellectuals — what will this cost me — no longer has interesting answers in his case. He has already been charged. He writes as a man who has been priced out of the market for respectability and has decided the market was not worth entering on the terms it offered.
That freedom has a specific shape. It is not the freedom of the independent academic or the freedom of the trust-funded iconoclast. It is the freedom of the excluded insider who knows the institutions he was excluded from, knows why he was excluded, and has spent the rest of his life explaining both to anyone who will listen. The exclusion is his subject and his position and his method, all at once. Change the position and the whole structure collapses.
Hybrid Vigor
Gottfried himself is a heterosis product. Hungarian Jewish refugee stock crossed with American academic training, German idealist philosophy crossed with American political commentary, Frankfurt School method crossed with Old Right commitments, Yeshiva University clannishness crossed with Yale cosmopolitanism. The intellectual vigor of his mature work comes from combinations his American peers never made. Most postwar American conservatives inherited a narrow gene pool: Burkean traditionalism, Hayekian economics, anti-communism, and a thin reading of the American founding. Gottfried carried Hegel, Schmitt, Burnham, Marcuse, and the whole German historical school into that ecosystem. The result was a thinker who could see things the inbred mainstream could not see.
The same framework clarifies why he punches harder than the institutional conservatives with larger platforms. His opponents recombine inherited American materials. He crosses traditions that rarely meet on American soil. The Babylonian Talmud example maps onto this precisely. Gottfried wrote from a kind of intellectual diaspora, outside the respectable right’s homeland, and the displacement produced the elaboration.
The neoconservatives were also hybrids, former Trotskyists crossing into the right, which helps explain their institutional productivity. But they were a narrow hybrid drawing on one source population. Gottfried drew on more.
The framework also names a problem Gottfried cannot quite see about his own faction. Paleoconservatism after the Bradford purge became a closed breeding population. Chronicles, the Mencken Club, the Rockford Institute circle, the John Randolph Club, the same twenty writers reading and citing each other across decades. The social world shrank. The same targets got hit with the same instruments. New ideas entered slowly because entry required passing tests that few outsiders would bother to take.
The deleterious recessives accumulated. Tolerance of explicit racialist fellow travelers. Conspiracy-tinged framings that would not have survived exposure to serious outside criticism. A habit of treating every setback as confirmation rather than as data requiring revision. The Spencer episode shows the cost of inbreeding depression at the reputational level: a closed system could not generate the antibodies to reject a charismatic defector until he had already done his damage.
Gottfried’s own productivity stayed high because his personal intellectual gene pool was broad. The movement around him narrowed, and its narrowing is part of why his ideas traveled further than his movement did.
Gottfried built a counter-niche. Chronicles as textual redoubt. The Mencken Club as institutional anchor. Fourteen books as a corpus that could not easily be written out of the record. He modified the small environment he could reach in ways that favored his own perpetuation.
The niche stayed small because it never achieved the scale at which niche construction becomes self-reinforcing. The neoconservatives built a niche that included AEI, Commentary, the Wall Street Journal editorial page, the Hudson Institute, the Bradley Foundation pipeline, and enough university posts to reproduce the cadre across generations. Their niche selected for the traits they prized and punished deviation. Gottfried’s niche could select within its walls but could not discipline the larger ecosystem.
This is why his ideas migrate without his name. The larger ecosystem selects against citing him while happily using his frames. He built a refuge. He did not build an engine.
The Bradford affair reads cleanly as an immune system event. The conservative establishment’s immune apparatus, trained on communism and on interwar racial science, identified Southern Lincoln revisionism as pathogen. It mobilized the mature antibodies it had developed for fighting older threats. It expelled the perceived infection. William Bennett, the antibody, bound to the receptor and got installed.
The apparatus trained on real historical pathogens attacked tissue that was not the pathogen it had learned to recognize. Bradford was a Southern literary scholar, not a Nazi. Gottfried was a Jewish refugee’s son whose family had fled the actual pathogen the apparatus was calibrated to fight. The autoimmune character of the exclusion is part of why it produced the paleo reaction rather than simply silencing dissent. The excluded tissue did not die. It organized around its exclusion and began producing a counter-narrative about the malfunction of the apparatus.
Gottfried’s entire managerial-state critique can be read as an extended diagnosis of autoimmune dysfunction in Western institutions. The biological frame makes the diagnosis more precise than his own Schmittian and Burnhamite language does.
Gottfried is a negative case for the crypsis framework. Writers with similar views developed protective coloration: they softened their formulations, avoided the most dangerous associations, published in venues the mainstream recognized, and signaled enough compliance with the dominant coalition’s vocabulary to stay detectable only to those looking carefully. Russell Kirk did this through piety and courtesy. Robert Nisbet did it through academic decorum. Eugene Genovese did it through his Marxist credentials. Christopher Lasch did it through a Jeremiah’s tone that read as social criticism rather than right-wing dissent.
Gottfried refused the coloration. He attacked neoconservatives by name. He spoke at American Renaissance. He co-edited a book with Spencer. He used language about Jewish neoconservative networks that a more cautious man would have buried in footnotes or left to others.
The career cost of his anti-crypsis is a data point. An organism that refuses to match its environment pays in exclusion. The benefit is that no one can mistake his positions for something else. Future readers cannot claim he hid his views. The mimics around him will have harder biographies to reconstruct.
The mirror of Gottfried’s refusal is the neoconservative success. The neocons produced signals indistinguishable from traditional American conservatism while carrying different substrate. They used the vocabulary of limited government while building a foreign policy apparatus that required unlimited executive power. They invoked the founders while arguing for universal democratic crusades the founders would have rejected. They wore the coloration of the host coalition, traditional conservatism, long enough to reproduce inside it and eventually to dominate it.
This is textbook Batesian mimicry. The host coalition’s immune system could not detect the mismatch because the signals matched. By the time the detection arms race began, the mimics had become the dominant population. Gottfried’s writing functions partly as a detection tool, an attempt to teach the host to recognize mimicry it had failed to catch when it mattered. The tool arrived too late.
The clearest single biological framework for what happened to Gottfried’s ideas is horizontal gene transfer. His frames move between institutional populations that share no formal lineage with him. Francis carried them into conservative journalism. Buchanan carried them into presidential campaigns. Carlson carried them into cable television. Sohrab Ahmari carried them into Compact. Patrick Deneen carried them into Notre Dame political theory. Adrian Vermeule carried them into Harvard Law. Rusty Reno carried them into First Things. The NatCon conference circuit carries them into a younger cadre that has read fragments and will build careers on the managerial state critique without quite knowing where it came from.
The gene transfers because the adaptive trait it carries, a compact account of managerial governance, is useful for organisms competing in a new environment the older theoretical frameworks do not illuminate. The organisms that pick it up do not need to know its origin. They need only the adaptive advantage it confers. This is why Gottfried cannot be permanently buried. The gene is in circulation.
Gottfried ran a slow life history strategy. Fourteen books over decades. Patient scholarship in multiple languages. Long time horizons. Investment in correspondence with Stephen Turner and other serious interlocutors. Comfort with the idea that readership would accumulate slowly and posthumously.
The neoconservatives ran a faster strategy. Shorter books, more articles, more policy memos, more think tank products. Quick turnaround on political events. Heavy investment in near-term influence. The faster strategy paid off in the Reagan and Bush years. It produced the Iraq disaster and the 2008 crisis because fast strategies discount future consequences heavily. Gottfried’s slower strategy looked like career failure during the neocon ascendancy and looks like something else now that the fast strategy’s collateral damage is visible.
Both strategies are biologically intelligible. Neither is a moral failing. They are calibrations to different predictions about how stable the environment will be. Gottfried bet on a longer time horizon than his opponents. The bet is paying off in a way that would please him more if he were less temperamentally inclined to document his grievances.
The traits that made Gottfried intellectually productive made him reputationally radioactive. The willingness to engage heterodox thinkers produced both his best work and his Spencer problem. The refusal to soften his formulations produced both his analytical clarity and his exile from respectable venues. The commitment to historicism produced both his critique of Strauss and his vulnerability to the charge that his particularism has no principled stopping point.
These are not separate traits that could have been combined differently. They are the same traits expressed in different environments. The young thinker’s willingness to say hard things was adaptive in graduate school and in the intellectual formation phase. The same willingness became costly as his career required institutional reproduction. He could not have the productivity without the exposure. He could not have the exposure without the cost.
The paleo-neocon conflict consumed both factions’ resources across four decades without producing permanent victory for either side. Each side spent enormous effort on purity maintenance, enemy identification, and boundary policing. Each side developed increasingly sophisticated detection systems for the other side’s infiltration. The arms race escalated without resolution.
The larger environment changed faster than either side could track. The managerial state Gottfried diagnosed grew regardless of which faction won any particular intra-conservative skirmish. The neocons won every battle and lost the war. The paleos lost every battle and are watching their diagnosis get vindicated by conditions neither faction controlled. Both factions ran as fast as they could to stay in the same relative position. Neither caught the actual organism that was growing around them.
What the Frames Add
The biological maps give Gottfried’s critique a precision his own vocabulary sometimes lacks. He reaches for words like theocracy, regime, apparatus, and class, which are political and theological categories carrying historical baggage. The biological frames describe the same phenomena in causal language that does not depend on the reader sharing his political commitments. Niche construction, homeostasis, endosymbiosis, autoimmune calibration, horizontal gene transfer: these describe what the managerial state does without requiring a judgment about whether it should be doing it. The judgment can follow the description, and the description survives disagreement with the judgment.
The frames also locate Gottfried inside the processes he describes rather than outside them. He is not a neutral observer of managerial capture. He is an organism with his own niche, his own immune responses, his own life history strategy, his own inbreeding and outbreeding patterns. The biology applies to him too. His exclusion is a selection event. His frames spread through horizontal transfer. His refusal of crypsis has its costs and benefits. He is not a victim of the system. He is a specimen of the ecology the system operates in, doing what selection shaped him to do, telling himself a story about it that the biology does not fully support.
Gottfried reads the managerial state as a cultural catastrophe caused by bad human decisions. The biology suggests it is an evolutionary outcome that would have occurred under any leadership, because the selection pressures operating on modern administrative organisms produce the observed behavior regardless of the intentions of the humans inside. His diagnosis stays correct. His moral register becomes optional. The structure he hates is not the product of villainy. It is the product of selection pressures he did not design and his opponents did not design either. The question stops being who is to blame and becomes which organism’s adaptive strategies fit current environmental conditions best.
Gottfried would resist this conclusion. His whole project rests on the assumption that human beings with different values made specific choices that could have been made differently. The biology suggests the range of choice was narrower than his moral framing allows. Which does not disqualify the moral framing. It just places it inside a larger frame the moral argument cannot see from inside itself.
Carl Schmitt: Politics and Theory by Paul Gottfried
Published by Greenwood Press in 1990. A short book, around 150 pages, early in the anglophone reception of Schmitt.
Context sets the value. In 1990 most of Schmitt’s work sat untranslated into English. The standard treatment in American political theory read him through his 1933 Nazi party membership and left the arguments in the drawer. George Schwab’s 1970 study had cracked the door. Joseph Bendersky’s 1983 political biography pushed it further. Gottfried’s book arrived as part of that small rehabilitating cohort, aimed at readers who knew Schmitt only as a name attached to a disgrace.
Gottfried’s method matches his method everywhere else. He refuses the guilt-by-association shortcut. He treats Schmitt’s arguments as arguments rather than symptoms of bad politics. The move frustrates critics who want the Nazi affiliation to do the analytical work. Gottfried reads the affiliation as a biographical fact that does not answer the question of whether Schmitt saw something real about liberal orders.
The substantive core of the book traces Schmitt against his Weimar rivals. Schmitt rejected the pluralism of Harold Laski, who saw the state as but one of many groups within society, a view Schmitt read as evasion of the state’s function as monopolist of coercive decision. Against Hans Kelsen’s pure theory of law, which deduced legal systems from a basic norm, Schmitt located sovereignty in the power to decide the exception. Gottfried follows this argument carefully and shows why the decisionist claim survives its author’s Nazi years. The argument does not depend on the affiliation, and the affiliation does not refute the argument.
The original contribution comes in the application. Gottfried turns Schmitt’s critique of liberal universalism on the American neoconservatives. Their commitment to democracy as a universal export, their Wilsonian interventionism, their treatment of the American creed as a discoverable truth available to any willing convert — these are the positions Schmitt diagnosed in Weimar liberals who wanted to dissolve the political into legal procedure and moral consensus. Gottfried compares Allan Bloom’s Kantian universalism directly to the structure Schmitt attacked. The neocons looked right-wing only against the Soviet Union. Viewed through Schmitt, they carried a universalist liberalism that traditional conservatives should oppose.
This reading becomes the engine of his later work. After Liberalism, Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt, and the managerial-state essays all run on Schmittian equipment. The sovereign decides who counts as enemy and who counts as sick. The administrative apparatus makes those decisions upstream of elections. Formal democracy conceals the real locus of political choice. Gottfried arrived at these positions by reading Schmitt first and Burnham second, and the Schmitt book is where the first read gets documented.
On the narrow question of Schmitt scholarship, Gottfried’s book does not sit at the top rank. Heinrich Meier on the theological stakes, Jan-Werner Müller on the postwar reception, John McCormick on the technology and critique pieces, Bendersky on the biography, and Schwab on the foundation all did more sustained work. Gottfried wrote a clear introductory study with a sharp polemical edge and an original application to American politics.
The application is the contribution. He used Schmitt to name what American conservatives had stopped being able to see about their own universalism. Few others were doing that in 1990. Most still have not caught up.
Watergate as Democratic Ritual & Cultural Trauma
The Bradford purge is Gottfried’s Watergate, and the parallel is exact in structure while inverted in outcome.
A personnel dispute over a humanities endowment chairmanship had, in 1981, no inherent significance. Most conservatives did not notice it. Most of the public never heard about it. The appointment of William Bennett over Mel Bradford would have faded into bureaucratic memory like ten thousand other agency-head decisions made during the Reagan transition.
The transformation of Bradford-as-personnel-decision into Bradford-as-founding-trauma required the exact symbolic work Alexander describes for Watergate. Gottfried performed that work. He built the consensus that something larger than a staffing dispute had happened. He generalized from the political facts, a few neoconservatives blocked a Southern literary scholar, to sacred values, the progressive civil religion had purged a dissenter from Lincoln mythology. He invoked institutional authority, the conservative movement’s own founding principles, to delegitimize the actors who had won. He mobilized elite countercenters, Chronicles magazine, the Rockford Institute, the newly named paleoconservative tendency, to maintain the trauma claim across decades. He created a ritual space, the annual Mencken Club meetings, the dedication pages of his books, the recurring essays returning to Bradford, in which the exclusion could be relitigated and the wound reopened.
The difference from Watergate is that Alexander’s Watergate narrative won. The Senate hearings produced a majority coalition that accepted the sacralized version. Nixon resigned. The civil religion absorbed the event as foundational. Gottfried’s Bradford narrative lost. No majority coalition accepted it. Bennett went on to be Secretary of Education. Bradford died in 1993 having never held the chair. Most conservative readers today have never heard of him.
The trauma construction work continues anyway, and this is where Alexander’s framework generates the most precise observation about Gottfried. Carrier groups do not stop constructing trauma when their construction fails. They intensify the construction, narrow the audience, and ritualize the memory inside a subculture that cannot influence the broader civil religion but can maintain internal coherence through continuous re-narration of the founding wound. Gottfried has been doing this for forty-five years. The wound does not heal because healing would require abandoning the construction, and the construction is what holds his coalition together.
Carrier Group of One
Alexander specifies that successful trauma construction requires carrier groups with specific discursive skills, institutional access, and both ideal and material interests in fixing the official meaning of what happened. Gottfried supplies all three in the paleo case, but the carrier group is unusually small. He is closer to a carrier group of one than to the multi-actor constellations Alexander typically describes.
The Watergate carrier group included the Senate, the Washington Post, the federal judiciary, network news, and a generation of journalism schools that institutionalized the narrative. Each element supplied complementary skills and reach. The paleo carrier group includes Chronicles, the Mencken Club, a handful of Rothbardian libertarian outlets, Taki’s Magazine, and a few dozen younger writers who have read Gottfried closely enough to transmit his frames. The discursive skills are high. The institutional access is minimal. The material interests are modest. The ideal interests are intense.
When a trauma narrative lacks institutional reach, carrier groups compensate through intensity of symbolic work. They produce more elaborate accounts, more sacralized victim narratives, more richly developed villain taxonomies, more ritualized commemorative practices. Gottfried’s fourteen books are what this compensation looks like. Each book elaborates the trauma further. The managerial state thesis, the therapeutic regime, the secular theocracy, the post-liberal order, the fascism-as-moveable-smear thesis, the antifascism-as-crusade thesis: each is a further development of the original wound’s meaning. The construction has reached a baroque elaboration that the institutional reach of its carrier group cannot support. The frames escape into the broader conservative ecosystem precisely because no institutional apparatus contains them.
American politics operates through a dominant civil religion centered on the Founding, the Civil War, the Second World War, and the Civil Rights Movement. This civil religion sacralizes specific figures, Washington, Lincoln, Roosevelt, King, and treats certain events as sacred traumas whose meanings are not open to revision without triggering pollution responses. The Holocaust occupies a particular position in this religion. It is not merely a historical event but a founding trauma of postwar Western legitimacy whose meaning carrier groups actively defend against revisionist readings.
Gottfried’s managerial-state critique is, at its deepest level, an attack on this civil religion. He rejects the sacralization of Lincoln, which is why the Bradford affair mattered so much to him. He questions the sacralization of the Second World War, which is what his fascism and antifascism books are about. He resists the sacralization of civil rights as the completion of the American experiment, which is what his multiculturalism book argues. He refuses the sacralization of the Holocaust as a template applicable to American racial and immigration politics, which he inherited from his father and developed into a position.
He is, in Alexander’s terms, attempting counter-sacralization. He wants to install a different trauma at the center of the American story: the managerial state’s seizure of power from a constitutional republic that had governed itself without therapeutic bureaucracy. He wants a different sacred object at the heart of national self-understanding: the historical American community, Protestant, English-derived, regionally rooted, culturally particular, rather than the propositional nation the dominant civil religion elevates. He wants different victims, the dispossessed traditionalists, and different perpetrators, the managerial elites.
This is trauma construction at its most ambitious. It is also trauma construction with almost no chance of success. The dominant civil religion has the institutional apparatus, the ritual calendar, the consensus carrier groups, the media reproduction, and the sacred sites. Gottfried has Chronicles. The mismatch is total. What Alexander’s framework makes visible is that Gottfried’s project is not a scholarly critique of managerial governance. It is an attempted reorganization of the American civil religion’s symbolic classification system. The attempt is why his writing carries the emotional register it does. He is not arguing about policy. He is trying to move the sacred and the profane to different locations on the map.
The Jewish Biographical Position
Alexander’s framework specifies that carrier groups have structural positions that affect what trauma they can construct credibly. Gottfried’s structural position is specific and consequential. He is a Jewish intellectual whose family fled the actual Nazis, writing about the mobilization of Holocaust memory against contemporary right-wing dissent. This position gives him rhetorical resources no Gentile writer could deploy.
When Gottfried writes about antifascism as a moveable smear, he cannot be dismissed as someone who wants to rehabilitate actual fascism. His biography precludes the standard move. When he writes about Jewish neoconservative networks, he cannot be dismissed as an antisemitic outsider. His biography forecloses that move too. When he writes about the cultural trauma industry, he is a survivor of the original pathogen writing against the industry that claims to preserve its memory. The position is rhetorically powerful.
The position is also unstable, and Alexander’s framework makes the instability visible. Civil religions depend on who gets counted as a credible voice on the sacred. Gottfried keeps trying to occupy the voice of the Jewish critic of postwar Jewish political accommodation with the American civil religion’s sacralization of the Holocaust as universal template. This voice exists. Norman Finkelstein occupies it on the left. Peter Novick occupied a version of it academically. Gottfried occupies a right-wing version of it. The civil religion’s carrier groups cannot simply silence this voice because the voice speaks from inside the sacred category the civil religion is built around. They can marginalize it. They can refuse to cite it. They can decline to engage it. They cannot eliminate it without undermining their own claim that Jewish voices matter.
The dominant civil religion’s carrier groups do not engage his arguments. They refuse to cite him. They treat his existence as an embarrassment. They allow his frames to be absorbed by intermediaries who strip the attribution. The treatment is consistent with how civil religions handle insider dissent that cannot be eliminated on sacred grounds. The dissent gets routed around rather than refuted.
Why the Spiral Never Reaches Mass Audience
Alexander describes the spiral of signification through which traumas become publicly legible. Carrier groups move claims from specialized discourse into mass awareness through a ratcheting process. Each stage amplifies the claim and broadens the audience. The final stage is public recognition, where the trauma construction achieves consensus and enters the civil religion as an accepted feature of the collective story.
Gottfried’s spiral has stalled at stage two for four decades. His claims have moved beyond his immediate circle. Younger conservative writers cite him. The managerial-state vocabulary has escaped into broader conservative discourse. National Conservatism, Post-Liberalism, Integralism, and Claremont writers all deploy frames he developed. The spiral has reached the conservative intellectual subculture.
It has not reached mass awareness. It has not achieved public recognition. It has not been absorbed by the broader civil religion. What Alexander’s framework suggests is that this stalling is not a temporary condition that will resolve when enough people read Gottfried. It is a structural feature of the construction he attempted. His trauma narrative attacks the dominant civil religion at its sacred center. Civil religions do not absorb such attacks. They route around them.
The Trump era tested this thesis and confirmed it. Trump carried fragments of paleo rhetoric into mass politics. The managerial-state critique reached audiences Gottfried’s books never could. But the fragments reached mass awareness in degraded form, stripped of their theoretical scaffolding, connected to a populist movement that did not share Gottfried’s historicist commitments or his scholarly register. What made the rhetoric usable at mass scale was exactly what made it unattributable to Gottfried. The civil religion could absorb populist grievance. It could not absorb Gottfried’s sophisticated reconstruction of what populist grievance was a symptom of.
Successful mass trauma construction requires compatibility with the civil religion’s existing symbolic architecture. Gottfried’s construction is incompatible by design. He is not trying to add a trauma to the religion. He is trying to replace the religion’s sacred center. The attempt is intellectually admirable and politically impossible.
Gottfried is a trained intellectual historian who writes about how moralized vocabularies serve coalition purposes. He should be able to see his own trauma construction in the terms the framework makes available. He mostly does not.
His Bradford essays read Bradford’s exclusion as a moral catastrophe inflicted by villains on an innocent victim. They do not read it as a trauma construction his own coalition performed on raw material that could have supported other constructions. His managerial-state analysis treats the postwar American state as sacralized wrongly. It does not treat his own alternative sacralization of historical American community as a symmetric construction that would face the same problems if it succeeded. His attacks on the therapeutic regime are written in the register of someone who has seen through a false religion. They are not written in the register of someone who recognizes that what he is offering is a rival religion.
Carrier groups are the actors least able to see their own trauma construction as construction. The symbolic work only functions when the carrier group experiences it as discovery rather than as production. Gottfried’s inability to apply his own historicist tools to his own trauma narrative is what makes him an effective carrier group leader. A Gottfried who fully grasped that he was constructing rather than describing the Bradford wound would be a less potent carrier group member and might have produced less work. The blind spot is functional.
This is the same structural feature Alexander’s framework identified when applied to Alexander himself. Carrier groups are always partially blind to their own function. The blindness is the price of the discursive energy that makes carrier group work possible. Seeing all the way through dissolves the motivation to continue the work. Gottfried sees further than most. He does not see all the way through. If he did, he could not be Gottfried.
The corrected reading, then, is not a debunking. It is a completed diagnosis. Gottfried’s managerial-state thesis captures something real about postwar American governance. His Bradford narrative captures something real about how the conservative movement got reorganized in the 1980s. His account of civil religion as therapeutic theocracy captures something real about how public moral discourse now functions. These are his contributions. What Alexander adds is the recognition that these contributions are themselves trauma constructions serving carrier group purposes, produced by a scholar whose structural position, material interests, and discursive talents predict exactly the constructions he produced. The contributions remain valuable. They are also specimens of the very thing they describe. The symmetry is not a problem to be resolved. It is a feature of intellectual life that Alexander’s framework is built to make visible and that Gottfried’s own framework is built to obscure when turned on its producer.
A Big Misunderstanding
Gottfried is a hard case for the misunderstanding essay because he is partially immunized against it by his own theoretical commitments. His historicism, his Schmittian analysis of sovereignty, his Burnhamite account of managerial class formation, and his Pinsof-adjacent sensitivity to coalition behavior all push him toward motive-based rather than error-based diagnoses. He knows intellectually that his opponents are not confused. He writes as if they are anyway. The gap between what he knows and how he writes is the interesting datum.
The Partial Immunity
Gottfried’s managerial-state thesis is a motive-based account at the institutional level. The managerial class rules because ruling serves its material and status interests. The therapeutic apparatus expands because expansion enlarges the class’s jurisdiction. The civil religion sacralizes specific events because sacralization legitimates the class’s authority. None of this is misunderstanding. The managers understand what they are doing. They are doing it because it pays.
His neoconservative analysis is motive-based at the coalition level. The neocons captured the conservative movement because capture served their interests. They moved their former socialist commitments into Cold War internationalism because the move preserved their cultural politics while gaining them access to defense industry funding and Republican patronage. They defended Israel through conservative institutions because conservative institutions could be repurposed to that end. None of this is misunderstanding. The neocons understood what they were doing. They were doing it because it worked.
His paleo coalition analysis, where he performs it, is also motive-based. The paleos lost because they were bad coalition partners, tolerated embarrassing fellow travelers, refused to signal reliability to adjacent groups, and maintained positions that scared donors. These are not failures of understanding. They are failures of coalition discipline.
So far, Gottfried looks like a writer Pinsof would approve of. He sees coalitions. He sees interests. He sees motives.
Where the Misunderstanding Myth Reappears
The myth reappears at the level of ideas rather than institutions. Gottfried writes as if his ideological opponents have made specific intellectual errors that better theory could correct.
The Straussians, he argues, misunderstand the relationship between political truth and historical community. They think natural right is accessible through philosophical reasoning. He knows natural right is an abstraction from specific historical peoples’ lived commitments. If they would read Hegel and the German historical school, they could see what they have missed. His book on Strauss is, at its core, a correction of this misunderstanding.
The neoconservatives misunderstand American identity. They treat America as a proposition available to any willing convert. He knows America is a specific historical community formed by Protestant English settlers whose character and commitments cannot be reduced to creedal claims. If they would read their own founders more carefully, they could see what they have missed. His corpus returns to this correction across decades.
The contemporary American conservative movement misunderstands its own inheritance. It thinks it is defending traditional order. He knows it has absorbed Hegelian historicism while pretending to reject it, absorbed therapeutic progressivism while claiming to oppose it, and absorbed managerial universalism while posturing as anti-elite. If movement conservatives would read his Search for Historical Meaning and After Liberalism, they could see what they have missed. The books exist to correct this misunderstanding.
The multicultural left misunderstands its own religiosity. It thinks it is secular and rational. He knows it is practicing a secular theocracy with Christian structure and pagan content. If its practitioners would read Karl Löwith and Eric Voegelin on political religion, they could see what they have missed. Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt is built around this correction.
The antifascists misunderstand fascism. They have detached the word from its historical referent and deployed it as a moveable smear. If they would read his Fascism: The Career of a Concept, they could see what they have missed. The book exists to correct this misunderstanding.
Each of these framings places Gottfried in the heroic position. The opponent is confused. Gottfried sees clearly. The confusion can be corrected by better scholarship, and Gottfried has produced the scholarship. The world’s problems would be at least partially tractable if his opponents would read his books and think clearly about what the books show them.
Books produced on this model do not win institutional victories. The neoconservatives did not read his Strauss book and change their minds. The antifascists did not read his Fascism book and moderate their rhetoric. The multicultural left did not read his Politics of Guilt and recognize their own religiosity. The civil religion’s carrier groups did not read his Bradford essays and reverse the 1981 decision.
The books are high-quality scholarship. They did not move the institutions they targeted. The institutions were not confused. They were pursuing coalition interests through intellectual vocabularies that served those interests. Better scholarship cannot defeat coalition interests. Better scholarship only produces better scholarship.
What Gottfried should have invested in, if institutional victory were his goal, is coalition-building of the kind the neoconservatives did. They did not produce better scholarship than the paleos. Most paleo scholarship was better. The neocons produced better coalition infrastructure. They built think tanks that could pay their writers. They built donor networks that could fund their magazines. They built fellowship pipelines that could reproduce their cadre. They built relationships with the defense establishment, the Israel lobby, and the Republican Party apparatus that gave them standing in arenas where argument alone could not reach. When they fought the paleos, they did not fight with arguments. They fought with exclusions, with phone calls to donors, with editorial decisions, with access to appointments. The paleos fought with books.
Gottfried’s fourteen books are what the misunderstanding myth produces when its believer has real scholarly gifts. The quality is high. The institutional effect is thin. No amount of additional high-quality books will change the institutional outcome because the institutional outcome is not responsive to books. It is responsive to coalition pressure Gottfried was never positioned to apply.
The Reflexive Flattery
Pinsof’s essay notes that the misunderstanding myth flatters the person who holds it. It lets him maintain a self-image as disinterested truth-seeker rather than coalition combatant. Gottfried’s writing exhibits exactly this flattery, and he is harder to catch at it than most because he partly sees through it.
His self-presentation across the corpus is of the historian who reads carefully, thinks precisely, and reports what he finds. He does not present himself as a paleo coalition operative. He presents himself as a scholar whose conclusions happen to align with positions the paleo coalition holds, because those positions happen to be historically and philosophically correct. The opponents are intellectually deficient. He is simply accurate.
The self-image makes his work possible. A writer who fully understood that he was a coalition combatant producing coalition-serving scholarship could not generate the affective commitment Gottfried’s books require. The flattery supplies the motivation. It lets him write as if he were doing something larger than coalition work. The paleo coalition needs him to feel this way because his writing is the coalition’s most valuable asset. A Gottfried who experienced his work as coalition work would produce weaker work. The self-deception is functional.
Gottfried’s neocon opponents produce their work under the same flattery. David Frum, Bill Kristol, Norman Podhoretz, and the rest understood themselves as defenders of principle against paleo reaction. They did not experience their coalition operations as coalition operations. They experienced them as principled defense of conservatism against cranks and bigots. The experience was sincere. It was also functional for neocon coalition reproduction. Both coalitions ran the same myth in mirror image. Both coalitions needed their members to experience coalition work as truth-seeking. Neither coalition could have reproduced itself without the myth.
The clearest case where the misunderstanding myth distorts Gottfried’s analysis is the civil rights regime. He argues that Americans misunderstand what the 1964 Civil Rights Act did. They think it removed formal discrimination. He knows it built a permanent therapeutic bureaucracy that uses disparate-impact reasoning to extend jurisdiction over private life. If they would read his books, they could see what they have missed.
The people who benefit from the civil rights regime, the employment lawyers, the DEI officers, the federal civil rights division, the academic administrators, the consulting firms, the training providers, the plaintiff attorneys, the advocacy nonprofits, understand exactly what the regime does. They built it. They maintain it. They reproduce it. They are not confused. They are making a living at something they understand clearly. The regime serves their interests. No amount of scholarship showing that the regime has drifted from its original purpose will affect the people whose paychecks depend on the drift.
Gottfried’s writing on this topic proceeds as if better historical understanding of what the act was supposed to do could reverse what the act has become. This writing cannot reverse the regime because the regime’s reproduction is not controlled by historical understanding. It is controlled by the coalition of interests that the regime has constructed. Those interests will defend themselves with any intellectual vocabulary available. If Gottfried’s vocabulary became the dominant one tomorrow, the regime would absorb it, translate its criticisms into risk management language, and continue operating. The coalition would survive the vocabulary change.
The reverse case is equally clear. Gottfried reads the neocon ascendancy as built on specific intellectual errors that his writing can expose. If movement conservatives would recognize what Straussianism really is, what propositional nationhood really implies, and what democratic universalism really produces, they would abandon these commitments.
Movement conservatives adopted neocon vocabulary because the vocabulary served coalition purposes. It let them raise money from donors who wanted support for Israel and aggressive foreign policy. It let them recruit voters who wanted patriotic affirmation rather than historical specificity. It let them placate Jewish and Catholic audiences whose participation required universalist rather than particularist framing. It let them defend affirmative capitalism against socialist challenges by appealing to abstract equality rather than specific hierarchy. The vocabulary did work. It continues to do work. It will be maintained as long as the work remains necessary.
Gottfried’s writing that exposes the vocabulary’s philosophical defects cannot displace the vocabulary because the vocabulary is not in place for philosophical reasons. When the coalition purposes change, the vocabulary will change, and the change will not be produced by Gottfried’s critique. It will be produced by shifts in the coalition’s operating environment. The Trump years illustrate this. Parts of the neocon vocabulary got dropped when the coalition that used them lost standing with Republican voters. The dropping was not because Gottfried’s critique finally reached its audience. It was because the audience stopped finding the vocabulary useful for its own coalition purposes.
Gottfried partially recognizes the problem. In some of his more reflective passages, he acknowledges that the neocons won through institutional capture rather than argumentative superiority. He knows the paleos lost because of coalition dynamics. He knows his exclusion was not a judgment on his scholarship. He knows the civil religion reproduces through apparatus rather than through persuasion.
But he cannot integrate this recognition into the structure of his writing. He continues producing books built around the misunderstanding model because the book-production model he learned as a young historian trained on books. He writes the book that would correct the misunderstanding even when he knows the misunderstanding is not the real problem. The book is what he can produce. The book is what his career taught him to produce. The coalition infrastructure he would need to build instead requires skills he does not have and temperament he does not share.
He continues the practice because the practice is what sustains his identity and his material existence. A Gottfried who abandoned the misunderstanding model would have no books to write. The books would become coalition combat documents rather than works of historical scholarship, and he would lose the scholarly identity that makes his life meaningful. The flattery of the truth-seeker role is not a vanity he could shed without becoming someone else entirely.
The misunderstanding essay specifies the exact intellectual operation Gottfried performs that keeps him a scholar rather than a partisan. He diagnoses his opponents as confused because he has to. The diagnosis is the precondition of his self-understanding as a scholar. Strip the diagnosis and he becomes what he does not want to be: a coalition operative writing coalition tracts. Keep the diagnosis and he remains what he wants to be: the historian whose conclusions happen to serve a coalition but whose primary loyalty is to the truth the conclusions describe.
There is no position outside coalition from which scholarship can be produced on topics where coalitions contest meaning. The belief that such a position exists is itself a coalition technology deployed by specific coalitions whose interests are served by the scholar’s self-image. Gottfried’s coalition needed him to experience his work as truth-seeking.
Charisma and Social Paradoxes
The tension his audience faces is the gap between what American conservatism claims to be about and what it has done. Most thinking conservatives sense something has gone wrong. They cannot name it. The vocabulary they inherited from Buckley and Kristol forecloses the naming. They need someone to name it for them, on materials they can recognize, in a way that feels like revelation rather than attack.
Gottfried has done the work that would let him fill this role. The managerial-state thesis names the structure. The Bradford history names the founding crime. The Strauss critique names the intellectual confusion. The antifascism book names the rhetorical weapon. The materials are assembled. The audience exists. The charismatic role is there to be occupied.
He has not occupied it. The frameworks make visible why.
Pinsof’s charisma essay identifies a specific paradox the charismatic figure must execute: pursuing status while appearing not to seek it. The concealment of the pursuit is what makes the pursuit succeed. A figure whose status ambitions are visible cannot generate the affective response that creates charismatic authority. Audiences reward the figure who seems indifferent to their reward and punish the figure who seems to want it too obviously.
Gottfried fails this paradox across his corpus, and the failure is most visible in his memoir, Encounters. The book documents professional slights in extensive detail. It names names. It tracks injuries across decades. It makes the grievances legible. It also makes the status concerns legible, and the legibility is fatal to the charismatic function.
Frum’s characterization of Gottfried as the most relentlessly solipsistic of the disgruntled paleos, obsessed with professional rebuffs, is a coalition attack. The attack lands because Gottfried supplied the material. Someone who could not have produced Gottfried’s books can still read them and notice that the writer dwells on his exclusions more than writers above status concerns are supposed to dwell on such things. Audiences are equipped to detect status concern and are repelled when they find it in someone who is supposed to be speaking from a position beyond it.
Spencer does this better than Gottfried. Spencer performs the revolutionary stance while possessing the credentials that should preclude revolutionary outsider status. He does not dwell on personal grievances. He writes as if status does not interest him even as he pursues it relentlessly. This is part of why Spencer briefly captured charismatic attention that Gottfried, whose intellectual claim to the attention was stronger, could not capture. Spencer executed the paradox. Gottfried did not.
Gottfried does execute some paradoxes successfully, which is what gives him his narrow charismatic authority inside the paleo ecosystem.
The insider-attacking-the-inside paradox works for him. He was trained at Yale under Marcuse. He holds a doctorate from a premier university. He taught at Elizabethtown for twenty-five years. He has the credentials the academy requires. He uses those credentials to attack the academy and the intellectual establishment it serves. The paradox resolves in his favor because his critique cannot be dismissed as the complaint of someone who could not meet the standards. He met the standards. He rejects what the standards have become.
The humble-historian paradox also works. He presents himself as a scholar describing what happened rather than an advocate recommending what should happen. The managerial-state thesis comes wrapped in historical narrative. The Bradford affair is documented rather than editorialized. The neocon critique proceeds through intellectual history rather than political polemic. The presentation allows readers to experience his conclusions as things they discovered by following his evidence rather than positions he talked them into.
The Jewish-refugee-who-rejects-the-script paradox has charismatic value inside his subculture. His biography blocks the simplest attacks and gives him standing that Gentile paleos cannot claim. When he writes about antifascism as a moveable smear, the biography does charismatic work the argument alone could not do. Younger paleo writers cite this standing explicitly when they invoke him. He has become a sacralized figure for their coalition partly because his biography lets him say things they could not say in his voice.
Coalitions generate tensions that cannot be solved, only personified by figures who absorb them without visibly breaking. The paleo coalition is structured around tensions that resist dissolution.
The coalition unites Southern agrarians, Hungarian Jewish historians, Rothbardian libertarians, Catholic traditionalists, and occasional White nationalist fellow travelers. The coalition has no internal philosophical logic. Its members share rivals rather than premises. A charismatic figure who could make the coalition feel internally coherent would personify the paleo position in a way that let members experience their coalition membership as natural rather than strategic.
Gottfried cannot do this. His writing makes the tensions more visible rather than less. He writes explicitly about why Southern traditionalists and Jewish refugees can and should be allies. He explains the coalition’s structure rather than dissolving it in a figure who embodies synthesis. The explanation is intellectually honest and charismatically fatal. Audiences cannot project unity onto someone who keeps showing them how the unity is constructed.
This is the same pattern visible in figures like Horwitz, who made psychiatric paradoxes more precise rather than dissolving them, and who therefore generated scholarly authority without charismatic standing. Gottfried has produced the paleo equivalent. He has made the coalition’s structural tensions more visible across fourteen books. He has not produced the figure who would let paleo sympathizers experience their commitments as obvious rather than contested.
Spencer, again, pulled off the dissolution Gottfried could not. He offered White identity as the solvent that would unify the coalition’s scattered commitments. The solvent was false, and most of the coalition correctly rejected it, but the falseness was not the reason it briefly worked. It worked because it dissolved tensions that could not be dissolved by accurate description. Charismatic dissolution does not require truth. It requires audience capture through apparent synthesis. Gottfried refused the false synthesis, correctly and at cost.
The social paradoxes paper identifies recursive mindreading as central to how charismatic paradoxes succeed. Speaker and audience engage in tacit inference about what each other knows, and the strategy stays concealed from both parties simultaneously. Both sides benefit from the arrangement. Neither has incentive to examine it.
Gottfried breaks the recursion deliberately and constantly. He examines the strategies his coalition deploys. He describes how the neocons built their coalition. He names the mechanics of exclusion. He explains how civil religions reproduce. He makes visible what charismatic figures must keep invisible.
His historicism is the instrument of the breaking. A thinker who views values as products of specific historical communities cannot pretend, for his audience’s benefit, that those values descend from timeless truth. A thinker who views the managerial state as an emergent property of class interests cannot pretend the coalition he opposes believes its own rhetoric. A thinker who understands how coalitions police their boundaries cannot be surprised when his own coalition is policed. The sophistication blocks the concealment that would let charismatic authority accumulate.
This is why his narrow charismatic standing has not translated into mass audience capture. Inside the paleo subculture, where audiences value the historicist move more than they value charismatic reassurance, he functions as a founder figure. Outside that subculture, where audiences would need to experience his analysis as revelation, the historicism gets in the way. He is too quick to show how his own analysis works. The showing breaks the spell the analysis would otherwise cast.
Figures who refuse the charismatic concealment can still accumulate authority of a different kind. Horwitz has it. Certain academic theorists have it. Gottfried has it. The authority is scholarly rather than charismatic. It rewards precision, sustained argument, and intellectual honesty. It attracts readers who prefer tools over conviction. It does not attract coalitions that want affective confirmation of their commitments.
Gottfried is a carrier group leader for a lost trauma narrative. The misunderstanding essay showed him as a scholar whose self-image as truth-seeker blocks full recognition of his coalition function. The Becker hero system showed him as the witness who refuses forgetting.
The charisma and paradoxes frameworks name the specific performance skills Gottfried lacks, the specific paradoxes he cannot execute, and the specific tensions his coalition needed someone to personify that he could not personify. The lack is not a character flaw. It is a consequence of his intellectual commitments. A Gottfried who could execute the charismatic paradoxes would not be the historicist he is. The historicism and the charismatic incapacity are the same trait seen from different angles.
This reframes what his career cost. He did not merely lose a coalition fight to opponents with better institutional access. He also lost a charismatic competition to figures with better performance skills. Buchanan had more political charisma than Gottfried. Francis had more rhetorical charisma until he died. Carlson has more mass charisma now. Spencer briefly captured charismatic attention Gottfried could not hold. Each of these figures executed paradoxes Gottfried refused or could not perform.
The refusal is intellectually principled. A scholar who understands how charisma works cannot deploy it cleanly because the understanding prevents the concealment the deployment requires. Gottfried knows what charismatic performance is. He knows what it does to audiences. He knows why it works. The knowing makes him unable to do it himself. He is stuck producing scholarly work that charismatic performers can raid for material while he stays at the edge of the attention the work could have attracted.
This is the specific tragedy the frameworks make visible. His analytical tools are sharp enough to see through charismatic performance. The sharpness prevents him from producing it. The absence of the performance prevents the work from reaching the audience that would have validated the analysis. He is a man whose intelligence blocks the rewards his intelligence earned. No framework can dissolve this pattern because the pattern is what intelligence produces when it looks too clearly at the conditions of its own reception.
Coalitions need charismatic figures to personify their commitments. The figures who personify well do not understand what they are doing. The figures who understand what they are doing cannot personify. Gottfried belongs to the second group. His coalition got the theorist it deserved and the charismatic leader it never produced. The historical record will credit him with what charisma could not have preserved. The absence of charisma is why the credit is available at all.
Hero System
Gottfried sees himself as the witness who refuses to let the record be rewritten. The conservative movement was captured. The capture happened in ways that its beneficiaries have an interest in obscuring. Most conservatives today do not know who Mel Bradford was, why the Bradford affair mattered, who did what to whom in 1981, what the paleos were trying to preserve, or what the neocons replaced it with. The forgetting is not accidental. It serves the winning coalition. Someone has to remember, someone has to document, someone has to name the people and dates and decisions that the victors would prefer to leave unspecified.
This is the role Gottfried performs across fourteen books and four decades of editorial work at Chronicles. He remembers. He names names. He documents the exclusions. He writes the same story from different angles because the story can be buried once but not if it keeps being told. The hero in this drama is the one who holds the line of memory against the erasure the victors would impose.
The role has a specific emotional register that runs through his writing. It is not triumph. It is not even optimism about eventual vindication. It is the stubborn refusal to accept the official story, maintained past the point where maintenance has any practical payoff. The witness does not need to win. He needs to have been there and to have written it down. The immortality project is that the record survives even if the coalition that produced it does not.
A second role runs parallel. Gottfried is the heir to a tradition that the people who should have inherited it abandoned. The Old Right, the pre-war American right that was suspicious of centralized power, skeptical of foreign entanglements, rooted in regional and religious particularism, and committed to historical rather than propositional nationhood, had heirs. The heirs included the people who built the conservative movement in the 1950s and 1960s. Most of those heirs sold the inheritance for access to institutional power during the Cold War and the Reagan years. They became neocons or fusionists or Republican establishment figures who could no longer explain what the tradition they nominally represented actually stood for.
Gottfried casts himself as the heir who did not sell. He kept reading Burnham when Burnham became unfashionable. He kept reading the German historical school when American conservatism lost interest in European intellectual sources. He kept citing Kendall and Weaver and Bradford when the movement stopped mentioning them. He kept the genealogy alive. If the tradition recovers, it will recover because someone preserved the texts and the framework when preservation carried reputational cost.
The heir role supplies a different kind of significance than the witness role. The witness documents a crime. The heir maintains a treasure. Both roles cast Gottfried as faithful to something larger than himself, but the heir role gives him positive content to transmit rather than just a negative story to tell. When he edits Chronicles, when he founds the Mencken Club, when he mentors younger writers, he is performing the heir’s function. He is passing on what he inherited to the next generation of people who might be able to receive it.
Gottfried’s father fled the European catastrophe of the 1930s. Gottfried himself reads ten languages and has written on Hegel, Schmitt, Weimar political theory, the German historical school, Italian fascism, French reaction, and Spanish Carlism. He is an American who lives inside a European intellectual inheritance that his native country mostly does not engage with.
This supplies a third role. He is the refugee scholar’s son who keeps the old civilization’s intellectual resources available in a country that does not read them. Most American conservatives do not know Schmitt or Hegel or Maistre or de Bonald in any depth. Most American academics know them only through the filtering of secondary literature that processes them for ideological acceptability. Gottfried reads the originals and translates them into American contexts the originals never anticipated.
The role carries emotional weight his father’s biography supplies. Andrew Gottfried fled a civilization that destroyed itself. The son preserves fragments of what that civilization produced before it destroyed itself. The preservation is not nostalgic. It is practical. The tools European thought developed for analyzing centralized power, mass politics, civil religion, and managerial bureaucracy turn out to be useful for analyzing postwar American politics, which European analysts anticipated more clearly than American analysts did.
This role also connects Gottfried to a specific Jewish intellectual tradition. Hannah Arendt, Leo Strauss, Hans Morgenthau, Eric Voegelin, Karl Löwith, and others brought European political thought into American universities after fleeing the catastrophe. Gottfried is the heir of this tradition who refuses its liberal political conclusions while keeping its intellectual methods. The role is not comfortable. Most inheritors of the emigre tradition became consensus liberals or neoconservatives. Gottfried took the tools and applied them to targets the other emigres would have rejected. But he is still working inside the tradition they established, and the role gives him standing to criticize its American descendants on their own terrain.
A fourth role is more delicate and runs closer to what gives his writing its peculiar charge. American Jewish intellectual life after 1945 settled into a specific posture: support for civil rights, support for liberal immigration, support for the welfare state, support for Israel, hostility to racial science, hostility to ethnic particularism among Whites, and acceptance of the Holocaust as the defining trauma of modern political life. This posture had coalition reasons that made sense for the people who adopted it. It also functioned as a kind of civil religion that told American Jews who they were and what they owed.
Gottfried refuses the script. He criticizes neoconservative foreign policy. He questions the civil rights regime. He writes about Jewish intellectual networks without the pieties that usually accompany such writing. He engages heterodox thinkers who most American Jews would not engage. He maintains Jewish identity without maintaining the political positions that American Jewish institutional life treats as following from Jewish identity.
The role gives him a specific kind of significance that other paleo writers cannot claim. He is doing what he is doing as a Jew, on grounds that include his Jewish biography, and the doing is not available to Gentile analysts. When he argues that antifascist rhetoric has been weaponized into a smear against right-wing dissent, he argues as someone whose family fled actual fascists. When he argues that the Holocaust should not be deployed as a universal template, he argues from inside the community whose experience is being deployed. The argument carries weight his biography supplies.
This role has costs he has borne for decades. American Jewish institutional life has no place for him. The neocons treat him as an embarrassment. The liberal Jewish establishment treats him as a traitor. Most Jewish intellectuals will not cite him. The isolation is real and the hero system includes it. He is the Jew who stands apart because the standing-apart is the position his analysis requires. If he accepted the coalition posture, he could not produce the analysis. The refusal is the intellectual condition of possibility for the work.
A fifth role frames his relationship to the managerial state he has spent decades diagnosing. The apparatus rules through therapeutic bureaucracy, credentialed expertise, and the production of sacralized moral vocabulary that preempts dissent. The apparatus reproduces itself through the universities, the media, the professional accreditation bodies, the corporate HR functions, and the federal agencies that employ its graduates.
Gottfried positions himself as a scholar who refuses the apparatus’s authority to define what counts as legitimate thought. He retired from Elizabethtown College under pressure, from what he has described as administrative encouragement to leave. He edits Chronicles, which sits outside the respectable intellectual ecosystem. He publishes with presses that the apparatus does not rank highly. He speaks at conferences that the apparatus has blacklisted. He does what scholars are supposed to do, read widely, think carefully, write clearly, and engage serious interlocutors, while refusing the discipline that the apparatus uses to mark which scholars count.
The role casts him as maintaining the scholar’s function against the bureaucracy that has replaced it. Real scholarship, in this framing, is what Gottfried does. What the universities now reward is a corrupted simulacrum, peer review that polices conformity, publications that certify coalition membership, citations that rehearse orthodoxy, grants that fund compliant research programs. Gottfried’s scholarship matters because it is what scholarship looked like before the apparatus colonized the word.
This role is defensive. It does not promise that the apparatus will fall. It promises that scholarship will survive if someone keeps doing it under adverse conditions. The immortality project is that the thing called scholarship continues to exist as a live practice even while the institutions that were supposed to house it have become something else. Someone has to be doing it outside the institutions so that the memory of what it was remains available when the institutions collapse or transform.
The five roles are variations on a common theme. Gottfried is the figure who remains faithful to something that most of its official custodians have betrayed. The tradition, the civilization, the scholarly vocation, the Jewish intellectual inheritance, the conservative movement, all have been captured by coalitions that serve interests other than the interests the captured objects were supposed to serve. Gottfried refuses the capture. He maintains fidelity to the uncaptured version. He pays the cost of the fidelity in career terms and accepts the cost as the price of the role.
This is a classic Becker hero system. It supplies significance through sacrifice. It gives Gottfried a role in a drama larger than his mortal life. It lets him experience the reputational damage as meaningful rather than as simple loss. It provides a standard against which his participation can be measured and, he believes, eventually vindicated. It connects him to a specific lineage, the Old Right, the emigre scholars, the pre-apparatus Jewish intellectuals, the paleoconservative tradition, and makes him continuous with figures whose work he considers valuable even as official memory dims.
The system gives him reasons to keep going when material rewards do not. It produces emotional stability in conditions that would otherwise destabilize him. It makes his isolation survivable because the isolation is cast as adequate to the role. It makes his continued productivity possible because the productivity is not contingent on reception. He writes the books whether or not anyone reads them because writing the books is what the hero in his drama does.
Hero systems produce affective commitment at the price of analytical distance from the commitments they produce. Gottfried cannot fully see his own coalition behavior because seeing it would undermine the witness-and-heir role that sustains him. He cannot fully acknowledge the stochastic character of the paleo defeat because full acknowledgment would reduce the defeat from sacred trauma to contingent loss. He cannot fully apply his own theoretical tools to his own position because applying them all the way through would produce a portrait of himself as a coalition operative producing coalition-serving work, and that portrait is incompatible with the role he needs to play.
The costs are not hidden from him. He has moments of recognition scattered through his writing. He notes his own solipsism in the memoir. He acknowledges his isolation. He gestures toward the coalition dimension of his own work. But the acknowledgments remain moments. They do not become the controlling framework. The controlling framework remains the heroic one because the heroic one supplies what he needs to continue.
The charisma framework predicted that Gottfried should have burned out. A thinker who produces high-quality work for decades without mass audience capture should eventually either adapt his performance to reach audiences or stop producing. Most writers who fail at charismatic reach either learn to perform or lose the motivation to keep working. Gottfried has done neither. He has continued producing at a steady rate across fifty years despite the audience never arriving. The hero system is what explains the continuation.
Becker’s framework describes hero systems as immortality projects that give ordinary lives participation in something larger than mortality. The systems can be religious, national, professional, familial, or intellectual. What they share is a structure that converts the holder’s actions into meaningful participation in a drama that outlasts him.
Most intellectual hero systems depend on audience validation. The scholar who needs citations, the public intellectual who needs book sales, the academic who needs graduate students, the journalist who needs readers, all run hero systems that require the audience to supply the feedback that makes the system function. When the audience fails to arrive, the system starves. The holder either changes his work to attract the audience or loses faith in the system he was running.
Gottfried’s hero system is unusual because it does not require the audience. Each of the five roles generates significance through fidelity rather than through reception. The witness against forgetting succeeds by remembering, whether or not anyone else remembers with him. The displaced heir succeeds by preserving the inheritance, whether or not a successor claims it. The European intellectual in American exile succeeds by keeping the tradition alive, whether or not any American reads it. The Jew who refuses the script succeeds by refusing, whether or not the refusal persuades anyone. The scholar against the apparatus succeeds by scholaring, whether or not the apparatus notices.
None of these roles requires an audience to function. All of them require only Gottfried himself to perform them. The system is audience-independent. This is what lets him sustain the work without the reception.
Historical examples help locate Gottfried’s situation. Monastic scholars who preserved texts through the early medieval period ran audience-independent hero systems. No mass audience existed for their work. Most of what they copied would not be read by contemporaries. They kept copying anyway because the system gave significance to the copying itself. The significance did not require readers. It required fidelity to the tradition the copying served.
Samizdat writers in the late Soviet period ran similar systems. They produced work that small circles of readers passed hand to hand. No publication, no royalties, no recognition, minimal impact. They kept writing because the system gave significance to the writing whether or not it reached anyone. The writing was the participation in the drama. The drama did not require audience capture to be meaningful.
Certain kinds of religious witnesses run audience-independent systems. The prophet who speaks in the wilderness, the heretic who preserves the persecuted doctrine, the confessor who testifies in conditions that preclude response. The system is not designed to convert audiences. It is designed to bear witness, which is a function the witness performs for the truth being witnessed rather than for observers who might receive the witness.
Gottfried belongs to this class of figures. His hero system is closer to monastic preservation and prophetic witness than to modern public intellectual performance. He has intuited this about himself across decades of writing. The Mencken Club is a kind of monastery. Chronicles is a kind of samizdat. The H.L. Mencken he invokes was a figure who wrote as if the audience did not matter, and Gottfried has adopted a version of the same posture.
Audience-independent hero systems come with a specific trade-off. They produce resilience at the cost of reach. The holder cannot be destroyed by audience failure because his significance does not depend on audience success. He can also not be helped by audience success because his significance does not respond to audience feedback.
Gottfried has both halves of this trade-off in full. He cannot be destroyed by the managerial state’s refusal to recognize him because his system does not require recognition. He also cannot be helped by the late-arriving vindication of his managerial-state thesis because the vindication arrives too late to change the role he has been playing. The witness has already witnessed. The heir has already preserved. The exile has already stayed faithful. The refuser has already refused. The scholar has already scholared. Late arrival of audience cannot retroactively supply the reward that charismatic success would have supplied in real time.
This is visible in how he writes about current developments. The Trump years partially vindicated his analysis. The managerial-state critique reached mass audiences, albeit in degraded form. His own readership probably grew. Younger writers who had never heard of him before 2016 started citing him. A more conventional hero system would have produced visible emotional response to this shift. The prophet validated. The outcast received. The scholar finally read.
Gottfried’s writing shows almost none of this emotional response. He notes the developments. He participates in the conversations. He remains essentially unchanged. The hero system that sustained him through exclusion does not know how to process partial inclusion because it was not designed to respond to inclusion. It was designed to sustain the work regardless of what happens outside the work. The emotional flatness in the face of apparent vindication is what audience-independent systems produce.
Audience-independent hero systems shape the work they sustain. The monastic scribe copies what the tradition requires rather than what readers would enjoy. The samizdat writer writes what must be said rather than what publishers would accept. The prophetic witness speaks what the truth demands rather than what listeners would welcome. The work reflects the system’s indifference to reception.
Gottfried’s work reflects this indifference. It is not written to be charismatic. It is not written to capture audiences. It is not written to build coalitions. It is written to be accurate, to be thorough, to document what the tradition requires documenting, to preserve what the inheritance requires preserving, to witness what the witnessing role requires witnessing.
Readers who encounter the work expecting conventional public intellectual performance find it strange. It does not perform the moves charismatic public intellectuals perform. It does not manage the reader’s experience. It does not produce the affective rewards readers expect. It just does what its hero system requires. The work is not less valuable for this. It is differently valuable. It rewards readers who have the patience to read it on its own terms and frustrates readers who expect it to reward them on theirs.
The younger writers who have begun reading Gottfried more closely are readers who have developed the patience. They come to him not expecting charismatic uplift but analytical depth. They find what the hero system produced. They transmit the analytical depth to their own audiences in charismatic form that Gottfried could not supply. The division of labor works. Gottfried produces the material. Others charismatize it. The work reaches audiences through intermediaries rather than through Gottfried himself.
Five decades of continuous output is rare in any field. Most scholars peak in a decade or two and then either repeat themselves or stop. Most public intellectuals have shorter peaks. Most writers who produce fourteen substantial books have done so over compressed periods of intense productivity followed by decline.
Gottfried has produced steadily. The books have maintained quality across the arc. The editorial work at Chronicles continues. The correspondence continues. The lectures continue. The mentorship of younger writers continues. At eighty-four, the output rate remains roughly what it was at sixty. This is what audience-independent hero systems produce in their holders. The system does not run on external validation that could fail. It runs on internal fidelity that does not fail as long as the holder remains capable of performing the role.
Charisma-dependent hero systems burn their holders out. The performer who needs audience response exhausts himself managing the audience. The public intellectual who needs citations contorts his work to produce them. The prophet who needs converts eventually gives up when the converts do not come. Gottfried’s system does not burn him out because it does not require the responses that charisma-dependent systems require. The system costs him what it costs him, the exclusion, the modest living, the absence from respectable venues, but it does not exhaust him. It sustains him.
The frameworks also predict what the immunity costs. A hero system that does not require audience cannot be corrected by audience. If the work is drifting in ways that audience feedback would catch, the system provides no signal that correction is needed. The holder just keeps producing because the production is what the system requires.
Some of Gottfried’s late work shows this pattern. Repetitions of earlier arguments. Returns to the same grievances. Extended engagement with opponents who no longer matter. Positions held more rigidly than the evidence warrants because no audience is pushing back hard enough to prompt reconsideration. These are patterns that audience-dependent hero systems correct automatically because the audience stops showing up when the work drifts. Gottfried’s system has no such correction built in.
This does not mean the late work is bad. Most of it is still analytically sharp. The point is that the quality is maintained by Gottfried’s own standards rather than by external pressure. When his standards slip, as they occasionally do in the memoir passages and in certain repetitive polemics, no external force corrects the slippage. The hero system protects him from audience failure and also protects him from audience feedback that would have been useful.
The trade-off is specific and the framework makes it visible. Writers who depend on audiences get both the destruction the audiences can inflict and the correction the audiences can provide. Writers who are audience-independent get neither. Gottfried has written himself into a position where he cannot be hurt by his audience and cannot be helped by it either. He has the full resilience and the full isolation the position entails.
The audience-independent hero system creates a specific problem for transmission to the next generation. The system sustained Gottfried because it was his. The roles fit his biography, his training, his temperament, his Jewish refugee background, his European intellectual formation. The system cannot simply be handed to younger writers whose biographies do not fit the roles.
Younger paleos who admire Gottfried cannot inherit the witness role because they were not present for the events he witnesses. They cannot inherit the European intellectual role because they do not read ten languages and were not trained on Hegel and Schmitt from the original texts. They cannot inherit the Jewish refugee role because they are not Jewish and their families did not flee Nazis. They can inherit the heir role and the refuser role in modified forms, but the inheritance will be partial.
This is one reason the paleo movement reproduces itself badly. Its founding figure runs a hero system that cannot be replicated. Younger writers who want to occupy paleo intellectual space have to construct their own hero systems from whatever materials their own biographies supply. Some have done this. Most have not. The ones who have not tend to drift toward charisma-dependent systems that offer the rewards their biographies do allow them to capture. These drifts are what produce the Spencer-style collapses and the Carlson-style mass-audience conversions. The original Gottfried pattern cannot be scaled.
The charisma failure and the hero system are the same phenomenon viewed from two angles. Gottfried’s hero system is what he has instead of charisma. The system supplies the significance that charismatic audience capture would have supplied. It supplies it through a different channel that does not require the paradoxes the charismatic figure must execute.
The system is not a consolation prize. It is a specific intellectual accomplishment with costs and benefits of its own. It produces fourteen books. It sustains an editor for forty years. It holds a founder figure in place for a small intellectual subculture. It demonstrates that serious work is possible without mass audience capture and without institutional reward. It models a form of intellectual life that most contemporary public intellectuals have forgotten how to run.
The system is also limited in exactly the ways audience-independent systems are limited. It does not reach audiences. It does not build coalitions. It does not produce the charismatic leaders the coalition needs to survive. It cannot be scaled or transmitted cleanly. It dies with its holder.
When Gottfried dies, the hero system dies with him. The books will remain. The frames will keep traveling. The scholarship will keep being useful to whoever finds it. What will not remain is the specific integrated identity, the witness-heir-exile-refuser-scholar, that made the production of the work possible across five decades. Nobody else is running that system. Nobody else can. Its conditions of possibility were specific to his biography and his moment.
This is the bittersweet symmetry the frameworks produce. The hero system that kept him working past all charismatic failure is also the thing that cannot outlast him. He will leave the work. He will not leave the system that produced the work. The younger paleos will have to build their own systems, and the systems they build will be different from his, and the work they produce will be different from his work. He has been what his moment required, and no successor will be precisely what the next moment requires, because the next moment will require something else. The witness who refused forgetting will himself be forgotten as a living figure and remembered, if at all, through the work the forgetting preserved. That is the asymmetry between hero systems and the work they sustain. The work can outlast the holder. The system that produced it cannot.
Gottfried and the first-generation neoconservatives were coevals who ran opposite hero systems inside the same historical moment. Podhoretz was born in 1930, Kristol in 1920, Decter in 1927, Gottfried in 1941. They read the same books, passed through the same universities, watched the same political events, and argued with each other across the same decades. The material they worked with was shared. What differed was the hero system each built out of it. Becker’s framework makes the comparison productive because it shows the systems as functional equivalents rather than as the truth-telling of one side versus the delusions of the other. Both systems worked. Both gave their holders significance. Both produced the output the holders produced. Neither is more honest than the other.
Podhoretz, Kristol, and Decter constructed their hero system around a specific structure: the prophet who moved from left to right because he saw clearly what his former comrades refused to see. The structure required certain elements. An origin inside the left that established the prophet’s early credentials as a member in good standing. A moment of recognition when something about the left became visible that its partisans could not see. A painful breaking away that demonstrated the prophet’s willingness to accept cost for truth. A new position that looked like betrayal from the old side and like wisdom from the new side. And a subsequent life spent explaining what had been seen, to audiences who needed the explanation because they had not made the same journey.
Podhoretz’s Breaking Ranks (1979) and Ex-Friends (1999) formalized this structure. He had been the young editor of Commentary when it was a liberal flagship. He had been friends with Norman Mailer, Lionel Trilling, Hannah Arendt, and Lillian Hellman. He had moved right during the late 1960s as the New Left’s excesses, the Vietnam protests’ sympathies for North Vietnam, and the cultural radicalism of the period became visible to him. He broke with the friends who could not break with the movement. He spent the rest of his career explaining what he had seen.
Kristol’s Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea (1995) ran the same structure with different content. Trotskyist at City College in the 1930s. Liberal anti-communist in the 1940s and 1950s. Neoconservative founder in the 1970s. The movement was his insight made institutional. The insight was that good intentions produce bad outcomes when they are not disciplined by attention to how humans and societies actually function. Liberalism had lost that discipline. He had recovered it by breaking with the liberalism that had shaped him.
Decter’s An Old Wife’s Tale (2001) told the same story from the feminist movement’s flank. She had been a liberal feminist before feminism lost its mind. She had watched the movement collapse into hostility toward men, family, and traditional sexuality. She had broken with it. The breaking was the proof of her clear sight. The subsequent career was the consequence of the sight.
What This System Produced
The prophetic conversion system produced specific outcomes. It gave its holders a clear narrative they could retell across decades without losing coherence. It produced a ready response to every attack: critics who accused them of abandoning principle were replaying the same blindness the prophet had already broken through. It generated continuous material because every new development could be interpreted through the conversion framework as further confirmation of what the prophet had seen. It allowed the holders to age without losing their story. The conversion was in the past. Everything since had been elaboration.
It also produced institutional success because the narrative was one the postwar American establishment needed. The establishment required defenders against the New Left’s cultural radicalism. It required critics of Soviet power who came from the left’s own vocabulary. It required voices that could explain America to Americans in language that retained moral seriousness without succumbing to either conservative nostalgia or liberal drift. The neocons supplied what the establishment needed. The establishment rewarded them with the positions, the funding, the platforms, and the influence that their hero system implicitly promised but did not directly request.
The hero system concealed the establishment fit. That concealment was part of what made the system work. If Podhoretz had presented as a man seeking influence through ideological repositioning, the positioning would have been discounted. He presented as a man who had been painfully forced into his positions by truths he could not deny. The painfulness was load-bearing. It certified that the positions were not self-interested. The certification let the influence flow.
Becker’s framework explains why this worked. Hero systems require the holder to experience his role as significance-supplying rather than as strategy-executing. The neocon prophets experienced their conversion as genuine. They were not cynical. They had actually broken with their former communities. The breaks had cost them friendships and standing inside those communities. The pain was real. What the framework adds is that the realness of the pain did not preclude the functionality of the structure. Hero systems work precisely because the holders experience them as truth rather than as strategy. The experience and the function are compatible.
Gottfried’s Inverse System
Gottfried constructed an opposite hero system out of closely related material. He was born later, into a refugee Jewish family rather than into the New York Jewish intellectual establishment that produced the neocons. He studied at Yale rather than at City College. He read European intellectual history rather than American political theory. His formation was different enough that the prophetic conversion structure was not available to him. He had never been on the left in the way that made right-ward conversion dramatically meaningful. He had been trained by Marcuse but had never joined the movement Marcuse inspired.
What Gottfried constructed instead was the faithful remnant hero system. Not the prophet who moved from one camp to another, but the witness who stayed where he had always been while the camp around him transformed into something unrecognizable. The Old Right he identified with, the pre-war American right of regional particularism, non-interventionism, and constitutional restraint, had been captured by the neocons. The tradition had not moved. The institutional apparatus that was supposed to carry it had moved. Gottfried’s role was to remain faithful to the tradition while the apparatus abandoned it.
This is a different structure from the neocon one and produces different outputs. The prophet accumulates moral authority through having changed. The witness accumulates moral authority through having remained. The prophet’s narrative requires institutional reception because the prophet must be validated by the new community he joins. The witness’s narrative does not require reception because fidelity is verified by the holder’s own consistency rather than by external reward.
The inverse structure predicted inverse outcomes. The neocons got institutional success because their hero system fit establishment needs. Gottfried got institutional exile because his hero system contradicted establishment needs. Both outcomes were functional. Both systems gave their holders what hero systems give holders. The systems differed in what they required the world to supply. The prophetic system required audiences and institutions. The witness system required only the holder’s continued fidelity.
The Sincerity Symmetry
The framework refuses the judgment that either system is more sincere than the other. Gottfried’s coalition often makes the accusation against the neocons: they moved right for career reasons, their principles were flexible, their convictions followed their self-interest. The framework denies the premise. Podhoretz, Kristol, and Decter experienced their conversions as genuinely painful breaks with communities they had loved. The pain was real. The friendships they lost were friendships they valued. The opportunity costs of the break were opportunity costs they had actually considered. That the break also opened new careers does not mean the break was a career move. Both things were true. The sincerity and the functionality coexisted.
The same framework applied in reverse refuses the neocon charge against Gottfried: that his paleo position was cover for resentments about professional exclusion, that his critique of neocon ascendancy was motivated by his own failure to benefit from it, that he found reasons to oppose what he could not have joined. Some of this is true at the level of motivation. His hero system was constructed partly in response to his exclusion. But the construction was not cynical either. He experienced the paleo position as faithfulness to a tradition he genuinely believed in. The experience was real. That his position also gave his exclusion meaning does not mean the position was invented to justify the exclusion. Both things were true.
Hero systems are not chosen from a menu. They are constructed from available materials under biographical pressure. The neocons constructed their system from the materials their biographies supplied: New York Jewish intellectual formation, left-wing origins, painful awareness of Soviet crimes and New Left excesses, institutional opportunities that opened as they moved right. Gottfried constructed his from different materials: refugee family background, European intellectual training, formation outside the New York circuit, exclusion from the apparatus his credentials would have otherwise fit. Each holder did what was possible given what each had to work with. Neither holder chose his system in any strong sense. The systems chose them by being the hero systems that their biographies made available.
The two hero systems could not tolerate each other because each needed to be the true version of American intellectual conservatism. The prophetic conversion narrative required the former left to have been confused and the new right to be clear-sighted. The witness narrative required the traditional right to have been authentic and the new right to be a managerial substitute. These are incompatible framings of the same historical period. One side is the real story. The other side is the obscuring counter-narrative.
The fight was not resolvable by evidence because both framings fit the evidence. The neocons could read the movement of Podhoretz or Kristol as painful but necessary conversion. The paleos could read the same movement as strategic repositioning that captured an inheritance it had no claim to. The same events supported both readings. Each reading made the other unintelligible. Each side’s hero system required the other side’s system to be false.
This is why the paleo-neocon fight could not end. Coalition fights over institutional resources can end through settlement or exhaustion. Fights between hero systems cannot, because each system’s significance depends on the other system being wrong. If the neocons were actually prophets, Gottfried’s witness role was misguided. If Gottfried was actually a faithful remnant, the neocons were impostors. The hero systems could not negotiate because negotiation would have required each side to acknowledge what it could not acknowledge without dissolving its own role.
The fight produced mutual caricatures. Frum caricatured Gottfried as a solipsistic grievance-collector because any more generous reading of Gottfried would have undermined the neocon conversion narrative. Gottfried caricatured the neocons as Wilsonian interventionists and Trotskyist fellow-travelers because any more generous reading would have undermined the paleo witness narrative. Both caricatures were partly accurate. Neither was the complete picture. The completeness was unavailable to either side because completeness would have required abandoning the hero system that made the critique possible.
The Asymmetry the Framework Does Not Hide
The framework’s insistence on treating both systems as functionally equivalent should not obscure the asymmetry in their outcomes. The prophetic conversion system produced institutional success because it fit establishment needs. The witness system produced institutional exile because it did not fit those needs. Both systems were functional for their holders. Only one was functional for the institutions the holders wanted to influence.
This asymmetry has a specific implication Becker’s framework makes visible. Hero systems that align with institutional needs get amplified by those institutions. Systems that do not align get starved. The alignment is not a judgment on the hero system’s accuracy. It is a judgment on its fit with what the institutions require. The institutions did not select for accuracy. They selected for serviceability. The neocon system was more serviceable. The paleo system was more accurate on some specific questions, particularly about the limits of democratic universalism, the costs of interventionism, and the emergence of the managerial state. Accuracy did not translate into amplification because accuracy was not what the institutions needed.
The framework makes this translatable into a claim that is not partisan. Some hero systems produce outputs institutions can use. Other hero systems produce outputs institutions cannot use. The first kind gets amplified, whether the outputs are accurate or not. The second kind gets exiled, whether the outputs are accurate or not. The accuracy and the amplification are independent variables. Treating them as correlated is the specific error institutional actors make when they assume that amplified voices are amplified because they are right. The neocons made this error. They mistook their institutional reception for validation. Gottfried has mostly avoided the opposite error. He has not mistaken his exclusion for validation either, though his coalition sometimes does.
Hero systems often require the other side to exist as a foil. The prophetic conversion narrative required the left to continue existing in a form that the prophet had correctly rejected. If the left had followed the prophet’s lead, the conversion would have lost its significance. The neocons therefore had a structural interest in the left remaining confused, radical, and morally compromised. Their hero system needed the opponents its conversion had broken with.
The witness hero system requires the captured apparatus to continue operating in captured form. If the apparatus returned to the tradition the witness preserves, the witness would have no one left to witness against. Gottfried has a structural interest in the conservative movement remaining neoconized. His hero system needs the opponents his fidelity has diagnosed. If the movement reverted to paleoconservative commitments tomorrow, Gottfried’s witness role would become redundant. The preservation work would be absorbed by the apparatus. The exile would end. The significance the exile supplied would end with it.
Neither Podhoretz nor Gottfried would accept that their hero systems require their opponents to continue occupying the positions the systems oppose. They experience themselves as hoping for their opponents’ correction. Becker’s framework says the hope is partially false. Full correction would unmake the role. The systems are calibrated to perpetual struggle rather than to resolution. This is part of why the paleo-neocon fight has continued long past the point where the original coalition that produced it has dispersed. The remaining combatants on each side need the fight to continue because the fight is what supplies their hero systems with the opposition each system requires.
The final observation the framework generates concerns what outlives each system. The neocons’ institutional success has been eroding. The Iraq war discredited the foreign policy that was their signature contribution. The 2008 financial crisis discredited the economic policies their coalition supported. The Trump era has pushed them out of the Republican Party they helped build. The institutions that amplified them are no longer amplifying them. Their hero system continues to supply them with significance, but the external validation their system implicitly required has been withdrawn. They are older now and increasingly isolated. The prophets have become the elders who are no longer consulted.
Gottfried’s hero system is unaffected by these developments. His exile was built in. The apparatus’ withdrawal of attention was a feature of his position from the start. The partial vindication of his analysis arrives late and does not require him to change his role. He is still the witness, still the heir, still the exile. The conditions that made his hero system functional have not changed because the system did not require those conditions to change.
Hero systems that depend on institutional amplification are vulnerable to institutional withdrawal. Systems that do not depend on such amplification are not. The neocons’ system has been failing them in late life because the institutions they counted on have stopped supplying the significance. Gottfried’s system continues supplying significance because it was never routed through institutions that could fail.
Both systems were sincere. Both were functional. Both produced the work their holders produced. The systems have aged differently because they were built on different foundations. The prophetic conversion was a high-reward, high-dependency construction that delivered enormous significance while the institutions supplied it and became brittle when the institutions withdrew. The witness system was a low-reward, low-dependency construction that delivered modest significance continuously and retains that delivery regardless of what happens around it. Gottfried will die with his hero system intact. His neocon opponents will die with theirs partially hollowed by the institutions that abandoned them before they did.
Gottfried’s system sustained him through what the neocon system would have treated as failure. The neocons’ system sustained them through what Gottfried’s system would have treated as corruption. Each system saw the other as the wrong one to have built. Each held the holder through what that holder’s life required. That is what hero systems do. Whether either system was the right one to have built is a question the framework cannot answer because the question presupposes a vantage outside all hero systems from which the judgment could be made. Becker’s framework says no such vantage exists. People build the systems they can build from the materials they have. They live inside those systems. They die inside them. The systems were sufficient to the lives. That is all hero systems are supposed to be.
Becker argues that hero systems are inherited rather than invented. Individuals rarely construct their significance-supplying roles from scratch. They receive them from parents, teachers, traditions, institutions, and the surrounding culture, then modify them under the pressure of their own biographies. A hero system that cannot be inherited dies with its holder. The work the holder produced may survive. The system that produced the work does not.
Gottfried’s hero system faces an acute transmission problem. The five roles that sustained him were calibrated to a biography that his potential successors do not share. Some of the roles can be inherited in modified form. Some cannot. The transmission failures predict specific features of the paleo project’s trajectory after Gottfried dies.
The witness against forgetting is the hardest role to transmit because witnessing requires having been present. Gottfried was present for the Bradford affair. He knew the people involved. He watched the decisions being made in real time. He experienced the exclusion as a participant rather than as a historical subject. His witness authority rests on that presence. He can say what happened because he saw it. The authority is first-person and cannot be transferred.
Younger paleo writers were not present. The oldest of them were small children when Bradford was blocked. Most were not yet born. They know the Bradford story because Gottfried told it to them. They do not know it because they lived it. This is a different relationship to the material and produces a different kind of authority. They are historians of the event rather than witnesses to it.
The shift matters more than it might seem. The witness speaks with the emotional weight of having been there. The historian speaks with the analytical weight of having studied it. Both kinds of authority have value. They are not interchangeable. Audiences respond differently to each. The witness commands attention through presence. The historian commands attention through accuracy. Gottfried commanded attention through presence. His successors will have to command attention through accuracy, and the accuracy will be harder to maintain once the primary witnesses are gone and the historical record becomes contested.
This is the pattern that occurs in every intellectual movement built around a specific foundational injury. The Frankfurt School carried the Weimar collapse as lived memory during Adorno and Horkheimer’s lifetimes. After them, the school’s inheritors worked from texts and testimony rather than from presence. The work shifted from witnessing to interpretation. Interpretation is a legitimate activity. It produces different work than witnessing does, and the transition from one to the other marks the end of the founding period and the beginning of the scholarly period. Paleoconservatism is approaching the same transition.
What dies with Gottfried, in other words, is not the Bradford story but the first-person authority behind the telling. The story will continue to be told. It will be told differently by people who read it rather than saw it. Some of the emotional weight will transfer. Some will not. The proportion that fails to transfer is the proportion the witness role cannot transmit.
Gottfried reads ten languages. He was trained on Hegel, Schmitt, Marcuse, and the German historical school in original texts. His father fled Budapest. His intellectual formation happened inside a European tradition that American conservatism mostly does not engage. This is a specific biographical combination that his younger successors cannot reproduce.
Most younger paleos read at best French and some read German, but few have the deep philological training Gottfried had. They encounter Schmitt through translations. They encounter Hegel through anglophone secondary literature. They read Burnham and Francis and Kendall in English. The European-American bridge that Gottfried walked back and forth across is not a bridge they can walk in the same way.
This produces a specific deformation in what gets inherited. The European intellectual resources will thin. The arguments that depended on Schmitt’s decisionism, Hegel’s historicism, Löwith’s political theology, and the longer European tradition of reactionary thought will become harder to sustain at the level Gottfried sustained them. The younger paleos will work from the anglophone paleo corpus, which means they will work from Gottfried’s books, from Francis, from Weaver, from Bradford, from Kendall, and from a handful of others. This is a substantial corpus but a thinner one than Gottfried himself drew on. The thinning will show up as reduced theoretical depth in subsequent paleo work. The arguments will get simpler. The references will narrow. The connection to the longer European tradition will fade.
This is also the pattern that has occurred in every American intellectual movement built on European foundations. The original emigre generation carried the European inheritance in their heads. The next generation studied the emigres. The generation after that studied the students of the emigres. By the third generation, the European sources have become ritual citations rather than living influences. The paleos will follow this trajectory because the linguistic and philological conditions that made Gottfried’s work possible are not conditions that can be reproduced at scale in contemporary American education.
The Jew who refuses the official script is a role available only to Jews, and among Jews only to those positioned to refuse it. Gottfried’s Hungarian refugee background, his father’s fiery courage, his own distance from American Jewish institutional life, and his willingness to criticize Jewish intellectual networks from inside the community gave him a specific rhetorical position that no non-Jewish writer can occupy.
Younger paleos include a small number of Jews, some of whom are trying to occupy similar positions. The majority are Gentile. The Gentile majority cannot simply inherit the role. When a Gentile writer makes the same arguments Gottfried makes about Jewish neoconservative networks, the arguments land differently. They carry different risks. They attract different accusations. They are read differently by audiences. The biographical position is load-bearing. Without it, the arguments lose some of the rhetorical resources that made Gottfried’s versions work.
This creates a transmission problem the younger paleos have handled in two ways. Some have tried to make the arguments anyway, accepting the accusations that follow when Gentile writers criticize Jewish intellectual networks. This path produces the figures who slide from paleoconservatism toward explicit White nationalism or toward anti-Jewish positions Gottfried would have refused. Spencer is the most visible example. The logic of the slide is that without the biographical shield Gottfried possessed, the arguments require a different framing, and the different framing tends to harden into something Gottfried never endorsed.
Others have avoided the arguments entirely, adopting paleo positions that do not require the specifically Jewish critique Gottfried made central to his analysis. These writers produce paleo work stripped of one of its most distinctive features. The work is intellectually legitimate but theoretically thinner than Gottfried’s. It has dropped material that required Gottfried’s biography to deploy safely.
The Jewish minority among younger paleos who can potentially inherit the role face their own problem. They do not have Gottfried’s refugee background. They are American-born Jews whose relationship to the Holocaust, to the civil religion of antifascism, and to the postwar Jewish establishment is mediated differently than his was. Their critiques of those institutions come from different biographical sources. Some of this work is impressive. None of it can replicate the specific authority Gottfried’s background supplied.
The scholar against the apparatus is the role that transmits most cleanly, and for specific reasons. The role does not require presence at founding events. It does not require European linguistic training. It does not require Jewish biography. It requires intellectual seriousness, willingness to work outside respectable venues, and commitment to scholarly standards that the apparatus has largely abandoned. These are transferable conditions. Any capable scholar with the temperament can occupy the role.
Younger paleo writers who have inherited this role are the ones producing the most durable work. They read widely. They argue carefully. They engage serious interlocutors. They publish in venues the apparatus does not rank highly. They are doing what scholars are supposed to do under conditions that do not reward the doing. The role is sustainable across generations because its conditions can be reproduced by any writer with the relevant intellectual capacities.
This is where the paleo tradition has its best transmission prospects. The analytical frameworks Gottfried developed, the managerial-state thesis, the critique of civil religion, the historicist challenge to Strauss, the analysis of antifascism as moveable smear, are inheritable by careful readers regardless of their biographies. The frameworks can be taught. They can be applied to new material. They can be refined and extended. The younger writers who have focused on this dimension of Gottfried’s work are producing output that could continue the tradition indefinitely.
The cost is that the transmitted paleo tradition will be thinner than Gottfried’s version. It will lose the presence, the European depth, and the Jewish biographical resources that gave his work its specific texture. What remains will be a scholarly tradition of managerial-state analysis, civil-religion critique, and historicist resistance to universalism. This is a real inheritance. It is not everything Gottfried was doing.
The displaced heir is the role with the most complicated transmission prospects. Gottfried cast himself as heir to a tradition his official custodians abandoned. The tradition was specific: the pre-war American Old Right of regional particularism, constitutional restraint, and non-interventionism, filtered through mid-century thinkers like Burnham, Kendall, Weaver, Chodorov, and Flynn.
Younger paleos can inherit the heir role, but they will inherit it to a different tradition. By the time they have absorbed Gottfried’s version of the inheritance, the tradition they are preserving has become the Gottfried-mediated paleo corpus itself. They are heirs to Gottfried’s heir role rather than to the original Old Right he was trying to preserve. The transmission produces a mutation specific to intellectual traditions in their second and third generations.
This mutation has specific predictable effects. Younger writers will cite Gottfried as foundational rather than as transmitter. They will treat the paleo corpus as the tradition rather than as one generation’s attempt to recover an older tradition. The layering that was visible in Gottfried’s work, the Old Right material filtered through Gottfried’s European training and emigre perspective, will flatten. The European layer will fade. The Old Right layer will be received through Gottfried’s version rather than directly. The resulting tradition will be more homogeneous, thinner, and more centered on Gottfried himself as the foundational figure.
This is how intellectual traditions typically reproduce. Each generation reads the previous generation more than the generation before that. By the third generation, the founders are canonical and their sources are footnotes. Gottfried will become the canonical figure. His sources will become the footnotes. The paleo tradition that survives will be a Gottfried-centric tradition rather than an Old Right tradition Gottfried participated in transmitting.
The witness role dies with Gottfried. The European intellectual role thins drastically. The Jewish refugee role transmits only to the small Jewish minority among his successors, and even there in weakened form. The scholar role transmits cleanly. The heir role transmits in mutated form that centers Gottfried himself.
The surviving hero system for younger paleos will be significantly thinner than Gottfried’s. It will consist primarily of the scholar role plus a version of the heir role in which Gottfried has become the founding figure. The witness, exile, and refuser roles will mostly not survive. The younger writers will need to construct additional significance from materials their own biographies supply, which means they will build hero systems that blend partial Gottfried inheritance with resources he did not have access to.
Some of these resources are better than his. Younger paleos have access to the internet, to social media platforms, to podcast audiences, to Substack subscriptions. They can build readerships Gottfried could not have reached through Chronicles magazine alone. They can reach younger audiences who will never buy a book. They can participate in the attention economy in ways Gottfried never did. These are genuine advantages that the new generation can use.
Other resources are worse. The younger paleos do not have the depth of training Gottfried received. They do not have his foreign language skills. They do not have his decades of correspondence with serious European and American intellectuals. Their readings will be shallower by necessity. They will work faster because the attention economy demands it. They will produce more but reflect less. This is the contemporary condition for all intellectual work, not a paleo-specific problem, but it bites especially hard for a tradition that depended on theoretical depth.
Whether the paleo project survives Gottfried’s death depends on what we mean by survival. The books will remain. The frames will keep traveling. The younger scholarly paleos will continue producing work. The analytical tradition will not disappear.
What will disappear is the specific thing Gottfried was doing, the integrated performance of all five roles by a single scholar trained across multiple European intellectual traditions, writing at book length, maintaining a small magazine across decades, and holding the tradition together through his own continued output. Nobody else is doing this now. Nobody is going to start. The conditions that made it possible do not exist anymore and will not be recreated.
The project will survive as a scholarly tradition with occasional charismatic performers who popularize the analytical material for mass audiences. It will not survive as Gottfried’s project. The scholarly work will get thinner over time, and the charismatic performances will get further from the scholarly work that supposedly grounds them. Within a generation or two, the connection between the charismatic paleo voice and the scholarly paleo corpus will weaken to the point where most audiences cannot tell that the voice claims to rest on the corpus at all.
This is the pattern every intellectual tradition follows as it moves from founding to inheritance to dilution. Freud’s tradition followed it. Marx’s tradition followed it. The Frankfurt School followed it. Leo Strauss’s tradition followed it. The neoconservatives’ own tradition is following it now. There is nothing specific to paleoconservatism that would exempt it from the pattern. Gottfried was a founding figure. Founding figures die. Their traditions continue in forms the founders would have recognized only partially.
Gottfried is intellectually acute enough to know most of this. He has watched the Frankfurt School thin. He has watched the Old Right he inherited thin before him. He has watched the neocon tradition he opposed begin to thin. He understands how intellectual traditions attenuate across generations. He knows his own succession problem is severe.
What he has done in response is what founders typically do. He has written the books he could write while he could write them. He has edited the magazine. He has trained a handful of younger writers directly through correspondence and mentorship. He has founded the institutional apparatus, the Mencken Club, that might survive him at least briefly. He has accepted that the tradition will continue in diluted form because diluted continuation is the best realistic outcome for any intellectual tradition built around a specific founder’s biography.
The alternative would have been to train successors more aggressively, to build more institutional apparatus, to invest in reproduction rather than production. He chose production. This was consistent with his hero system, which required writing the books more than it required building the succession. A founder whose hero system prioritized reproduction would have produced fewer books and more successors. Gottfried made the opposite choice. The books will survive. The succession will be thinner than the books.
This is a tradeoff every founder faces and every founder resolves in ways consistent with the hero system he is running. Gottfried’s system kept him writing. The writing was what the system required. The system did not require succession planning at the level that might have produced more substantial inheritance.
The fourteen books are what fidelity produced. They are substantial. They will keep being read. They will feed whatever versions of paleoconservatism continue to exist in coming decades. What they will not do is reproduce Gottfried himself. That kind of reproduction was not what his hero system rewarded. He did what the system rewarded. When he dies, the system dies. What his work produced will outlast the system that produced it. That is how intellectual traditions work. Gottfried has been running the specific version of the system his biography made possible. The version is ending. The corpus remains. Future paleos will build new hero systems on the corpus, and those systems will look different from Gottfried’s. The difference is what transmission is. Complete inheritance is not transmission. It is identity. Identity cannot transfer. Only material can.
Gottfried Under Hugo Mercier and John M. Doris
Mercier’s argument operates at the level of reception. Gottfried’s managerial state thesis assumes that therapeutic liberalism penetrates populations through schools, media, corporate administration, and government agencies, restructuring beliefs and producing compliant subjects. The penetration is continuous and counter-transmission has been starved. The depoliticized population Gottfried describes is the product of decades of ideological formation.
Mercier’s evidence runs against the transmission model. Propaganda mostly fails. It succeeds where it surfs existing commitment and produces backlash where the commitment runs the other way. The vigilance populations run on political and ideological content tracks their stakes. For citizens whose vital interests are not directly touched by therapeutic liberalism’s content, most of it sits as reflective belief, available for verbal profession but largely inert with respect to behavior. The compliance Gottfried reads as ideological penetration is, for much of the population, the compliance of people whose beliefs about DEI, gender ideology, or therapeutic psychology are reflective and therefore do not guide what they actually do. Where the penetration appears most successful, in corporate administration and professional credential structures, it reaches populations whose vital interests include their jobs, and there the vigilance runs hard but the behavior is produced by the cost structure of compliance rather than by belief. The employee who completes the diversity training is not a convert. He is a rational actor whose behavior tracks the situation the employer has engineered.
Doris specifies the behavioral dimension Gottfried’s framework handles poorly. The compliance Gottfried reads as ideological capture is produced principally by situations, not by beliefs. The corporate employee who uses the mandated pronouns, the university applicant who performs the diversity statement, the federal employee who completes the training, all produce the behaviors the situations reward and penalize. The beliefs underlying these behaviors vary widely. Many of the compliers hold views Gottfried would find congenial but produce the expected behaviors because the cost of not producing them is high. Others hold views that align with the training and also produce the behaviors. Others hold views that have simply never been engaged because the content has never touched their vital interests. The uniformity of the behavior is situational. The uniformity of belief is an illusion Gottfried’s framework projects onto the uniform behavior.
This matters for Gottfried’s diagnosis because the two readings produce opposite treatments. If therapeutic liberalism advanced through transmission into populations, counter-transmission should reverse it. Build conservative institutions, fund conservative media, train conservative cadres, and the tide turns. Conservative foundations, think tanks, publications, and law schools have operated for half a century on this premise. The cultural trajectory did not reverse. Mercier predicts this outcome. The conservatives who staffed these institutions were already conservative. Their transmission to populations that did not share their starting commitments produced little change, because where vigilance was engaged it produced rejection of content that did not fit prior commitment, and where vigilance was not engaged the beliefs stayed reflective and did not drive behavior. Doris adds that where conservative behavior did appear in the culture, it tracked situations that had shifted for reasons the conservative institutions did not produce. Economic decline, demographic change, elite overproduction, regional realignment. The behaviors these situations generated found vocabulary in the conservative institutions. They were not created by them.
Take the friend-enemy recovery Gottfried urges. Following Schmitt, he argues that conservatism must recover the capacity to name enemies and mobilize against them. The liberal habit of treating political opponents as fellow citizens with different views, rather than as enemies, disarms the right before the fight begins. A real right would name the enemy and act.
Mercier’s evidence on naming runs as it did in the Schmitt analysis. Populations that have vital stakes in the naming run vigilance on it. The naming reaches only those whose prior commitments accept it. Populations without stakes hold the naming as reflective belief, available for profession but inert with respect to behavior. Gottfried’s own writing demonstrates this. He has named enemies with precision and persistence for decades. The naming has reached his coalition of readers, which was prepared. It has not reached populations whose prior commitments did not align. The call for friend-enemy recovery assumes the naming has mobilizational force that the evidence does not support.
Doris extends the point into behavior. Even if a segment of the population accepts the naming, whether acceptance translates into action depends on situation. The citizen who votes for a nationalist party, who attends a rally, who donates to a cause, who refuses to enforce a law he finds illegitimate, each of these behaviors responds to situational features. Peer presence matters. Framing matters. Cost and risk matter. Visibility matters. The right Gottfried wants to mobilize exists in a situational environment that makes some behaviors easy and others hard. The easy behaviors are symbolic ones that impose no real cost, sharing articles on social media, voting in primaries, attending occasional conferences. The hard behaviors, the ones Gottfried’s Schmittian vision requires, are made hard by situational features Gottfried’s intellectual project does not address. Naming the enemy more precisely does not change the situational architecture that determines whether coalition members act. A movement that produces better diagnosis without changing situations produces better commentary, not better politics.
Take Gottfried’s account of conservative failure. The standard paleoconservative indictment runs that Buckley excommunicated the serious paleoconservatives, neoconservatism captured the funding and the journals, the movement accepted liberal premises about equality, rights, and universalism, the result was a conservatism that could not defend what it claimed to conserve. Had the paleoconservatives won the internal fight, the trajectory would have been different.
The Mercier-Doris combination produces a different reading. The paleoconservatives lost the internal fight because they had the weaker institutional position, not because their ideas were inferior or because Buckley outmaneuvered them. Neoconservatism attracted Jewish intellectuals and hawkish Cold War liberals because their networks had access to universities, foundations, federal agencies, and major media. The situations those actors occupied rewarded the neoconservative synthesis and did not reward the paleoconservative one. Funding flowed to the side whose situational position made it attractive to donors, universities, and policy audiences. The paleoconservatives, with their Southern traditionalist, Catholic localist, and ethnic populist constituencies, did not have comparable institutional access, and the content of their positions did not fit the situations that foundations and universities were prepared to support. Mercier’s framework predicts this. Doris’s framework predicts this. Ideas do not win the fights Gottfried describes. Institutional situations do. The ideas that win are those whose situations are winning.
Gottfried’s own career illustrates what his framework cannot acknowledge. His books have been influential within a small coalition of paleoconservatives, traditionalists, and post-liberal readers who find in him confirmation of views they held on arriving. His books have had essentially no influence on the populations whose depoliticization he diagnoses. Mercier’s framework explains this. Gottfried’s readers hold his framings as reflective beliefs because those framings do not bear directly on most readers’ vital interests. The readers agree, cite him approvingly, and carry on with lives that the agreement does not measurably alter. Doris extends the explanation. The behaviors Gottfried might hope to produce in his readers would require situations that supported those behaviors. The readers’ situations do not. Their employers, their families, their professional networks, their residential communities all generate the behaviors those situations generate, and the essays do not reach into those situations.
Gottfried’s bridge-burning pattern deserves direct engagement. His public commentary over decades has made him unclubbable by mainstream conservative institutions. He writes approvingly of figures that respectable conservatives will not touch. He publishes in venues that signal membership in a specific small coalition. On Mercier’s framework, this pattern is not a failure. It is a signal that functions precisely because it would not be emitted if it were not sincere. Expressing views that foreclose access to larger coalitions is how one establishes reliability to a smaller one. The strategy works on its own terms. Doris adds that Gottfried’s specific trajectory is also a product of the situations his career passed through. Different institutional placements, different editors, different readers would have produced a different Gottfried without different underlying commitments. This is not a criticism. It is a clarification that his current position is an equilibrium of specific situations, not the pure expression of a character.
Take the Schmittian apparatus Gottfried imports. Gottfried treats Schmitt as a diagnostician who saw what American conservatives missed, that politics is about friend-enemy distinction and that liberal proceduralism cannot sustain political community. The Mercier-Doris reading of Schmitt, developed in the prior essay, says Schmitt overestimated the mobilizational power of sovereign decision and mythic articulation. Gottfried inherits the overestimation. His prescriptive moments, which call for a revived right that names enemies and decides, assume that such naming and deciding would mobilize populations. The evidence says it would not. The populations Gottfried wants to mobilize would filter the naming through vigilance calibrated to their stakes. Those whose stakes activated vigilance and whose prior commitments aligned would ratify. Those whose stakes left vigilance unengaged would absorb the naming as reflective belief and produce no corresponding behavior. Those whose stakes activated vigilance and whose prior commitments ran the other way would reject. The decision would not constitute the community. The community exists or it does not, and the decision would either find its receptive audience or fail to.
Take Gottfried’s account of the managerial state as a class with coherent ideology. Gottfried treats administrators as an ideological formation whose therapeutic liberalism produces the compliance of the populations they manage. The Mercier-Doris framework suggests the ideology tracks the situations of the administrators rather than producing the behaviors of the managed. DEI administrators believe what they believe because the belief secures their employment and status. Public health officials endorse positions that expand public health authority because the expansion is good for them. The managerial class is a situational equilibrium, and its ideology is the vocabulary the situation supplies. This reading does not contradict Gottfried’s descriptive claim about the class’s power. It changes the etiology. If ideology produces the class, defeating the ideology shrinks the class. If situations produce the class, shrinking the class requires attacking the situational architecture that sustains it, and defeating its ideology achieves little.
The implication for Gottfried’s program is severe. Gottfried calls for the American right to become capable of mythic mobilization and decisionist clarity. Mercier shows that such mobilization requires populations whose stakes activate their vigilance and whose prior commitments accept the mobilizing content. Gottfried cannot produce those populations through better diagnosis. Doris shows that activation of even willing populations into political behavior depends on situational engineering that intellectual work cannot accomplish. The right Gottfried wants would require restructured situations that make nationalist or traditionalist behavior low-cost and high-reward for populations whose prior commitments already incline them in that direction. This work is political organizing, institutional capture, patronage, coalition-building, the engineering of local environments in which particular behaviors become salient. It is slow, material, and unromantic. It is not the work of producing better books. Gottfried’s framework provides no account of this work because the framework treats the intellectual project as upstream of political outcomes. The evidence suggests the causation runs the other way.
A related consequence concerns the specific relationship between Gottfried’s writing and what has actually moved on the American right. The Trump phenomenon is the case where Gottfried’s framework would predict vindication. A nationalist movement emerged. It named enemies. It rejected liberal premises. It captured a major party. Gottfried’s readers often treat Trump as the paleoconservative moment arriving.
The Mercier-Doris reading complicates this. Trump did not emerge because paleoconservative ideas finally reached the electorate. He emerged because situations had shifted. Manufacturing decline, opioid devastation, demographic change, elite overproduction, institutional failures that touched voters’ vital interests. Populations whose stakes had risen ran vigilance on mainstream political messaging and found it wanting. Trump’s rhetoric reached them because their prior commitments, newly activated by stakes, aligned with it. The rhetoric did not create the alignment. The situations did. Paleoconservative writing had existed for decades without producing this effect because the situations had not produced the stakes. Once the situations produced the stakes, Trump’s rhetoric fit, and the specific framings Gottfried had developed earlier were available to be drawn on.
This reading diminishes Gottfried’s claim to have anticipated or enabled the phenomenon. He described what would happen if situations moved certain ways. They moved. The description looked prescient. The movement was not produced by the description. It was produced by the situations. Gottfried’s vocabulary was available to receive the movement once it occurred, but the movement would have occurred with different vocabulary if his had not been available. The paleoconservative intellectual project made the description more precise. It did not cause the events the description applied to.
The deeper problem for Gottfried is that his own framework should predict his own irrelevance and does not. A thinker who insists that ideology follows interest and that intellectuals serve audiences already formed should recognize that his own project, reaching audiences too small to carry institutional weight, cannot move the populations he wants to move. The failure to apply his own insight to his own project is the characteristic failure Mercier and Doris together identify. The situation in which Gottfried writes rewards the belief that his writing matters. His readers confirm the belief. His conferences, his book contracts, his mutual citations with other paleoconservative writers all produce the belief as the equilibrium of the specific situation. A Gottfried placed in a different situation would hold the belief less firmly. The situation he occupies maintains it. This is not dishonesty. It is the predictable product of the situation. Mercier and Doris together suggest that the intellectual who wants to see his situation clearly must first change it, and most intellectuals do not, because the situations that rewarded their rise continue to reward their staying.
What survives the combined critique is a smaller Gottfried. The small Gottfried is a careful reader of Schmitt, Strauss, and Mannheim, a precise chronicler of internal conservative fights, and a diagnostician of specific institutional captures. His descriptive work on particular episodes holds up. His histories of the American right, his engagement with European political thought, his documentation of how neoconservatism displaced alternatives, all represent real contributions to intellectual history.
The larger Gottfried, the theorist whose prescriptive framework calls for a revived right capable of mythic mobilization, friend-enemy clarity, and decisionist posture, rests on the same theory of leader-population relations that Schmitt rested on and that the cognitive and behavioral evidence together dismantle. The right Gottfried wants cannot be summoned by better ideas because ideas do not summon publics in the way the Schmittian framework requires. Publics run vigilance in proportion to stakes and act from situations. The coalitions Gottfried wants to activate cannot be activated by rhetoric because activation depends on situational features rhetoric cannot supply. If the stakes and situations that would produce the right Gottfried wants exist, they will find vocabulary regardless of what Gottfried writes. If they do not exist, no vocabulary can produce them.
The practical implication for someone who sympathizes with Gottfried’s diagnosis but wants to be realistic about what writing can accomplish is that the work is best understood as articulation, not production. The writing gives names to phenomena that exist or emerge independently. It supplies vocabulary for coalitions that are forming or retaining form. It documents for history what was done and why. It does not cause the phenomena it names. It cannot, because the causes run through vital interests, vigilance, situations, and behavior in ways the writing does not reach. Understood this way, Gottfried’s work has real value within its limits. Understood as the Schmittian project demands, as the intellectual construction of political form, it overreaches, and the overreach runs consistently into the evidence.
David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory
The standard treatments read Gottfried either as the paleoconservative intellectual historian who kept faith with an older conservatism while the movement drifted neoconservative, or as the credentialed godfather of the alt-right who supplied the term and some of the intellectual framing that younger figures then took in directions he disavowed. Both readings share a premise: Gottfried’s positions flow from his intellectual convictions, and his coalition relationships follow from the positions. The Pinsof reading inverts this. The coalition relationships come first. The positions follow, narrated as convictions, and the convictions get adjusted as the available coalitions shift.
Gottfried trained at Yale under Herbert Marcuse, which placed him inside the postwar Central European émigré intellectual world that shaped American conservative thought from the 1950s through the 1980s. His early scholarly work on Hegel, on conservative political philosophy, and on the thought of Carl Schmitt situated him inside an academic coalition that included Paul Piccone at Telos, Russell Kirk-adjacent figures, and the specific Straussian and anti-Straussian networks that competed for control of the conservative intellectual tradition. His work at Rockford College and then at Elizabethtown College placed him in the second tier of the American academy, at institutions serious enough to employ him but marginal enough to keep him outside the prestige centers where his contemporaries ended up. The second-tier placement is itself part of the Alliance Theory story. A man with Gottfried’s credentials who lands at Yale or Chicago or Harvard develops different allies than a man who lands at Rockford and Elizabethtown. The coalition available to him was shaped by the institutional position available to him.
The Buckley expulsion story matters here. Gottfried and his paleoconservative allies were pushed out of the Buckley-National Review center of American conservatism during the 1980s and 1990s, in a series of episodes Gottfried has narrated repeatedly. His account frames this as a principled expulsion: the paleocons held the authentic conservative tradition, the neocons captured the institutions, and the neocons purged the paleos to secure the capture. The Alliance Theory reading treats this differently. Both sides were coalitions competing for the same resources: donor money, magazine platforms, think tank positions, White House access, academic standing. The neocons won because they had better resources, better access to postwar American foreign policy establishments, and better alignment with the donor class that funded conservative institutions. The paleos lost for the symmetric reasons. The principled framing Gottfried uses serves coalition function in Pinsof’s sense: it transforms a resource competition into a moral narrative in which his side represents authentic tradition and his enemies represent corruption. The transformation is the work. Every coalition does it. Gottfried’s version is unusually articulate because he is an unusually articulate man.
The post-expulsion coalition Gottfried built around himself over the next thirty years centers on the H. L. Mencken Club, which he founded in 2008. It includes figures like Peter Brimelow, Robert Weissberg, and the roster of speakers who have appeared at Mencken Club conferences over the years. It overlaps with Taki’s Magazine, with Chronicles, with the remnant paleocon infrastructure, and with the specific academic network that produces writers like Jack Kerwick. It historically included Richard Spencer before the 2016 public break and Jared Taylor in ambiguous relationship across the years. The coalition is small, underfunded relative to the neocon world, and operates largely outside the prestige American right. Its members depend on each other for venues, for audiences, for blurbs, for the basic infrastructure of public intellectual life, because the mainstream right has closed most of its venues to them.
Pinsof’s four criteria describe this coalition.
Similarity runs along specific lines: Central European intellectual formation or sympathy for it, hostility to neoconservative foreign policy, hostility to what members call egalitarian liberalism, comfort with explicitly racial or ethnic framing of political questions (with variation in how far each member will go), rejection of the Buckley settlement, attachment to an older American conservatism the members take themselves to represent. The tags are clear enough that outsiders can recognize the coalition at a glance, which is what Pinsof predicts a functioning coalition will produce.
Transitivity is visible in the overlapping roster of Mencken Club speakers, Taki’s contributors, VDARE writers (before VDARE’s collapse), Chronicles stable members, and American Renaissance attendees. The same names appear repeatedly across the venues. The allies are allies with each other and rivals with the same rivals. The rivals include the Buckley-National Review establishment, the neoconservative foreign policy apparatus, the mainstream academic conservatism represented by figures like Harvey Mansfield, and the progressive liberal coalition that both paleos and neocons nominally oppose.
Interdependence is tight because the coalition is small. Gottfried provides intellectual authorization, academic credentials, and the historical narrative that explains why the coalition matters. In return he receives speaking invitations, publication venues for books that mainstream publishers will not take, and the status of being the credentialed intellectual the coalition points to when it needs to answer charges of being unserious. The transaction is mutually reinforcing. Gottfried’s credentialed status is load-bearing for the coalition’s claim to intellectual legitimacy. The coalition’s existence provides Gottfried the platform he would not have had if he had simply retired from Elizabethtown into scholarly obscurity.
Stochasticity applies in specific ways. The coalition did not have to form in its current shape. Had Buckley handled the paleo-neocon fight differently, had Joe Sobran not been forced out over his columns, had Sam Francis not been fired from the Washington Times, had Peter Brimelow not founded VDARE, the coalition might have reconstituted inside National Review rather than outside it. The small initial conditions of the 1980s and 1990s purges snowballed into the current configuration. Gottfried narrates this as principled separation. Pinsof would describe it as path-dependent coalition formation produced by a specific sequence of institutional ruptures, which looks principled from inside and contingent from outside.
The three propagandistic biases run through Gottfried’s work in identifiable ways.
Perpetrator biases protect allies who transgress. When figures close to Gottfried’s coalition say things that would get others fired, Gottfried finds framings that make the statements defensible. Sam Francis’s late columns get contextualized as provocative truth-telling. Richard Spencer’s 2016 statements get treated initially as youthful excess before Gottfried eventually distanced himself publicly after sustained outside pressure. Jared Taylor’s positions on race get treated as empirical claims the mainstream refuses to engage rather than as advocacy positions with political consequences. The framing is consistent across cases: allies who say controversial things are provocateurs and truth-tellers, enemies who say less controversial things are ideologues and propagandists. Pinsof predicts this asymmetry and Gottfried’s output supplies it.
The bias also protects Gottfried from self-audit on his own past positions. He has not revised his early framings of paleoconservative thought even where subsequent scholarship has complicated them. His historical accounts of the neocon capture of American conservatism have hardened over the decades rather than incorporating counter-evidence. The Trivers self-deception pattern applies: he sincerely holds the positions, and the sincerity is load-bearing for the coalition, which needs its credentialed intellectual to believe what he writes so that the writing retains its authorization function.
Victim biases saturate the Gottfried coalition’s self-narrative. Paleos were purged. The authentic tradition was suppressed. The neocons captured institutions built by better men. The academic world closed itself to serious conservative thought. Mainstream publishers will not take paleo books. Mainstream reviewers will not review them. The coalition is the remnant of a once-vital intellectual tradition now reduced to small conferences and obscure journals by a hostile establishment. The narrative is not empty. Some of it describes real events. But its function is support mobilization, and the intensity of its deployment exceeds what the particular instances support. Competitive victimhood runs between the paleo coalition and the neocon coalition: each narrates its marginalization by the other, each claims to represent the authentic conservative tradition, each treats the other as the source of its suffering. Pinsof predicts this symmetry between coalitions competing for the same resources, and the symmetry is exact.
Attributional biases govern Gottfried’s treatment of intellectual figures. Conservatives he admires receive internal attributions for their successes and external attributions for their failures. Sam Francis’s best work reflects his character; his late-career descent into the Council of Conservative Citizens reflects the pressure his enemies put on him. Russell Kirk’s achievements reflect his mind; his marginalization reflects the hostile environment. Mel Bradford’s thwarted NEH appointment reflects neocon skullduggery rather than anything about Bradford’s actual positions. The symmetric figures on the other side receive the opposite treatment. Irving Kristol’s successes reflect his coalition’s resources rather than his mind. Allan Bloom’s achievements reflect Straussian coalition promotion rather than the quality of his work. Norman Podhoretz’s career reflects ambition and positioning rather than intellectual seriousness. The asymmetry is consistent enough across Gottfried’s output that it can be tracked sentence by sentence in some of his longer essays.
The strange bedfellows inside Gottfried’s coalition are visible once you look. The coalition contains traditional Catholics, secular Jewish intellectuals, Protestant southerners, European race realists, American libertarians, and explicit white advocates, held together by shared opposition to the Buckley-neocon-progressive trinity rather than by any positive common commitment. The Jewish intellectuals in the coalition, Gottfried included, coexist with members whose positions on Jewish influence they would elsewhere find unacceptable, because the coalition’s operating principle requires that members not audit each other too closely. The Catholic integralists coexist with the secular libertarians. The southern particularists coexist with the Central European cosmopolitans. No principle unites the content. The coalition unites the members because the members have nowhere else to go.
Gottfried’s own position in this coalition is specifically that of the credentialed intellectual who lends academic respectability to figures who lack it. This is a valuable role and it pays in specific ways. He receives invitations, audiences, and the status that comes from being the Mencken Club’s founder and intellectual center. In return he provides the coalition with something it cannot supply from within: a man with a Yale PhD, a long publication record in academic presses, and fluency in the scholarly apparatus of political philosophy. The coalition needs this because without it, the coalition would be dismissible as a collection of cranks and racialists. Gottfried’s credentials make the coalition harder to dismiss. The credentials are the coalition’s shield. Gottfried’s role is to hold the shield.
This role has specific costs Gottfried has absorbed. His academic standing has been damaged by the association. His later books have received less serious attention than his earlier work, not because the later books are necessarily worse but because the coalition association makes many academic reviewers unwilling to engage with them. His students have been fewer than they would have been at a more prestigious institution or inside a less marginal coalition. The costs are real. He has absorbed them because the alternative was retiring from Elizabethtown into obscurity, and the coalition gave him a public intellectual life his academic position would not have given him on its own.
The fourth question Pinsof’s framework pushes toward: what would Gottfried have to give up if he changed position? The answer is specific and heavy. The Mencken Club depends on him. The coalition’s claim to intellectual seriousness depends on his credentials. Taki’s Magazine, Chronicles, and the other venues depend on him as a load-bearing contributor. If he publicly audited his own coalition the way he audits the neocons, the coalition would collapse around him. He would retain his academic credentials and his published body of work, but he would lose the platform that has given his last thirty years their public meaning. He would also lose the relationships with men who have been his allies for decades, including some who believed the coalition’s self-narrative more literally than Gottfried himself might. The cost of honest audit is the end of his public intellectual life as currently constituted. He has not paid this cost. Pinsof’s model predicts he will not pay it. Writers do not audit the coalitions that make their work possible, regardless of their self-image as independent thinkers.
The positions themselves are not arbitrary in relation to the coalition. They are the specific cluster the coalition requires. Opposition to mass immigration, hostility to neoconservative foreign policy, suspicion of postwar civil rights legislation, skepticism of the Holocaust education apparatus (in some of his work), defense of Schmittian political theory, attack on managerial liberalism, nostalgic framing of an older American polity, and qualified engagement with biological differences between populations, form a package that holds the coalition together. A Gottfried who accepted mass immigration or who defended civil rights legislation on liberal grounds would no longer be recognizable as a coalition member. The positions are not conclusions reached through independent inquiry. They are the membership tags of the coalition he founded and leads.
Gottfried’s engagement with Carl Schmitt is serious on its scholarly merits. His books on Schmitt and on the broader tradition of anti-liberal political thought contain real analytical work. The scholarly quality is not the question. The Pinsof question is about the use. Schmitt’s concept of the political as friend-enemy distinction, his critique of liberal proceduralism, his attack on managerial and technocratic governance, and his framing of sovereignty as the power to decide the exception, all do specific work for Gottfried’s coalition. They supply intellectual authorization for a politics of civilizational defense against internal enemies. They license the framing of progressive liberalism as an enemy rather than as an opposing party in a shared system. They make coalition warfare the fundamental political reality. This is congenial to the Mencken Club. A different reader of Schmitt, inside a different coalition, might emphasize different aspects of his thought. Gottfried emphasizes the aspects his coalition needs emphasized. The scholarship is real; the emphasis is coalitional.
Gottfried coined “alternative right” in a 2008 essay and watched the term get appropriated by figures he came to distance himself from. His subsequent explanations have framed this as misappropriation, with Spencer and others taking a term meant for a serious intellectual project and degrading it for online movement politics. The Alliance Theory reading treats this more carefully. Gottfried supplied the term to young men who were already inside his coalition’s broader orbit. Some of them took it in directions he preferred and some in directions he opposed. When the directions he opposed became publicly toxic after Charlottesville and subsequent events, he distanced himself, but not before the coalition had absorbed the public costs and he had absorbed his share of them. The distancing was coalition management: he needed to protect his academic standing and his scholarly reputation from the worst consequences of figures he had platformed. He did not distance himself from the broader coalition that includes figures on the more moderate end of the spectrum he helped create. The distancing was selective, and the selection followed coalition logic: drop the members whose liabilities exceed their utility, keep the members whose utility still exceeds their liabilities.
What Gottfried cannot say, if Pinsof’s model is correct, is whatever would damage the coalition’s ongoing function. He cannot say that the paleo-neocon fight of the 1980s was primarily a resource competition rather than a conflict over authentic tradition. He cannot say that his coalition’s intellectual output has been less significant than its self-narrative claims. He cannot say that some of the figures he has platformed have been more damaging to American public discourse than their marginality would suggest. He cannot audit his own role in supplying the alt-right with its name and its early intellectual framing, beyond the managed distancing he has already performed. He cannot say that his Schmitt scholarship, however real its merits, has been used for coalition purposes that exceed what Schmitt himself might have endorsed. He cannot say that the Mencken Club’s intellectual standards have been uneven across its history. These are the costly truths. Writers do not tell the costly truths about the coalitions they depend on, and Gottfried depends on this one for the public meaning of his last thirty years.
Gottfried is a serious intellectual whose early scholarly work deserves the respect it received. His books on conservative political theory, on Schmitt, and on twentieth-century European political thought contain real analysis that rewards careful reading. His prose is disciplined. His range is genuine. None of this is diminished by noting that his public career has been shaped by coalition logic more than by independent inquiry, that his propagandistic biases run consistently in the directions his coalition requires, that his trajectory from Yale through Rockford and Elizabethtown to the Mencken Club reflects available coalitions rather than chosen ones, and that the narrative he has constructed around his career, as principled resistance to neoconservative capture, performs the coalition function Pinsof’s model predicts. The coalition needed the narrative. Gottfried supplied it. The supply has been sincere, which made it more effective, which made the coalition stronger, which made Gottfried’s public life possible in the specific shape it has taken.
The wars are real. So, possibly, is what the combatants are fighting about.
Buffered & Porous Selves
Gottfried’s formation combines specifically Central European Jewish background with American academic training in critical theory. His father fled Budapest in 1934. The family brought with them specifically Central European Jewish intellectual dispositions that differed from the Eastern European Jewish Orthodox traditions that had become dominant in American Jewish institutional life. Gottfried’s dislike of what he called the clannish atmosphere of transplanted Eastern European Orthodoxy at Yeshiva University reflects specifically this Central European Jewish cultural positioning. The positioning matters for understanding his subsequent work because it shaped his relationship to both Jewish tradition and to American intellectual culture.
His doctoral training at Yale under Herbert Marcuse provided specifically Frankfurt School methodological tools. Critical theory teaches its readers to view dominant moral vocabularies as control systems, to identify the gap between professed ideals and actual power, to treat emancipation rhetoric with suspicion. Gottfried absorbed these methods while rejecting the political conclusions Marcuse and other Frankfurt School thinkers drew from them. The absorption without the conclusions produced a specific analytical position. Gottfried turned critical theory’s tools against the class that had forged them.
The combination of Central European Jewish background, Frankfurt School methodological training, and subsequent engagement with Hegel, Schmitt, and Burnham produced a distinctive analytical framework. The framework operates differently from the buffered secular analytical frameworks that dominate contemporary American academic humanities and social sciences. It operates differently from the porous religious commitments that sustain specifically Orthodox Jewish intellectual life. It occupies a specifically distinctive position that does not map cleanly onto the buffered-porous axis as typically applied.
Gottfried draws on Hegel and the German historical school to develop a specifically historicist account of political and moral life. The account holds that moral and political truths cannot be detached from the specific peoples and moments that produce them. This is a specifically important methodological position that differs from what most American political theory presupposes. American political theory typically operates through either natural law frameworks that treat political principles as universally valid or through buffered liberal frameworks that treat political principles as products of rational agreement among autonomous individuals. Gottfried rejects both.
His historicist position treats political communities as specifically historical entities with specific inheritances that cannot be reduced to universal principles. The rejection of universalism is specifically radical within American conservative thought. American conservatism since William F. Buckley has typically operated through universalist frameworks, whether Straussian natural right, fusionist combinations of libertarianism and traditionalism, or propositional nationhood. Gottfried’s historicism rejects all these approaches.
Taylor’s framework helps see what this historicism specifically accomplishes. It identifies political communities as what Taylor’s framework would call specifically porous formations that cannot be reproduced through buffered rational construction. Political communities have specific phenomenological conditions that enable their continued operation. The conditions include shared memories, common practices, inherited vocabularies, specific commitments that operate below the level of conscious adoption. Gottfried’s historicism acknowledges these conditions. His specific vocabulary differs from Taylor’s. The substantive acknowledgment is similar.
Gottfried operates from specifically Central European Jewish intellectual tradition that has maintained access to pre-modern phenomenological frameworks more fully than most American intellectual traditions have maintained. Central European Jewish intellectual life combined rigorous scholarly training with specifically porous religious commitments, at least through the early twentieth century. The combination produced specific intellectual capacities that later secularization typically lost even as it maintained the rigorous scholarly training.
Gottfried’s father’s generation brought this combination to America in modified form. The religious commitments had typically weakened by the point of emigration. The intellectual capacities remained. Paul Gottfried inherited the capacities while operating in a substantially secular mode. His secular operation differs from standard American secular academic operation in specifically important ways. He retains analytical resources that American secular academic training typically does not transmit. The resources include capacity to analyze secular modernity from positions that do not fully identify with secular modernity’s self-understanding.
Gottfried’s central theoretical contribution is his analysis of what he calls the managerial state. The analysis draws on Burnham’s earlier analysis of managerial revolution but extends it to contemporary American political life. The managerial state operates through specifically administrative institutions that have substantially superseded traditional democratic and constitutional frameworks. The state claims democratic legitimacy while operating through processes that specifically exclude democratic deliberation from substantial areas of policy.
The state’s legitimation proceeds through what Gottfried identifies as secular religion. The religion includes specific commitments to diversity, equality, inclusion, and progress. These commitments operate with specifically religious force within managerial institutions. Violations of the commitments produce responses that specifically resemble religious excommunication rather than political disagreement. The commitments cannot be substantively debated within the institutions because the institutions presuppose the commitments as foundational rather than as arguable positions.
The managerial state’s secular religion operates as what Taylor would call the immanent frame operating with specifically porous-like force within buffered institutional structures. The frame treats its specific commitments as simply what rational people believe. It does not recognize the commitments as specific commitments that require specific phenomenological conditions to be sustained. It treats opponents of the commitments as specifically confused or malicious rather than as operating from different phenomenological positions that have their own legitimacy.
Gottfried’s analysis differs from typical American conservatism in specifically important ways. Most American conservatism operates through commitments that Gottfried identifies as sharing specific features with progressive liberalism. National Review conservatism, Bush-era neoconservatism, and fusion conservatism all typically accept American propositional nationhood. They accept that the American political community is defined by commitment to specific universal principles rather than by specifically inherited traditions. Their disagreement with progressive liberalism operates within this shared commitment to universalism rather than challenging the commitment itself.
Gottfried’s paleoconservatism rejects the shared commitment. American political community on his account is defined by specifically historical inheritance rather than by universal principles. Immigration that changes the inherited population substantially changes what the political community is. Democratic procedures that extend to populations whose phenomenological formations differ substantially from the founding populations operate differently than the procedures operated when the populations were more similar. Universal principles cannot substitute for specifically inherited traditions that produced the principles in the first place.
Gottfried treats political communities as what the framework would identify as substantially porous formations. Porous formations cannot be reproduced through buffered rational construction. They require specific phenomenological conditions including shared memory, common practice, and inherited commitment. When these conditions change substantially, the formation changes even when the institutional forms remain similar. The changes produce specific consequences that universalist conservatism cannot address because universalist conservatism does not recognize the specifically porous dimensions of political community.
Gottfried has been substantially marginalized from mainstream American conservatism since the Mel Bradford NEH incident in 1981 and subsequent developments. The neoconservatives who dominated the conservative movement for several decades treated paleoconservatives as specifically unacceptable. The treatment extended to blacklisting from major conservative publications, exclusion from major conservative funding networks, and systematic public condemnation.
The marginalization has specific consequences for how Gottfried’s work has been received. Mainstream conservative media rarely engages his arguments on their merits. His books are reviewed, when at all, through hostile framings that focus on associations rather than on substance. Younger conservative intellectuals often encounter his vocabulary (paleoconservatism, managerial state) without encountering his specific arguments because the vocabulary has been absorbed while the substance has been excluded.
Gottfried operates from a position that cannot be accommodated within the dominant American conservative coalition because his analysis specifically challenges the universalist commitments that coalition shares with progressive liberalism. The challenge cannot be absorbed without fundamentally reconfiguring the coalition. The coalition has chosen exclusion over reconfiguration. The choice has specifically limited Gottfried’s influence within mainstream discourse. It has also preserved his specific analytical clarity. A Gottfried who had been successfully absorbed would have been a different Gottfried whose work would have been less analytically distinctive.
Rony Guldmann and Gottfried both operate as marginalized critics of American progressive institutional orthodoxy. Both produce work that mainstream institutions have difficulty accommodating. Both have paid specific professional costs for their positions. The two scholars differ in specific ways that reflect their different formations.
Guldmann operates through specifically philosophical analysis developed within American academic philosophy. His vocabulary draws on standard American philosophical resources. His analysis proceeds through close reading of American progressive commitments. His position is specifically American in its reference points and its methodological resources.
Gottfried operates through specifically Central European intellectual tradition applied to American political developments. His vocabulary draws on Hegel, Schmitt, the Frankfurt School, and Burnham. His analysis proceeds through concepts developed substantially outside American intellectual traditions. His position is specifically European in its reference points while engaging American phenomena.
Guldmann’s American philosophical analysis shows how American progressive institutional commitments operate within specifically American intellectual traditions. Gottfried’s European-derived analysis shows how the commitments connect to broader patterns of managerial modernity that extend beyond American specificity. Readers interested in understanding contemporary American institutional pathology benefit from both analyses. Neither substitutes for the other.
Gottfried is specifically Jewish and substantially engaged with Jewish intellectual traditions throughout his career. His work includes substantial engagement with Jewish questions. His critique of neoconservatism is partly a critique from within Jewish intellectual tradition of specifically other Jewish intellectual formations. The critique has specific force because it operates from within rather than from outside.
Gottfried has written that neoconservatism operates substantially as secular Jewish political position that defends specifically diaspora Jewish communal interests through the vocabulary of universal liberal democracy. The defense has had specific successes for Jewish communal security and prosperity. It has also committed American conservatism to specific positions that are not continuous with earlier American conservative traditions. The commitment has produced specific consequences for what American conservatism has become.
Taylor’s framework helps see what this internal Jewish critique represents. Gottfried operates as specifically Jewish intellectual whose engagement with Jewish traditions provides him with specific resources for analyzing how particular forms of Jewish political engagement operate. The analysis can be conducted from within specifically Jewish intellectual tradition with specific rigor that non-Jewish analysis would typically lack. The specific rigor is what gives Gottfried’s critique its distinctive analytical power even as the critique has made him specifically unwelcome within mainstream American Jewish institutional contexts.
Gottfried’s 1990 book on Carl Schmitt represents early engagement with Schmitt’s work in the American academic context. Most American academic engagement with Schmitt at that point operated through the filter of Schmitt’s 1933 Nazi Party membership. Gottfried refused the filter. He engaged Schmitt’s arguments on their merits while acknowledging Schmitt’s political choices.
The engagement produced specific analytical resources that Gottfried deployed in subsequent work. Schmitt’s decisionism, his critique of liberal pluralism, his analysis of the friend-enemy distinction provided specific tools that Gottfried applied to American political developments. The tools enabled analysis that purely liberal political theory could not produce. The analysis has had substantial influence on younger conservative intellectuals who have come to Schmitt partly through Gottfried’s work.
Schmitt’s work, whatever its specific political applications, provided analytical resources for understanding dimensions of political life that buffered liberal theory systematically excludes. Gottfried’s willingness to engage Schmitt on his merits while rejecting Schmitt’s political conclusions provided a model for how Schmitt’s analytical resources could be used by scholars with different political commitments than Schmitt held. The model has been followed by various subsequent scholars including figures on both left and right.
Gottfried’s historicism enables him to see political communities as specifically porous formations that require specific phenomenological conditions to be sustained. The seeing is not available from within standard American political theory which treats political communities as primarily defined by commitment to universal principles. The difference matters for what kind of analysis is possible. Gottfried’s analysis can address questions about what happens to political communities when their phenomenological conditions change substantially. Universalist analysis cannot address these questions because universalist analysis does not recognize the phenomenological conditions as politically significant.
Gottfried represents the combination of specifically Central European Jewish intellectual formation with sustained engagement with specifically American political developments. The combination has produced analytical capacities that purely American intellectual formations typically cannot produce. The capacities have been specifically marginalized within mainstream American intellectual life because they threaten commitments that mainstream American intellectual life depends on. The marginalization has preserved the capacities in somewhat pure form while limiting their broader influence.
The pattern is specifically important for understanding what contemporary American intellectual life has lost through the specific forms of marginalization it has practiced. Voices from intellectual traditions that differ substantially from the dominant American patterns provide analytical resources that the dominant patterns cannot generate from within. Marginalization of such voices produces specific intellectual impoverishment that is typically invisible from within the dominant patterns. The impoverishment is felt only when specific analytical questions require resources that have been excluded from available discourse.
Gottfried’s analytical resources would be valuable for addressing specific questions that contemporary American political discourse faces. The resources have been specifically excluded from mainstream discourse. The discourse has suffered specific analytical impoverishment as a consequence. Scholars who want to address the questions Gottfried’s work addresses must typically discover Gottfried through non-mainstream channels. The discovery happens for some. It does not happen for most. Most readers who could benefit from Gottfried’s analytical resources encounter those resources only in filtered forms that have been stripped of their analytical force.
Gottfried has held positions at Rockford College, Elizabethtown College, and as editor of Telos. His institutional trajectory has kept him away from the most prestigious academic positions while providing adequate base for his intellectual work. The trajectory has been shaped substantially by his specific marginalization from mainstream American conservative intellectual life. He has not been excluded from academia entirely. He has been excluded from the positions that would have amplified his influence within American political discourse.
Scholars whose work operates outside the dominant ideological frameworks of contemporary American academia typically face specific institutional limits. The limits include access to prestigious positions, visibility in major media, funding support, and graduate students who can extend the work into subsequent generations. Gottfried has faced all these limits. His work has continued despite the limits. It has done so because his commitment to the work has exceeded what professional career calculation alone would sustain.
Betrayals: The Unpredictability of Human Relations by Gabriella Turnaturi
Start with the Razumov axiom. “All a man can betray is his conscience.”
Gottfried had a deep bond with the American conservative intellectual movement from the 1960s through the 1980s. PhD in European history at Yale. Mentored by figures including Eugene Genovese on the left and various conservative scholars on the right. Contributor to mainstream conservative magazines. Member of the conservative intellectual community for decades. The bond was real, voluntary, mutually acknowledged. Betrayal claims are available on both sides.
Gottfried’s case: he kept faith with the original conservative tradition while the movement betrayed its principles by accepting neoconservative leadership. The Buckley-style fusionism of the 1960s, the traditionalism of Russell Kirk, the Old Right skepticism of empire and mass immigration, the localism and defense of Western Christian heritage. These constituted what Gottfried understood as conservatism. The neoconservative ascendancy through the 1980s and into the 2000s replaced these commitments with a different program: democracy promotion, global capitalism, sympathy for mass immigration, suspicion of paleoconservative concerns about Western civilizational continuity. Gottfried’s claim is that the movement changed beneath him, betrayed its own founders, and excluded him for refusing to follow the betrayal.
The mainstream conservative response: Gottfried drifted past the acceptable boundaries by associating with figures the movement was actively trying to expel (Sam Francis, others), by emphasizing themes that read as proximate to white nationalism, by coining “alternative right” in 2008. The movement did not change so much as draw lines that Gottfried was on the wrong side of.
Both claims hold.
Now apply change as betrayal. Gottfried’s positions have been remarkably consistent across his career. His critiques of multiculturalism, the welfare state, neoconservative foreign policy, mass immigration, and what he called the politics of guilt have been stable for decades. By Turnaturi’s standard, who changed?
The honest answer is that the conservative movement changed around him. The shifts from Buckley fusionism to neoconservatism to compassionate conservatism to Trumpist populism happened across his career. Each shift drew different boundaries. The paleoconservative ground he stood on became increasingly out of step with the mainstream conservative consensus.
Did the movement involve him in its changes? No. Paleoconservatives were excluded through procedural means: quiet disinvitations, magazines that stopped publishing them, think tank fellowships that dried up, conference invitations that did not come. The exclusion was distributed and gradual rather than dramatic. There was no Glacier View moment. There was no public excommunication. There was a slow accumulation of closed doors.
By Turnaturi’s standard, change perceived as betrayal happens mainly when the changing party hides the change. The conservative movement did not hide its drift in any deliberate way, but it also did not formally negotiate the boundary shifts with paleoconservatives like Gottfried. The change registered to him as unilateral redefinition of the conservative bond.
Time asymmetry runs in Gottfried’s direction. For him, the career was continuous. He kept doing the work he had always done. For the mainstream movement, the exclusion of paleoconservatives happened in discrete episodes spread across decades. Each local event made sense in its context. The cumulative effect was the marginalization of an entire intellectual tradition, but no single moment marked the rupture.
Gottfried experiences this as: I kept doing what I always did, and they kept moving the boundaries until I was outside. The expropriated time runs on his side. Years of conservative intellectual work that he experienced as central to the movement got recoded in retrospect as the work of someone always on the margins.
Reinterpretation of the past is sharp in his case because of the alt-right complication. After 2016, his earlier work got reread by critics looking for early evidence of extremism. His association with figures like Sam Francis, his coining of “alternative right” in 2008, his critiques of multiculturalism got recoded retrospectively as proto-alt-right material. By his lights, his work was traditionalist conservative European history scholarship, and the alt-right’s appropriation of his term was opportunistic theft.
The political asylum question is where Gottfried’s case looks most like Desmond Ford’s. His We’s (group identities) are small and ad hoc.
He has the H.L. Mencken Club, founded in 2008, which provides a small gathering of paleoconservative intellectuals. He has the Mises Institute, libertarian-paleoconservative, willing to publish him. He has Chronicles magazine, paleoconservative, small readership, increasingly marginal. He has some traditionalist Catholic intellectuals, though his own background is Jewish. He has former students, including some notable figures. He has a devoted but small readership for his books.
He does not have the major institutional networks Amy Wax and Clarence Thomas have. There is no paleoconservative Federalist Society. There is no paleoconservative AEI or Hoover Institution. The neoconservative-aligned think tanks that came to dominate the conservative landscape have not been available to him. He held a position at Elizabethtown College, a small Pennsylvania liberal arts school, rather than the elite academic appointments his scholarship arguably merited.
By Turnaturi’s plural-We logic, the thinness of his asylum means the verdict of the mainstream conservative movement has not been overwritten by alternative recognition from richer We’s. He stands somewhere, but the somewhere is small. His self-image is preserved among paleoconservative intellectuals but cannot replace the standing he was denied in mainstream conservatism.
This is structurally where Gottfried matches Ford. Both had deep bonds with the movement that excluded them. Both had ideologically pure but institutionally thin asylum. Both saw their conscience-claim recognized by small We’s while the larger We’s that controlled their careers refused to recognize them.
The Jewish dimension adds an unusual layer. Gottfried is Jewish. His father was a Hungarian Jewish refugee. Most Jewish conservative intellectuals have substantial support from mainstream Jewish organizations and from the neoconservative network that has been heavily Jewish in its leadership. Gottfried has not received that support. The paleoconservative movement’s relationship to Jewish issues has been contested, with figures like Pat Buchanan facing repeated charges of anti-Semitism. Gottfried’s association with paleoconservatism has complicated his Jewish standing. Some Jewish institutions have shunned him. The Jewish We that might have provided asylum to a conservative of different stripe has been ambivalent at best.
By Turnaturi’s frame, this is a place where a We he might have expected to provide some protection has not. The plural-We structure that helps Thomas and Wax helps Gottfried less, because two of the Wes he might have appealed to (mainstream conservatism, mainstream Jewish institutions) have both been unavailable.
The alt-right complication is the case’s distinctive feature. The term “alternative right” Gottfried coined in 2008 was appropriated by Richard Spencer’s white nationalist movement starting around 2010 and became toxic after Charlottesville in 2017. By Turnaturi’s frame, this is a case of a third party taking his vocabulary and using it in ways that changed his public identity without his consent. The structural rearrangement was unilateral: he had built a term to describe paleoconservatism; it became identified with neo-Nazis. He has spent years trying to distinguish his original meaning from the appropriated meaning, with limited success.
The asymmetric rearrangement was unilateral. Spencer did not negotiate the appropriation with Gottfried. He took the term and used it. The mainstream press and the broader culture accepted the appropriated meaning. Gottfried’s original meaning was erased. By Turnaturi’s standard, this is a kind of betrayal by a We Gottfried did not belong to (Spencer’s movement) that nonetheless used a tool he had created.
Once a public term has been redefined, the original definer loses control. This is a feature of plural-We modernity that Turnaturi’s chapter on the Internet anticipates: identities and labels can be cloned, mutated, and used against their originators in ways the older single-We societies could not produce.
Forgive for Good
The injury is real. The Bradford affair of 1981 stands as a marker. The neoconservatives, led by Norman Podhoretz (b. 1930), Irving Kristol (1920-2009), and their allies, blocked Mel Bradford (1934-1993) from the NEH chair in favor of William Bennett. The campaign against Bradford was sustained, coordinated, and effective. Gottfried watched it from his position as a young paleoconservative academic. The paleo faction lost the conservative civil war of the late 1970s and early 1980s. Gottfried lost professional access along with the rest of his side. He spent his career at Elizabethtown College rather than at any of the flagship institutions that might have credentialed his scholarship. The exclusion was institutional, durable, and personal in its consequences.
The grievance story is the structure he has built around the injury and tells repeatedly. The neoconservatives took over the movement the paleocons built. They forced out Catholics like Bradford. They marginalized the southern conservative tradition. They captured the journals. They wrote the histories. They dictated the terms of acceptable conservatism. They turned the movement toward foreign policy adventures with no anchor in Burke or Kirk. The memoir Encounters runs the grievance at length. The essays in Chronicles and elsewhere refresh it. The H.L. Mencken Club he founded keeps the alternative space open. The grievance has organized four decades of work.
The unenforceable rules behind the structure are visible. The conservative movement should have honored paleoconservative scholarship. The mainstream press and academy should have recognized the southern and Catholic intellectual traditions on their own terms. The Jewish neoconservatives should have left room for the paleos rather than push them to the margins. Gottfried’s own work should have earned him a position at a research university. None were within his power to enforce. The rules have not been enforced. The rules are still held.
The personalization is heavy in scholarly form. The memoir treats the exclusions as biography. The essays often point to the figures responsible. The grievance is academicized but not abstracted. He names names. He recounts the moments. The wound is finite, a handful of exclusions across the early to mid 1980s, but the retelling is unending. The hurt-versus-grievance distinction applies cleanly. The hurt was concentrated. The grievance has run for forty-plus years.
The hero-versus-victim distinction lands as expected. Gottfried’s preferred self-presentation is hero of paleoconservative integrity. The man who would not compromise. The scholar who took the cost of intellectual honesty rather than join the ascendant faction. Luskin’s frame sees a man whose hero story coexists with active grievance maintenance. The hero who has released the resentment does not write three or four memoirs returning to the exclusions. The wounded scholar who keeps the wound fresh is a different figure.
What did he want that he did not get. A research university position. Editorial roles at major journals. Recognition from the conservative establishment he believed had been built on traditions he was qualified to interpret. A clear public hearing for the southern, Catholic, Burkean strands he defended. Vindication as the legitimate heir of Russell Kirk (1918-1994) and Bradford. None arrived in the form he wanted. Some adjacent goods arrived in altered form: the Mencken Club, a loyal following of younger paleos and dissident-right writers, a place in the histories of American conservatism. He has not treated the substitutes as sufficient.
The harder element. The neoconservative faction has largely dissolved. Podhoretz is in his nineties. Kristol is dead. Bennett is retired. The Iraq War failures broke the foreign policy consensus. The Trump movement vindicated parts of the paleo position on trade, immigration, and foreign policy. The Republican Party Gottfried grew up criticizing has shifted toward positions he held in 1985. The figures he resented have lost the power that made the resentment urgent in the first place. He continues to hold the grievance against parties whose dominance has ended. The frame marks this as habit. The structure has worn the grooves. The retelling is now the activity rather than a response to ongoing injury.
What might the Luskin work look like at eighty-four. Accept that the bet in 1980 was made with the information available. Accept that the exclusion produced a life of solid scholarship and durable influence even without the credentials he wanted. Release the demand that the neoconservatives, who are mostly dead, recognize the paleocons who took the cost. Stop returning to the Bradford affair. Let the historical analysis stand without the biographical pointing.
He probably will not do this work. The grievance is now organic to the writing voice. The memoir is published. The essays will keep coming. This is the case of the academic dissident who has built a serviceable life around a grievance he never released, who has produced real scholarship throughout, and who in his eighties still describes the figures who blocked him in 1981 as if their blocking him explains the present moment.