Bramwell is the young lawyer recently appointed by  William F. Buckley to National Review's five-man Board of Trustees just before  Buckley's retirement. "I wanted somebody who is very young and very  talented," Buckley said.  "One likes to think in the long term."
In the July 17, 2006 issue of The American  Conservative, Bramwell writes:
First, the  conservative movement in large part exists to promote intellectual conformity.  Few writers or scholars affiliated with the movement care to risk their  sinecures (or their institutions' funding) by disagreeing too vociferously with  the official movement position. Consciously or unconsciously, right-wing writers  instead tend to suppress thoughts that may be deemed too eccentric or  independent. Meanwhile, the movement selects and promotes the careers of young  writers whose primary qualification consists of believing ab initio what  the movement tells them to believe. One should not be surprised, given this  incentive structure, if the movement has become increasingly bland,  notwithstanding the usual humbug about how intellectually superior the Right is  thse days. Blandness is part of the institutional design.
Second, those at the top of the conservative movement have wide discretion to  set its movement's official positions. Bedrock or founding principles, whatever  they may be, play very little role in determining what policies the conservative  movement will embrace. Whatever may be said of the Bush administration's  policies in Iraq, for example, they were surely not deduced from immutable  conservative principles. Nevertheless, the signature achievement of the  conservative movement in the past decade has been to rally -- or, perhaps more  accurately, manufacture -- public support for the invasion and occupation of  Iraq. With just one or two changes in personnel, however, one could easily  imagine events turning out very differently. Reckless or prudent, thoughtful or  ignorant, the opinion-mongers at the top set the movement line; the other  constituents -- the donors, the directors, and other writers and the consumers  of opinion -- then accept and promulgate whatever positions the movement tells  them to.
By the way, Bramwell had kind things to say about me last year.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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