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THE INSIDIOUS QUESTION
By Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
Somebody
asked me if I were a man of the right. Enthusiastically and
euphorically I answered, "Yes." On answering, I
was already waiting for the concise and venomous little question
that would come next: "Of the extreme right, then?"
The poor fellow who formulated the question thought he was
clever, as if clever and insidious were synonymous. "Read
my next article," I retorted. And with this, I was clever
and insidious. Clever, because I gained a reader for the monotonous
commentary that follows. And insidious, because his curiosity
will lead him to read this monotonous tract from beginning
to end.
Within the strange vocabulary that
is being forged as part of the political jargon of our days,
multiple, confused, and even contradictory meanings are being
artificially tacked onto the word "extreme" just
like so many others. It is impossible for me to answer this
little pseudo-clever question before making clear what these
different meanings are.
The bulk of national opinion is comfortably
and indolently centrist. It is precisely among the centrists
that the word "extreme" appears opalescent, multicolored
and changeable.
This whole confusion is the result
of a cross-eyed vision of a simple matter. I will present
it in a brief outline.
1. The intellectual work of a scientist
consists in acquiring and defining for himself basic truths
that in the rigor of logic merit all of his assent. Starting
off from these truths he goes constructing conclusions always
according to the rigor of logic. Every new conclusion is a
new victory of science. And the glory of the scientist's labor
consists in following the ways of logic right to the ultimate
conclusion that is legitimately deducible from the initial
truths. In this noble course, the extremes of glory are for
those who reach the extremes of the process.
2. This intellectual process comes
from the very nature of the human mind, and holds for anything
which it ponders. Granted man's fallibility, it is well for
him to check the successive stages of his intellectual journey
against the data of experience. However, when this is not
possible, man should not renounce his search for the ultimate
peak of his thought. For if he be eagle-eyed, a man can logically
work his way far beyond matters subject to tests by experimentation.
If this were not so, what would become of philosophy and theology?
So, the man who reaches the ultimate
consequences of the initial truths that he knows in the course
of the cadenced and firm march of his logical process, merits
at least respect. The march of his spirit is like that of
the body. It is healthy, beautiful and noble when it heads
directly for its final point. It is sickly, clumsy and unmanly
when it hesitates, wavers, and loses itself in the errors
and labyrinths of doubt.
While they may admit these principles
of common sense as valid for all the dominions of thought,
the centralists do make one exception. The more languorous
and comfortable these centrists are, the more inclined they
are to make an exception when it comes to minds that are given
to political or socio-economic reflection. These centrists
may marvel at the physicist or mathematician who reaches the
ultimate consequences of the initial truths that he knows.
However, they consider the same search is not licit for a
political thinker. So, if he acts like the scientist and reaches
the ultimate consequences of his thought, the centrist immediately
labels him an extremist.
There is more. Another contradiction
climbs right- on top of this first contradiction of the languorous
and comfortable centrist. The political thinker or socio-economic
theorist who has thus been branded an extremist is forthwith
suspected of aiming at imposing a dictatorship by means of
violence. Therefore, he is a criminal, at least potentially.
In this way, according to a certain
kind of centrist, consistency may be the path of glory for
some but for others, it is the path to crime.
Consequently, I comment for my part,
if in any field, one goes from consistency to consistency
to reach the apex of truth, then from inconsistency to inconsistency
one reaches the depth of absurdity.
There you have it. Here appears an absolutely arbitrary dichotomy
for the most comfortable and languorous of the centrists.
These centrists think immediately
of violence, concentration camps and genocide when they are
in the presence of an entirely consistent rightist. However,
when they are in the presence of an entirely consistent leftist,
a communist for example, the centrists I am talking about
make a distinction. If he is a communist who only dedicates
himself to studies and the doctrinal and peaceful dissemination
of his convictions, they consider him an irreproachable citizen
worthy of respect and, perhaps, even friendship.
When they look at him, no one thinks
of the Lubianca prison, or the concentration camps in Siberia,
or hospitals of neuro-psychiatric torture, or even of the
Iron Curtain. For all practical purposes, such centrists do
not feel a peaceful communist to be an extremist. A leftist
for them is an extremist only when he assaults, kidnaps, and
robs.
In short, it is a double standard.
When it heads right, consistency is considered as leading
necessarily to crime. When it heads left, it is considered
to be perfectly distinguishable from crime, to which it may
lead only "per accidens."
Now it falls to me to answer whether
I am a man of the right. I am, purely and simply. However,
I claim for myself with the greatest force, the force of logic,
the right to reach the ultimate and highest doctrinal consequences
of the principles that I profess, without anyone branding
me as an advocate of violence that I have never justified,
never encouraged, and never practiced.
And I say this squarely facing the
little man of the insidious question and the comfortable and
languid centrists of whom he is a specimen, affirming, furthermore:
As a man in full consonance with all divine and human laws
and all the requirements of logic, I am indeed one hundred
percent a man of the right.
Of the extreme right? This little
word "extreme" -that sounds for many almost like
a four letter word - I leave disdainfully rolling on the ground.
Asserting my authenticity and my integrity
as far as the right is concerned, I question the authenticity
and integrity of the little man and his like as far as the
center is concerned. If the center is by definition equidistance
between the two extremes, what right do they have to call
themselves centrists in spite of being so illogically and
aggressively contrary to the rightists, and so affably respectful
of the non-violent leftists?
It seems to me that in defining myself, I define them. Or
rather, facing my definition, they define themselves. Centrists
they are not.
What might they be? Let them say it
with the same frankness with which I have just said what I
am.
For my part, I see them as genuine
but bashful and disguised leftists.
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