The modern conservative movement began 60 years ago with the publication of a book by a 26-year-old first-time author.
Reflecting on that work teaches us something important about the nature of modern conservatism, about the energy that propelled the movement and about serious problems with the movement today.
The book was "God and Man at Yale." The author was William F. Buckley Jr.
"GAMAY" (as conservatives often call this iconic work) was an attack on the young author's alma mater. Buckley excoriated Yale for two things:
First, he complained that Yale's economics instructors were not indoctrinating their students in a pure version of laissez-faire economics, which Buckley called "individualism."
More than half were Keynesians who advocated some governmental regulation of the economy, and therefore, as Buckley saw it, economics training at Yale was "thoroughly collectivist."
The term collectivist still has bite today, but when "GAMAY" was published, it had a menacing connotation. Collectivism was associated with totalitarian regimes: Joseph Stalin of the Soviet Union and Mao Zedong of China.
Some on the right were warning that even if the American military successfully defended the ramparts of freedom abroad, Keynesian economic theories would lead America down a slippery slope into collectivism at home.