Abstract

Particularly pushed by the Edmund Burke Foundation and its president Yoram Hazony, the political movement of National Conservativism is largely based on specific concepts of nation, faith and family. Driven by the mission to overcome the violence of liberalism, identified with imperialism, national conservatives shape potent international and interreligious alliances for a religiously based system of independent national states. The article gives an outline of the main programmatic pillars of National Conservativism at the example of Yoram Hazony’s The Virtue of Nationalism, one of the current ideological key works of the movement. It will show how its political framework is based on a binary frame of liberalism (identified with imperialism) versus nationalism, the latter supported as the way forward towards protecting freedom, faith and family. The analytic part will focus on the use of religious motifs and the construction of a specific kind of Judaeo-Christianism as a means of exclusivist theo-political nationalism. It will be shown that Hazony’s nationalism is no way to overcome violence, but a political theory close to theo-political authoritarianism, based on abridged readings of Scripture, history and philosophy. It severely endangers the foundations of democracies, especially with regard to minority and women’s rights, and delegitimizes liberal democracy and religious traditions positively contributing to it.

Highlights

  • It is the beginning of February 2020, the first Coronavirus cases in Europe become known

  • Pushed by the Edmund Burke Foundation and its president Yoram Hazony, the political movement of National Conservativism is largely based on specific concepts of nation, faith and family

  • Driven by the mission to overcome the violence of liberalism, identified with imperialism, National Conservatives shape growing international and interreligious alliances for a religiously based system of independent national states

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Summary

Introduction

It is the beginning of February 2020, the first Coronavirus cases in Europe become known. From 3–4 February, the who’s who of “National Conservativism” met here under the title “God, Honor, Country: President Ronald Reagan, Pope John Paul II and the Freedom Nations”. Pushed by the Edmund Burke Foundation and its president Yoram Hazony, the political movement of National Conservativism is largely based on specific concepts of nation, faith and family. I will argue that National Conservativism does not overcome the definitely existing aspects of violence in some versions of liberalism, but religiously legitimates political authoritarianism at the expense of minority rights, individual freedom and women’s rights

The Edmund Burke Foundation and National Conservativism
Introducing Yoram Hazony
Europe—Kantian Hypocrites
A First Sum
No Political Theory without the Hebrew Bible
Family
Faith and Public Religion
Tracing the Context
The Sense for Current Hot Issues
Philosophical Concerns
Historical Misreadings
Theological Concerns
Political Dangers in Practice
Reflecting the Theo-Political Consequences
Full Text
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