Books
Our Boondoggling Democracy
– "Our Boondoggling Democracy," Commentary, August 1958. (A review of The Affluent Society by John Kenneth Galbraith.)Excerpt: The Affluent Society is by far the most serious critique of “welfare capitalism” that has been written in the post-Marxian era. (It is perhaps worth remarking that, though Mr.… More
Big Government and Little Men
– “Big Government and Little Men,” The New Leader, November 26, 1962.A Case of Uneven Development
– “A Case of Uneven Development,” The New Leader, February 18, 1963.Why the Welfare State Doesn’t Work
– “Why the Welfare State Doesn't Work,” Atlantic, June 1963.Is the Welfare State Obsolete?
– “Is the Welfare State Obsolete?” Harper's, June 1963.Age of the Remittance-Man
– “Age of the Remittance-Man,” The New Leader, August 5, 1963.Jobs and the Man
– “Jobs and the Man,” The New Leader, January 6, 1964.The Lower Fifth
– “The Lower Fifth,” The New Leader, February 17, 1964. (A review of Rich Man, Poor Man by Thomas Y. Crowell.)Poverty and Pecksniff
– “Poverty and Pecksniff,” The New Leader, March 30, 1964.Of Death and Politics
– “Of Death and Politics,” The New Leader, January 18, 1965.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” The New Leader, March 1, 1965.What Is the Public Interest?
– "What Is the Public Interest?" (with Daniel Bell), The Public Interest, Fall 1965.Excerpt: The aim of THE PUBLIC INTEREST is at once modest and presumptuous. It is to help all of us, when we discuss issues of public policy, to know a little better what we are talking… More
One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society
– “One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society,” Harper's, March 1966. (A review of Freedom Through Power by William Withers and Reclaiming the American Dream by Richard C. Cornuelle.)The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday
– “The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday,” New York Times Magazine, September 11, 1966.The Pauper Problem
– “The Pauper Problem,” The New Leader, December 5, 1966. (A review of The Poorhouse State by Richard M. Elman and The Despised Poor by Joseph P. Ritz.)Common Sense about the Urban Crisis
– “Common Sense about the Urban Crisis,” Fortune, October 1967. (A review of Metropolitan Enigma, United States Chamber of Commerce.)Decentralization for What?
– "Decentralization for What?" The Public Interest, Spring 1968.Excerpt: I began this essay by suggesting that, at this time and this place, bureaucratic nightmares might not be the worst imaginable nightmares. I also believe that, if by some miracle… More
The New Regulators
– “The New Regulators,” Fortune, June 15, 1968. (A review of Report of the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Traffic, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.)The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics
– "The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics," New York Times Magazine, November 24, 1968.Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s
– “Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s,” in The Thirties: A Reconsideration in the Light of the American Political Tradition, ed. Morton J. Frisch and Martin Diamond (De Kalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois University Press, 1968).The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis
– “The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis,” Fortune, June 1969. (A review of The Multi-Problem Dilemma by G. E. Brown.)Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results
– “Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results,” Atlantic, August 1971.Excerpt: Is it surprising, then, that — unmanned and demoralized — he removes himself from family responsibilities that no longer rest on his shoulders? That he drifts out of… More
A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism
– "A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism," New York Times Magazine, November 14, 1971.On the Democratic Idea in America
– New York: Harper, 1972.1. Urban Civilization and its Discontents 2. The Shaking of the Foundations 3. Pornography, Obscenity, and the Case for Censorship 4. American Historians and the Democratic Idea 5. American… More
Our Gang and How It Prospered
– “Our Gang and How It Prospered,” Fortune, April 1972. (A review of The Gang and the Establishment by Richard W. Poston.)Of Populism and Taxes
– "Of Populism and Taxes," The Public Interest, Summer 1972.Excerpt: There is no conspiracy—but there is a problem. It is not a problem of income distribution or of inequities of taxation. The problem is the bureaucratization of American… More
The New Road for the Democrats
– “The New Road for the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, October 13, 1972.Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform
– “Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform,” Wall Street Journal, December 15, 1972.What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?
– “What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?” (Lecture at The One-Day Institute, The New York City Council on Economic Education) April 11, 1973.Social Reform: Gain and Losses
– “Social Reform: Gain and Losses,” Wall Street Journal, April 16, 1973.In Defense of Equality
– Michael Walzer, "In Defense of Equality," Dissent, September 1973.Taxes, Poverty, and Equality
– "Taxes, Poverty, and Equality," The Public Interest, Fall 1974.Excerpt: Taxation, poverty, and equality are all and always proper subjects for concern and reformist action. But the first step toward effective reform is to disentangle these three… More
What Is a “Neo-Conservative”?
– “What Is a ‘Neo-Conservative’?” Newsweek, January 19, 1976.Excerpt: 1. Neo-conservatism is not at all hostile to the idea of a welfare state, but it is critical of the Great Society version of this welfare state. In general, it approves of… More
The Republican Future
– “The Republican Future,” Wall Street Journal, May 14, 1976.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” Wall Street Journal, July 12, 1976.Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea
– "Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea," Alternative, October 1976.Reforming the Welfare State
– “Reforming the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, October 25, 1976.Summer Notes and Footnotes
– “Summer Notes and Footnotes,” Wall Street Journal, July 18, 1977.Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections
– “Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections,” The American Spectator, November 1977.Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians
– “Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians,” in Income Redistribution, ed. Colin D. Campbell (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1977).Two Cheers for Capitalism
– New York: Basic Books, March 1978.PART ONE: The Enemy of Being is Having 1. Corporate Capitalism in America 2. Business and the “New Class” 3. Frustrations of Affluence 4. Ideology and Food 5. The… More
Human Nature and Social Reform
– “Human Nature and Social Reform,” Wall Street Journal, September 18, 1978.Excerpt: What it comes down to is that our reformers simply cannot bring themselves to think realistically about human nature. They believe it to be not only originally good, but also… More
Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative
– “Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative,” Public Opinion, October/November, 1979.Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector
– “Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector,” A speech before the Annual Conference of the Council on Foundations, May 30, 1980.Excerpt: I want to make one final point, which is really my original point. Foundations came into existence originally to do all the things that needed to be done that the government did… More
Reason Interview: Irving Kristol
– "Reason Interview: Irving Kristol," Reason, January 1983.Reflections of a Neoconservative: Looking Back, Looking Ahead
– New York: Basic Books, October 1983.I. IN THE BEGINNING… 1. Memoirs of a Trotskyist 2. Memoirs of a “Cold Warrior” II. THE CULTURE OF DEMOCRATIC CAPITALISM 3. The Adversary Culture of Intellectuals 4.… More
“Fairness” and Income Equalizing
– “'Fairness' and Income Equalizing,” Wall Street Journal, May 2, 1984.The Old World Needs a New Ideology
– “The Old World Needs a New Ideology,” Wall Street Journal, April 1, 1985.A White House in Search of Itself
– “A White House in Search of Itself,” Wall Street Journal, May 13, 1985.Reviewing Reagan’s Reviewers
– “Reviewing Reagan's Reviewers,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1985.Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest
– "Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest," The Public Interest, Fall, 1985.Excerpt: Indeed, The Public Interest has always emphasized the modestly positive along with the skeptical. Ours has always really been a meliorist frame of mind. The world is not coming to… More
Congressional Right Has It Wrong
– “Congressional Right Has It Wrong,” Wall Street Journal, November 18, 1985.The David I Knew
– “The David I Knew,” Wall Street Journal, May 9, 1986.Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts
– “Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts" (A symposium), Policy Review, Summer 1986.The Missing Social Agenda
– “The Missing Social Agenda,” Wall Street Journal, January 26, 1987.Not the Deficits
– “Not the Deficits,” Forbes, December 14, 1987.The Bizarre Social Security Surplus
– “The Bizarre Social Security Surplus,” Wall Street Journal, June 17, 1988.End Game of the Welfare State
– “End Game of the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1989.Reply to William Buckley, “In Search of Anti-Semitism”
– “Reply to William Buckley, 'In Search of Anti-Semitism',” National Review, March 16, 1992.When It’s Wrong to Be Right
– “When It's Wrong to Be Right,” Wall Street Journal, March 24, 1993.Two Parties in Search of Direction
– “Two Parties in Search of Direction,” Wall Street Journal, May 12, 1993.A Conservative Welfare State
– “A Conservative Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, June 14, 1993.Too Clever by Half
– “Too Clever by Half,” Wall Street Journal, October 12, 1993.A Tribute to Irving Kristol
– William E. Simon, "A Tribute to Irving Kristol," in The Neoconservative Imagination: Essays in Honor of Irving Kristol, ed. Christopher DeMuth and William Kristol, (Washington, DC: AEI Press, 1995).Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea
– New York: Free Press, 1995.SECTION I 1. An Autobiographical Memoir SECTION II: RACE, SEX, AND FAMILY 2. Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results 3. The Tragedy of “Multiculturalism” 4.… More
An Autobiographical Memoir
– “An Autobiographical Memoir” from Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea, (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1995).Excerpt: Is there such a thing as a “neo” gene? I ask that question because, looking back over a lifetime of my opinions, I am struck by the fact that they all quality as “neo.” I… More
American Conservatism, 1945-1995
– "American Conservatism, 1945-1995," The Public Interest, Fall 1995.Excerpt: THE Public Interest was born well before the term “neoconservative” was invented, and will—I trust—be alive and active when the term is of only historical interest. That… More
Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools
– "Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools," Michigan Law & Policy Review, 1996.Age Before Politics
– “Age Before Politics,” Wall Street Journal, April 25, 1996.Poverty, Crime, and Community Building
– "Poverty, Crime, and Community Building" (A symposium of the Jewish Policy Center), April 29, 1996.The Feminization of the Democrats
– “The Feminization of the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, September 9, 1996.Excerpt: The current breakup experienced by the American family is having a profound effect on American politics, as well as on American society. One can go further and say that the social… More
The Family Way
– Jacob Weisberg, "The Family Way," The New Yorker, October 21 & 28, 1996.Excerpt: Someone imperfectly versed in the idiosyncrasies of American political life might have found Irving Kristol’s seventy-fifth-birthday party a bit peculiar. Gathered to… More
The Welfare State’s Spiritual Crisis
– “The Welfare State's Spiritual Crisis,” Wall Street Journal, February 3, 1997.Excerpt: By now it is obvious to all who wish to see that we are experiencing a profound crisis of the welfare state. Several crises, in fact. There is the financial crisis now evident in… More
Income Inequality Without Class Conflict
– “Income Inequality Without Class Conflict,” Wall Street Journal, December 18, 1997.Arguing the World
– "Arguing the World" (A documentary), written and directed by Joseph Dorman, January 7, 1998.Petrified Europe
– “Petrified Europe,” Wall Street Journal, February 2, 1998.The Coming Clash of Welfare States
– “The Coming Clash of Welfare States,” American Outlook, Winter 1999.Faith à la Carte
– "Faith à la Carte," The Times Literary Supplement, May 26, 2000.Excerpt: With an unprecedented level of prosperity and the end of the Cold War, the American people say they want change—it is practically un-American for someone to say he does not want… More
The Two Welfare States
– “The Two Welfare States,” Wall Street Journal, October 19, 2000.Excerpt: The most notable aspect of the current presidential election has been the division that has emerged between the two versions of the welfare state envisaged by the two parties. An… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is
– "The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is," The Weekly Standard, August 25, 2003.Excerpt: Viewed in this way, one can say that the historical task and political purpose of neoconservatism would seem to be this: to convert the Republican party, and American conservatism… More
My “Public Interest”
– "My 'Public Interest'," The Weekly Standard, December 18, 2006.Excerpt: In 1965, through a series of circumstances that need not be recounted here, the stars became properly aligned so that my wish could become a reality. Dan Bell and I were able to… More
Three Cheers for Irving by David Brooks
– David Brooks, "Three Cheers for Irving," The New York Times, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: Kristol championed capitalism and wrote brilliantly about Adam Smith. But like Smith, he could only give two cheers for capitalism, because the system of creative destruction has… More
A Life in the Public Interest
– James Q. Wilson, "A Life in the Public Interest" The Wall Street Journal, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: The view that we know less than we thought we knew about how to change the human condition came, in time, to be called neoconservatism. Many of the writers, myself included,… More
Irving Kristol’s Gone–We’ll Miss His Clear Vision
– Irwin Stelzer, "Irving Kristol's Gone–We'll Miss His Clear Vision," Daily Telegraph, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving is best known as the godfather of neoconservatism, although his persuasive tools were not those of Tony Soprano or Marlon Brando’s Godfather-figures, but contained in… More
The Practical Liberal by Christopher DeMuth
– Christopher DeMuth, "The Practical Liberal," The American, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving was, from start to finish, a proponent of vigorous government within its proper sphere. He never passed up a chance to enter a dissent, serious or wisecracking, against… More
Irving Kristol’s Clear Thinking
– Jonah Goldberg, "Irving Kristol's Clear Thinking," Los Angeles Times, September 23, 2009.Excerpt: Buckley said that the neocons’ greatest contribution to conservatism was “sociology.” The early National Review conservatism was more Aristotelian, Buckley observed, while… More
Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?
– George Weigel, "Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?" column syndicated by Catholic Press, October 7, 2009.Excerpt: The Public Interest, which was chiefly responsible for brewing the ideas embodied in the welfare reform of the 1990s, was a journal in defense of subsidiarity and in opposition to… More
The Equilibrist
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Equilibrist," National Review, October 19, 2009.Excerpt: LUNCH with Irving Kristol was an experience to remember. I had the pleasure only three times, always in the excellent dining room atop the American Enterprise Institute, but I… More
The Interested Man
– Nathan Glazer, "The Interested Man," The New Republic, November 4, 2009.Excerpt: I think back to these early days because it seems to me that Irving was all of a piece, almost from the beginning. No comment on his passing has failed to mention the young… More
The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol by Eric Cohen
– Eric Cohen, "The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol," National Affairs, Winter 2010.Excerpt: Neoconservatism was, as Kristol always described it, merely a “persuasion” that tried to “imagine the world as it might be,” but also to “live and… More
Remembering Irving Kristol
– James Piereson, "Remembering Irving Kristol," The New Criterion, February 2010.The Neoconservative Persuasion: Selected Essays, 1942-2009
– New York: Basic Books, 2011.Foreword: In Memoriam: Irving Kristol, 1920-2009: William Kristol Introduction by Gertrude Himmelfarb I. IN THE BEGINNING . . . : Enquiry Auden: The Quality of Doubt A Christian… More
Beyond Ideology
– James Q. Wilson, "Beyond Ideology," Wall Street Journal, January 21, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: The essays in “The Neoconservative Persuasion”—all but one never before brought together in a book—are a remarkable introduction to one of the few people who… More
Irving Kristol’s Brute Reason
– Paul Berman, "Irving Kristol's Brute Reason," New York Times Book Review, January 30, 2011.Excerpt: And, in this new spirit, he plunged into his magnum opus, which, instead of a book, was the constructing of something called “neoconservatism.” This was intended to be a new… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion
– Amy Kass, Charles Krauthammer, Irwin Stelzer, Leon Kass, and William Kristol, "The Neoconservative Persuasion" (A panel discussion), February 2, 2011.The Flexible Temperament
– James Piereson, "The Flexible Temperament," The New Criterion, March 2010. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: Kristol’s intellectual contribution was to bring these fundamental ideas into contemporary debates about politics and public policy through his writings in outlets like the Wall… More
Ideas Rule the World
– Franklin Foer, "Ideas Rule the World," The New Republic, March 17, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: We are still living in the world of total ideological combat that Irving Kristol created (or re-created, since it was also the world into which he was born) in the course of… More
The Enduring Irving Kristol
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Enduring Irving Kristol," First Things, August/September 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: In any event, one must remember that it was in the shadow of events eerily similar in many ways to those of our own times that neoconservatism took shape, both in Irving… More
The Art of Persuasion
– Ross Douthat, "The Art of Persuasion," Claremont Review of Books, Fall 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: At times, the essays in The Neoconservative Persuasion suggest that these critics have a point. Neoconservatism may not be a rigid ideology, but even as a “persuasion”… More
The Brooklyn Burkeans
– Jonathan Bronitsky, "The Brooklyn Burkeans," National Affairs, Winter 2014.Excerpt: By the time Kristol and Himmelfarb moved back home to New York in 1958, they were entrenched in the classical-liberal tradition and, therefore, primed to react negatively to the… More
Essays
Our Boondoggling Democracy
– "Our Boondoggling Democracy," Commentary, August 1958. (A review of The Affluent Society by John Kenneth Galbraith.)Excerpt: The Affluent Society is by far the most serious critique of “welfare capitalism” that has been written in the post-Marxian era. (It is perhaps worth remarking that, though Mr.… More
Big Government and Little Men
– “Big Government and Little Men,” The New Leader, November 26, 1962.A Case of Uneven Development
– “A Case of Uneven Development,” The New Leader, February 18, 1963.Why the Welfare State Doesn’t Work
– “Why the Welfare State Doesn't Work,” Atlantic, June 1963.Is the Welfare State Obsolete?
– “Is the Welfare State Obsolete?” Harper's, June 1963.Age of the Remittance-Man
– “Age of the Remittance-Man,” The New Leader, August 5, 1963.Jobs and the Man
– “Jobs and the Man,” The New Leader, January 6, 1964.The Lower Fifth
– “The Lower Fifth,” The New Leader, February 17, 1964. (A review of Rich Man, Poor Man by Thomas Y. Crowell.)Poverty and Pecksniff
– “Poverty and Pecksniff,” The New Leader, March 30, 1964.Of Death and Politics
– “Of Death and Politics,” The New Leader, January 18, 1965.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” The New Leader, March 1, 1965.What Is the Public Interest?
– "What Is the Public Interest?" (with Daniel Bell), The Public Interest, Fall 1965.Excerpt: The aim of THE PUBLIC INTEREST is at once modest and presumptuous. It is to help all of us, when we discuss issues of public policy, to know a little better what we are talking… More
One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society
– “One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society,” Harper's, March 1966. (A review of Freedom Through Power by William Withers and Reclaiming the American Dream by Richard C. Cornuelle.)The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday
– “The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday,” New York Times Magazine, September 11, 1966.The Pauper Problem
– “The Pauper Problem,” The New Leader, December 5, 1966. (A review of The Poorhouse State by Richard M. Elman and The Despised Poor by Joseph P. Ritz.)Common Sense about the Urban Crisis
– “Common Sense about the Urban Crisis,” Fortune, October 1967. (A review of Metropolitan Enigma, United States Chamber of Commerce.)Decentralization for What?
– "Decentralization for What?" The Public Interest, Spring 1968.Excerpt: I began this essay by suggesting that, at this time and this place, bureaucratic nightmares might not be the worst imaginable nightmares. I also believe that, if by some miracle… More
The New Regulators
– “The New Regulators,” Fortune, June 15, 1968. (A review of Report of the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Traffic, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.)The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics
– "The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics," New York Times Magazine, November 24, 1968.Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s
– “Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s,” in The Thirties: A Reconsideration in the Light of the American Political Tradition, ed. Morton J. Frisch and Martin Diamond (De Kalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois University Press, 1968).The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis
– “The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis,” Fortune, June 1969. (A review of The Multi-Problem Dilemma by G. E. Brown.)Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results
– “Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results,” Atlantic, August 1971.Excerpt: Is it surprising, then, that — unmanned and demoralized — he removes himself from family responsibilities that no longer rest on his shoulders? That he drifts out of… More
A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism
– "A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism," New York Times Magazine, November 14, 1971.On the Democratic Idea in America
– New York: Harper, 1972.1. Urban Civilization and its Discontents 2. The Shaking of the Foundations 3. Pornography, Obscenity, and the Case for Censorship 4. American Historians and the Democratic Idea 5. American… More
Our Gang and How It Prospered
– “Our Gang and How It Prospered,” Fortune, April 1972. (A review of The Gang and the Establishment by Richard W. Poston.)Of Populism and Taxes
– "Of Populism and Taxes," The Public Interest, Summer 1972.Excerpt: There is no conspiracy—but there is a problem. It is not a problem of income distribution or of inequities of taxation. The problem is the bureaucratization of American… More
The New Road for the Democrats
– “The New Road for the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, October 13, 1972.Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform
– “Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform,” Wall Street Journal, December 15, 1972.What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?
– “What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?” (Lecture at The One-Day Institute, The New York City Council on Economic Education) April 11, 1973.Social Reform: Gain and Losses
– “Social Reform: Gain and Losses,” Wall Street Journal, April 16, 1973.In Defense of Equality
– Michael Walzer, "In Defense of Equality," Dissent, September 1973.Taxes, Poverty, and Equality
– "Taxes, Poverty, and Equality," The Public Interest, Fall 1974.Excerpt: Taxation, poverty, and equality are all and always proper subjects for concern and reformist action. But the first step toward effective reform is to disentangle these three… More
What Is a “Neo-Conservative”?
– “What Is a ‘Neo-Conservative’?” Newsweek, January 19, 1976.Excerpt: 1. Neo-conservatism is not at all hostile to the idea of a welfare state, but it is critical of the Great Society version of this welfare state. In general, it approves of… More
The Republican Future
– “The Republican Future,” Wall Street Journal, May 14, 1976.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” Wall Street Journal, July 12, 1976.Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea
– "Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea," Alternative, October 1976.Reforming the Welfare State
– “Reforming the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, October 25, 1976.Summer Notes and Footnotes
– “Summer Notes and Footnotes,” Wall Street Journal, July 18, 1977.Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections
– “Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections,” The American Spectator, November 1977.Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians
– “Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians,” in Income Redistribution, ed. Colin D. Campbell (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1977).Two Cheers for Capitalism
– New York: Basic Books, March 1978.PART ONE: The Enemy of Being is Having 1. Corporate Capitalism in America 2. Business and the “New Class” 3. Frustrations of Affluence 4. Ideology and Food 5. The… More
Human Nature and Social Reform
– “Human Nature and Social Reform,” Wall Street Journal, September 18, 1978.Excerpt: What it comes down to is that our reformers simply cannot bring themselves to think realistically about human nature. They believe it to be not only originally good, but also… More
Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative
– “Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative,” Public Opinion, October/November, 1979.Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector
– “Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector,” A speech before the Annual Conference of the Council on Foundations, May 30, 1980.Excerpt: I want to make one final point, which is really my original point. Foundations came into existence originally to do all the things that needed to be done that the government did… More
Reason Interview: Irving Kristol
– "Reason Interview: Irving Kristol," Reason, January 1983.Reflections of a Neoconservative: Looking Back, Looking Ahead
– New York: Basic Books, October 1983.I. IN THE BEGINNING… 1. Memoirs of a Trotskyist 2. Memoirs of a “Cold Warrior” II. THE CULTURE OF DEMOCRATIC CAPITALISM 3. The Adversary Culture of Intellectuals 4.… More
“Fairness” and Income Equalizing
– “'Fairness' and Income Equalizing,” Wall Street Journal, May 2, 1984.The Old World Needs a New Ideology
– “The Old World Needs a New Ideology,” Wall Street Journal, April 1, 1985.A White House in Search of Itself
– “A White House in Search of Itself,” Wall Street Journal, May 13, 1985.Reviewing Reagan’s Reviewers
– “Reviewing Reagan's Reviewers,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1985.Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest
– "Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest," The Public Interest, Fall, 1985.Excerpt: Indeed, The Public Interest has always emphasized the modestly positive along with the skeptical. Ours has always really been a meliorist frame of mind. The world is not coming to… More
Congressional Right Has It Wrong
– “Congressional Right Has It Wrong,” Wall Street Journal, November 18, 1985.The David I Knew
– “The David I Knew,” Wall Street Journal, May 9, 1986.Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts
– “Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts" (A symposium), Policy Review, Summer 1986.The Missing Social Agenda
– “The Missing Social Agenda,” Wall Street Journal, January 26, 1987.Not the Deficits
– “Not the Deficits,” Forbes, December 14, 1987.The Bizarre Social Security Surplus
– “The Bizarre Social Security Surplus,” Wall Street Journal, June 17, 1988.End Game of the Welfare State
– “End Game of the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1989.Reply to William Buckley, “In Search of Anti-Semitism”
– “Reply to William Buckley, 'In Search of Anti-Semitism',” National Review, March 16, 1992.When It’s Wrong to Be Right
– “When It's Wrong to Be Right,” Wall Street Journal, March 24, 1993.Two Parties in Search of Direction
– “Two Parties in Search of Direction,” Wall Street Journal, May 12, 1993.A Conservative Welfare State
– “A Conservative Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, June 14, 1993.Too Clever by Half
– “Too Clever by Half,” Wall Street Journal, October 12, 1993.A Tribute to Irving Kristol
– William E. Simon, "A Tribute to Irving Kristol," in The Neoconservative Imagination: Essays in Honor of Irving Kristol, ed. Christopher DeMuth and William Kristol, (Washington, DC: AEI Press, 1995).Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea
– New York: Free Press, 1995.SECTION I 1. An Autobiographical Memoir SECTION II: RACE, SEX, AND FAMILY 2. Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results 3. The Tragedy of “Multiculturalism” 4.… More
An Autobiographical Memoir
– “An Autobiographical Memoir” from Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea, (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1995).Excerpt: Is there such a thing as a “neo” gene? I ask that question because, looking back over a lifetime of my opinions, I am struck by the fact that they all quality as “neo.” I… More
American Conservatism, 1945-1995
– "American Conservatism, 1945-1995," The Public Interest, Fall 1995.Excerpt: THE Public Interest was born well before the term “neoconservative” was invented, and will—I trust—be alive and active when the term is of only historical interest. That… More
Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools
– "Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools," Michigan Law & Policy Review, 1996.Age Before Politics
– “Age Before Politics,” Wall Street Journal, April 25, 1996.Poverty, Crime, and Community Building
– "Poverty, Crime, and Community Building" (A symposium of the Jewish Policy Center), April 29, 1996.The Feminization of the Democrats
– “The Feminization of the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, September 9, 1996.Excerpt: The current breakup experienced by the American family is having a profound effect on American politics, as well as on American society. One can go further and say that the social… More
The Family Way
– Jacob Weisberg, "The Family Way," The New Yorker, October 21 & 28, 1996.Excerpt: Someone imperfectly versed in the idiosyncrasies of American political life might have found Irving Kristol’s seventy-fifth-birthday party a bit peculiar. Gathered to… More
The Welfare State’s Spiritual Crisis
– “The Welfare State's Spiritual Crisis,” Wall Street Journal, February 3, 1997.Excerpt: By now it is obvious to all who wish to see that we are experiencing a profound crisis of the welfare state. Several crises, in fact. There is the financial crisis now evident in… More
Income Inequality Without Class Conflict
– “Income Inequality Without Class Conflict,” Wall Street Journal, December 18, 1997.Arguing the World
– "Arguing the World" (A documentary), written and directed by Joseph Dorman, January 7, 1998.Petrified Europe
– “Petrified Europe,” Wall Street Journal, February 2, 1998.The Coming Clash of Welfare States
– “The Coming Clash of Welfare States,” American Outlook, Winter 1999.Faith à la Carte
– "Faith à la Carte," The Times Literary Supplement, May 26, 2000.Excerpt: With an unprecedented level of prosperity and the end of the Cold War, the American people say they want change—it is practically un-American for someone to say he does not want… More
The Two Welfare States
– “The Two Welfare States,” Wall Street Journal, October 19, 2000.Excerpt: The most notable aspect of the current presidential election has been the division that has emerged between the two versions of the welfare state envisaged by the two parties. An… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is
– "The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is," The Weekly Standard, August 25, 2003.Excerpt: Viewed in this way, one can say that the historical task and political purpose of neoconservatism would seem to be this: to convert the Republican party, and American conservatism… More
My “Public Interest”
– "My 'Public Interest'," The Weekly Standard, December 18, 2006.Excerpt: In 1965, through a series of circumstances that need not be recounted here, the stars became properly aligned so that my wish could become a reality. Dan Bell and I were able to… More
Three Cheers for Irving by David Brooks
– David Brooks, "Three Cheers for Irving," The New York Times, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: Kristol championed capitalism and wrote brilliantly about Adam Smith. But like Smith, he could only give two cheers for capitalism, because the system of creative destruction has… More
A Life in the Public Interest
– James Q. Wilson, "A Life in the Public Interest" The Wall Street Journal, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: The view that we know less than we thought we knew about how to change the human condition came, in time, to be called neoconservatism. Many of the writers, myself included,… More
Irving Kristol’s Gone–We’ll Miss His Clear Vision
– Irwin Stelzer, "Irving Kristol's Gone–We'll Miss His Clear Vision," Daily Telegraph, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving is best known as the godfather of neoconservatism, although his persuasive tools were not those of Tony Soprano or Marlon Brando’s Godfather-figures, but contained in… More
The Practical Liberal by Christopher DeMuth
– Christopher DeMuth, "The Practical Liberal," The American, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving was, from start to finish, a proponent of vigorous government within its proper sphere. He never passed up a chance to enter a dissent, serious or wisecracking, against… More
Irving Kristol’s Clear Thinking
– Jonah Goldberg, "Irving Kristol's Clear Thinking," Los Angeles Times, September 23, 2009.Excerpt: Buckley said that the neocons’ greatest contribution to conservatism was “sociology.” The early National Review conservatism was more Aristotelian, Buckley observed, while… More
Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?
– George Weigel, "Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?" column syndicated by Catholic Press, October 7, 2009.Excerpt: The Public Interest, which was chiefly responsible for brewing the ideas embodied in the welfare reform of the 1990s, was a journal in defense of subsidiarity and in opposition to… More
The Equilibrist
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Equilibrist," National Review, October 19, 2009.Excerpt: LUNCH with Irving Kristol was an experience to remember. I had the pleasure only three times, always in the excellent dining room atop the American Enterprise Institute, but I… More
The Interested Man
– Nathan Glazer, "The Interested Man," The New Republic, November 4, 2009.Excerpt: I think back to these early days because it seems to me that Irving was all of a piece, almost from the beginning. No comment on his passing has failed to mention the young… More
The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol by Eric Cohen
– Eric Cohen, "The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol," National Affairs, Winter 2010.Excerpt: Neoconservatism was, as Kristol always described it, merely a “persuasion” that tried to “imagine the world as it might be,” but also to “live and… More
Remembering Irving Kristol
– James Piereson, "Remembering Irving Kristol," The New Criterion, February 2010.The Neoconservative Persuasion: Selected Essays, 1942-2009
– New York: Basic Books, 2011.Foreword: In Memoriam: Irving Kristol, 1920-2009: William Kristol Introduction by Gertrude Himmelfarb I. IN THE BEGINNING . . . : Enquiry Auden: The Quality of Doubt A Christian… More
Beyond Ideology
– James Q. Wilson, "Beyond Ideology," Wall Street Journal, January 21, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: The essays in “The Neoconservative Persuasion”—all but one never before brought together in a book—are a remarkable introduction to one of the few people who… More
Irving Kristol’s Brute Reason
– Paul Berman, "Irving Kristol's Brute Reason," New York Times Book Review, January 30, 2011.Excerpt: And, in this new spirit, he plunged into his magnum opus, which, instead of a book, was the constructing of something called “neoconservatism.” This was intended to be a new… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion
– Amy Kass, Charles Krauthammer, Irwin Stelzer, Leon Kass, and William Kristol, "The Neoconservative Persuasion" (A panel discussion), February 2, 2011.The Flexible Temperament
– James Piereson, "The Flexible Temperament," The New Criterion, March 2010. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: Kristol’s intellectual contribution was to bring these fundamental ideas into contemporary debates about politics and public policy through his writings in outlets like the Wall… More
Ideas Rule the World
– Franklin Foer, "Ideas Rule the World," The New Republic, March 17, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: We are still living in the world of total ideological combat that Irving Kristol created (or re-created, since it was also the world into which he was born) in the course of… More
The Enduring Irving Kristol
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Enduring Irving Kristol," First Things, August/September 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: In any event, one must remember that it was in the shadow of events eerily similar in many ways to those of our own times that neoconservatism took shape, both in Irving… More
The Art of Persuasion
– Ross Douthat, "The Art of Persuasion," Claremont Review of Books, Fall 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: At times, the essays in The Neoconservative Persuasion suggest that these critics have a point. Neoconservatism may not be a rigid ideology, but even as a “persuasion”… More
The Brooklyn Burkeans
– Jonathan Bronitsky, "The Brooklyn Burkeans," National Affairs, Winter 2014.Excerpt: By the time Kristol and Himmelfarb moved back home to New York in 1958, they were entrenched in the classical-liberal tradition and, therefore, primed to react negatively to the… More
Commentary
Our Boondoggling Democracy
– "Our Boondoggling Democracy," Commentary, August 1958. (A review of The Affluent Society by John Kenneth Galbraith.)Excerpt: The Affluent Society is by far the most serious critique of “welfare capitalism” that has been written in the post-Marxian era. (It is perhaps worth remarking that, though Mr.… More
Big Government and Little Men
– “Big Government and Little Men,” The New Leader, November 26, 1962.A Case of Uneven Development
– “A Case of Uneven Development,” The New Leader, February 18, 1963.Why the Welfare State Doesn’t Work
– “Why the Welfare State Doesn't Work,” Atlantic, June 1963.Is the Welfare State Obsolete?
– “Is the Welfare State Obsolete?” Harper's, June 1963.Age of the Remittance-Man
– “Age of the Remittance-Man,” The New Leader, August 5, 1963.Jobs and the Man
– “Jobs and the Man,” The New Leader, January 6, 1964.The Lower Fifth
– “The Lower Fifth,” The New Leader, February 17, 1964. (A review of Rich Man, Poor Man by Thomas Y. Crowell.)Poverty and Pecksniff
– “Poverty and Pecksniff,” The New Leader, March 30, 1964.Of Death and Politics
– “Of Death and Politics,” The New Leader, January 18, 1965.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” The New Leader, March 1, 1965.What Is the Public Interest?
– "What Is the Public Interest?" (with Daniel Bell), The Public Interest, Fall 1965.Excerpt: The aim of THE PUBLIC INTEREST is at once modest and presumptuous. It is to help all of us, when we discuss issues of public policy, to know a little better what we are talking… More
One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society
– “One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society,” Harper's, March 1966. (A review of Freedom Through Power by William Withers and Reclaiming the American Dream by Richard C. Cornuelle.)The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday
– “The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday,” New York Times Magazine, September 11, 1966.The Pauper Problem
– “The Pauper Problem,” The New Leader, December 5, 1966. (A review of The Poorhouse State by Richard M. Elman and The Despised Poor by Joseph P. Ritz.)Common Sense about the Urban Crisis
– “Common Sense about the Urban Crisis,” Fortune, October 1967. (A review of Metropolitan Enigma, United States Chamber of Commerce.)Decentralization for What?
– "Decentralization for What?" The Public Interest, Spring 1968.Excerpt: I began this essay by suggesting that, at this time and this place, bureaucratic nightmares might not be the worst imaginable nightmares. I also believe that, if by some miracle… More
The New Regulators
– “The New Regulators,” Fortune, June 15, 1968. (A review of Report of the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Traffic, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.)The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics
– "The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics," New York Times Magazine, November 24, 1968.Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s
– “Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s,” in The Thirties: A Reconsideration in the Light of the American Political Tradition, ed. Morton J. Frisch and Martin Diamond (De Kalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois University Press, 1968).The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis
– “The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis,” Fortune, June 1969. (A review of The Multi-Problem Dilemma by G. E. Brown.)Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results
– “Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results,” Atlantic, August 1971.Excerpt: Is it surprising, then, that — unmanned and demoralized — he removes himself from family responsibilities that no longer rest on his shoulders? That he drifts out of… More
A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism
– "A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism," New York Times Magazine, November 14, 1971.On the Democratic Idea in America
– New York: Harper, 1972.1. Urban Civilization and its Discontents 2. The Shaking of the Foundations 3. Pornography, Obscenity, and the Case for Censorship 4. American Historians and the Democratic Idea 5. American… More
Our Gang and How It Prospered
– “Our Gang and How It Prospered,” Fortune, April 1972. (A review of The Gang and the Establishment by Richard W. Poston.)Of Populism and Taxes
– "Of Populism and Taxes," The Public Interest, Summer 1972.Excerpt: There is no conspiracy—but there is a problem. It is not a problem of income distribution or of inequities of taxation. The problem is the bureaucratization of American… More
The New Road for the Democrats
– “The New Road for the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, October 13, 1972.Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform
– “Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform,” Wall Street Journal, December 15, 1972.What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?
– “What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?” (Lecture at The One-Day Institute, The New York City Council on Economic Education) April 11, 1973.Social Reform: Gain and Losses
– “Social Reform: Gain and Losses,” Wall Street Journal, April 16, 1973.In Defense of Equality
– Michael Walzer, "In Defense of Equality," Dissent, September 1973.Taxes, Poverty, and Equality
– "Taxes, Poverty, and Equality," The Public Interest, Fall 1974.Excerpt: Taxation, poverty, and equality are all and always proper subjects for concern and reformist action. But the first step toward effective reform is to disentangle these three… More
What Is a “Neo-Conservative”?
– “What Is a ‘Neo-Conservative’?” Newsweek, January 19, 1976.Excerpt: 1. Neo-conservatism is not at all hostile to the idea of a welfare state, but it is critical of the Great Society version of this welfare state. In general, it approves of… More
The Republican Future
– “The Republican Future,” Wall Street Journal, May 14, 1976.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” Wall Street Journal, July 12, 1976.Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea
– "Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea," Alternative, October 1976.Reforming the Welfare State
– “Reforming the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, October 25, 1976.Summer Notes and Footnotes
– “Summer Notes and Footnotes,” Wall Street Journal, July 18, 1977.Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections
– “Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections,” The American Spectator, November 1977.Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians
– “Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians,” in Income Redistribution, ed. Colin D. Campbell (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1977).Two Cheers for Capitalism
– New York: Basic Books, March 1978.PART ONE: The Enemy of Being is Having 1. Corporate Capitalism in America 2. Business and the “New Class” 3. Frustrations of Affluence 4. Ideology and Food 5. The… More
Human Nature and Social Reform
– “Human Nature and Social Reform,” Wall Street Journal, September 18, 1978.Excerpt: What it comes down to is that our reformers simply cannot bring themselves to think realistically about human nature. They believe it to be not only originally good, but also… More
Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative
– “Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative,” Public Opinion, October/November, 1979.Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector
– “Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector,” A speech before the Annual Conference of the Council on Foundations, May 30, 1980.Excerpt: I want to make one final point, which is really my original point. Foundations came into existence originally to do all the things that needed to be done that the government did… More
Reason Interview: Irving Kristol
– "Reason Interview: Irving Kristol," Reason, January 1983.Reflections of a Neoconservative: Looking Back, Looking Ahead
– New York: Basic Books, October 1983.I. IN THE BEGINNING… 1. Memoirs of a Trotskyist 2. Memoirs of a “Cold Warrior” II. THE CULTURE OF DEMOCRATIC CAPITALISM 3. The Adversary Culture of Intellectuals 4.… More
“Fairness” and Income Equalizing
– “'Fairness' and Income Equalizing,” Wall Street Journal, May 2, 1984.The Old World Needs a New Ideology
– “The Old World Needs a New Ideology,” Wall Street Journal, April 1, 1985.A White House in Search of Itself
– “A White House in Search of Itself,” Wall Street Journal, May 13, 1985.Reviewing Reagan’s Reviewers
– “Reviewing Reagan's Reviewers,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1985.Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest
– "Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest," The Public Interest, Fall, 1985.Excerpt: Indeed, The Public Interest has always emphasized the modestly positive along with the skeptical. Ours has always really been a meliorist frame of mind. The world is not coming to… More
Congressional Right Has It Wrong
– “Congressional Right Has It Wrong,” Wall Street Journal, November 18, 1985.The David I Knew
– “The David I Knew,” Wall Street Journal, May 9, 1986.Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts
– “Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts" (A symposium), Policy Review, Summer 1986.The Missing Social Agenda
– “The Missing Social Agenda,” Wall Street Journal, January 26, 1987.Not the Deficits
– “Not the Deficits,” Forbes, December 14, 1987.The Bizarre Social Security Surplus
– “The Bizarre Social Security Surplus,” Wall Street Journal, June 17, 1988.End Game of the Welfare State
– “End Game of the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1989.Reply to William Buckley, “In Search of Anti-Semitism”
– “Reply to William Buckley, 'In Search of Anti-Semitism',” National Review, March 16, 1992.When It’s Wrong to Be Right
– “When It's Wrong to Be Right,” Wall Street Journal, March 24, 1993.Two Parties in Search of Direction
– “Two Parties in Search of Direction,” Wall Street Journal, May 12, 1993.A Conservative Welfare State
– “A Conservative Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, June 14, 1993.Too Clever by Half
– “Too Clever by Half,” Wall Street Journal, October 12, 1993.A Tribute to Irving Kristol
– William E. Simon, "A Tribute to Irving Kristol," in The Neoconservative Imagination: Essays in Honor of Irving Kristol, ed. Christopher DeMuth and William Kristol, (Washington, DC: AEI Press, 1995).Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea
– New York: Free Press, 1995.SECTION I 1. An Autobiographical Memoir SECTION II: RACE, SEX, AND FAMILY 2. Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results 3. The Tragedy of “Multiculturalism” 4.… More
An Autobiographical Memoir
– “An Autobiographical Memoir” from Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea, (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1995).Excerpt: Is there such a thing as a “neo” gene? I ask that question because, looking back over a lifetime of my opinions, I am struck by the fact that they all quality as “neo.” I… More
American Conservatism, 1945-1995
– "American Conservatism, 1945-1995," The Public Interest, Fall 1995.Excerpt: THE Public Interest was born well before the term “neoconservative” was invented, and will—I trust—be alive and active when the term is of only historical interest. That… More
Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools
– "Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools," Michigan Law & Policy Review, 1996.Age Before Politics
– “Age Before Politics,” Wall Street Journal, April 25, 1996.Poverty, Crime, and Community Building
– "Poverty, Crime, and Community Building" (A symposium of the Jewish Policy Center), April 29, 1996.The Feminization of the Democrats
– “The Feminization of the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, September 9, 1996.Excerpt: The current breakup experienced by the American family is having a profound effect on American politics, as well as on American society. One can go further and say that the social… More
The Family Way
– Jacob Weisberg, "The Family Way," The New Yorker, October 21 & 28, 1996.Excerpt: Someone imperfectly versed in the idiosyncrasies of American political life might have found Irving Kristol’s seventy-fifth-birthday party a bit peculiar. Gathered to… More
The Welfare State’s Spiritual Crisis
– “The Welfare State's Spiritual Crisis,” Wall Street Journal, February 3, 1997.Excerpt: By now it is obvious to all who wish to see that we are experiencing a profound crisis of the welfare state. Several crises, in fact. There is the financial crisis now evident in… More
Income Inequality Without Class Conflict
– “Income Inequality Without Class Conflict,” Wall Street Journal, December 18, 1997.Arguing the World
– "Arguing the World" (A documentary), written and directed by Joseph Dorman, January 7, 1998.Petrified Europe
– “Petrified Europe,” Wall Street Journal, February 2, 1998.The Coming Clash of Welfare States
– “The Coming Clash of Welfare States,” American Outlook, Winter 1999.Faith à la Carte
– "Faith à la Carte," The Times Literary Supplement, May 26, 2000.Excerpt: With an unprecedented level of prosperity and the end of the Cold War, the American people say they want change—it is practically un-American for someone to say he does not want… More
The Two Welfare States
– “The Two Welfare States,” Wall Street Journal, October 19, 2000.Excerpt: The most notable aspect of the current presidential election has been the division that has emerged between the two versions of the welfare state envisaged by the two parties. An… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is
– "The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is," The Weekly Standard, August 25, 2003.Excerpt: Viewed in this way, one can say that the historical task and political purpose of neoconservatism would seem to be this: to convert the Republican party, and American conservatism… More
My “Public Interest”
– "My 'Public Interest'," The Weekly Standard, December 18, 2006.Excerpt: In 1965, through a series of circumstances that need not be recounted here, the stars became properly aligned so that my wish could become a reality. Dan Bell and I were able to… More
Three Cheers for Irving by David Brooks
– David Brooks, "Three Cheers for Irving," The New York Times, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: Kristol championed capitalism and wrote brilliantly about Adam Smith. But like Smith, he could only give two cheers for capitalism, because the system of creative destruction has… More
A Life in the Public Interest
– James Q. Wilson, "A Life in the Public Interest" The Wall Street Journal, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: The view that we know less than we thought we knew about how to change the human condition came, in time, to be called neoconservatism. Many of the writers, myself included,… More
Irving Kristol’s Gone–We’ll Miss His Clear Vision
– Irwin Stelzer, "Irving Kristol's Gone–We'll Miss His Clear Vision," Daily Telegraph, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving is best known as the godfather of neoconservatism, although his persuasive tools were not those of Tony Soprano or Marlon Brando’s Godfather-figures, but contained in… More
The Practical Liberal by Christopher DeMuth
– Christopher DeMuth, "The Practical Liberal," The American, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving was, from start to finish, a proponent of vigorous government within its proper sphere. He never passed up a chance to enter a dissent, serious or wisecracking, against… More
Irving Kristol’s Clear Thinking
– Jonah Goldberg, "Irving Kristol's Clear Thinking," Los Angeles Times, September 23, 2009.Excerpt: Buckley said that the neocons’ greatest contribution to conservatism was “sociology.” The early National Review conservatism was more Aristotelian, Buckley observed, while… More
Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?
– George Weigel, "Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?" column syndicated by Catholic Press, October 7, 2009.Excerpt: The Public Interest, which was chiefly responsible for brewing the ideas embodied in the welfare reform of the 1990s, was a journal in defense of subsidiarity and in opposition to… More
The Equilibrist
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Equilibrist," National Review, October 19, 2009.Excerpt: LUNCH with Irving Kristol was an experience to remember. I had the pleasure only three times, always in the excellent dining room atop the American Enterprise Institute, but I… More
The Interested Man
– Nathan Glazer, "The Interested Man," The New Republic, November 4, 2009.Excerpt: I think back to these early days because it seems to me that Irving was all of a piece, almost from the beginning. No comment on his passing has failed to mention the young… More
The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol by Eric Cohen
– Eric Cohen, "The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol," National Affairs, Winter 2010.Excerpt: Neoconservatism was, as Kristol always described it, merely a “persuasion” that tried to “imagine the world as it might be,” but also to “live and… More
Remembering Irving Kristol
– James Piereson, "Remembering Irving Kristol," The New Criterion, February 2010.The Neoconservative Persuasion: Selected Essays, 1942-2009
– New York: Basic Books, 2011.Foreword: In Memoriam: Irving Kristol, 1920-2009: William Kristol Introduction by Gertrude Himmelfarb I. IN THE BEGINNING . . . : Enquiry Auden: The Quality of Doubt A Christian… More
Beyond Ideology
– James Q. Wilson, "Beyond Ideology," Wall Street Journal, January 21, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: The essays in “The Neoconservative Persuasion”—all but one never before brought together in a book—are a remarkable introduction to one of the few people who… More
Irving Kristol’s Brute Reason
– Paul Berman, "Irving Kristol's Brute Reason," New York Times Book Review, January 30, 2011.Excerpt: And, in this new spirit, he plunged into his magnum opus, which, instead of a book, was the constructing of something called “neoconservatism.” This was intended to be a new… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion
– Amy Kass, Charles Krauthammer, Irwin Stelzer, Leon Kass, and William Kristol, "The Neoconservative Persuasion" (A panel discussion), February 2, 2011.The Flexible Temperament
– James Piereson, "The Flexible Temperament," The New Criterion, March 2010. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: Kristol’s intellectual contribution was to bring these fundamental ideas into contemporary debates about politics and public policy through his writings in outlets like the Wall… More
Ideas Rule the World
– Franklin Foer, "Ideas Rule the World," The New Republic, March 17, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: We are still living in the world of total ideological combat that Irving Kristol created (or re-created, since it was also the world into which he was born) in the course of… More
The Enduring Irving Kristol
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Enduring Irving Kristol," First Things, August/September 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: In any event, one must remember that it was in the shadow of events eerily similar in many ways to those of our own times that neoconservatism took shape, both in Irving… More
The Art of Persuasion
– Ross Douthat, "The Art of Persuasion," Claremont Review of Books, Fall 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: At times, the essays in The Neoconservative Persuasion suggest that these critics have a point. Neoconservatism may not be a rigid ideology, but even as a “persuasion”… More
The Brooklyn Burkeans
– Jonathan Bronitsky, "The Brooklyn Burkeans," National Affairs, Winter 2014.Excerpt: By the time Kristol and Himmelfarb moved back home to New York in 1958, they were entrenched in the classical-liberal tradition and, therefore, primed to react negatively to the… More
Multimedia
Our Boondoggling Democracy
– "Our Boondoggling Democracy," Commentary, August 1958. (A review of The Affluent Society by John Kenneth Galbraith.)Excerpt: The Affluent Society is by far the most serious critique of “welfare capitalism” that has been written in the post-Marxian era. (It is perhaps worth remarking that, though Mr.… More
Big Government and Little Men
– “Big Government and Little Men,” The New Leader, November 26, 1962.A Case of Uneven Development
– “A Case of Uneven Development,” The New Leader, February 18, 1963.Why the Welfare State Doesn’t Work
– “Why the Welfare State Doesn't Work,” Atlantic, June 1963.Is the Welfare State Obsolete?
– “Is the Welfare State Obsolete?” Harper's, June 1963.Age of the Remittance-Man
– “Age of the Remittance-Man,” The New Leader, August 5, 1963.Jobs and the Man
– “Jobs and the Man,” The New Leader, January 6, 1964.The Lower Fifth
– “The Lower Fifth,” The New Leader, February 17, 1964. (A review of Rich Man, Poor Man by Thomas Y. Crowell.)Poverty and Pecksniff
– “Poverty and Pecksniff,” The New Leader, March 30, 1964.Of Death and Politics
– “Of Death and Politics,” The New Leader, January 18, 1965.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” The New Leader, March 1, 1965.What Is the Public Interest?
– "What Is the Public Interest?" (with Daniel Bell), The Public Interest, Fall 1965.Excerpt: The aim of THE PUBLIC INTEREST is at once modest and presumptuous. It is to help all of us, when we discuss issues of public policy, to know a little better what we are talking… More
One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society
– “One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society,” Harper's, March 1966. (A review of Freedom Through Power by William Withers and Reclaiming the American Dream by Richard C. Cornuelle.)The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday
– “The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday,” New York Times Magazine, September 11, 1966.The Pauper Problem
– “The Pauper Problem,” The New Leader, December 5, 1966. (A review of The Poorhouse State by Richard M. Elman and The Despised Poor by Joseph P. Ritz.)Common Sense about the Urban Crisis
– “Common Sense about the Urban Crisis,” Fortune, October 1967. (A review of Metropolitan Enigma, United States Chamber of Commerce.)Decentralization for What?
– "Decentralization for What?" The Public Interest, Spring 1968.Excerpt: I began this essay by suggesting that, at this time and this place, bureaucratic nightmares might not be the worst imaginable nightmares. I also believe that, if by some miracle… More
The New Regulators
– “The New Regulators,” Fortune, June 15, 1968. (A review of Report of the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Traffic, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.)The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics
– "The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics," New York Times Magazine, November 24, 1968.Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s
– “Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s,” in The Thirties: A Reconsideration in the Light of the American Political Tradition, ed. Morton J. Frisch and Martin Diamond (De Kalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois University Press, 1968).The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis
– “The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis,” Fortune, June 1969. (A review of The Multi-Problem Dilemma by G. E. Brown.)Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results
– “Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results,” Atlantic, August 1971.Excerpt: Is it surprising, then, that — unmanned and demoralized — he removes himself from family responsibilities that no longer rest on his shoulders? That he drifts out of… More
A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism
– "A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism," New York Times Magazine, November 14, 1971.On the Democratic Idea in America
– New York: Harper, 1972.1. Urban Civilization and its Discontents 2. The Shaking of the Foundations 3. Pornography, Obscenity, and the Case for Censorship 4. American Historians and the Democratic Idea 5. American… More
Our Gang and How It Prospered
– “Our Gang and How It Prospered,” Fortune, April 1972. (A review of The Gang and the Establishment by Richard W. Poston.)Of Populism and Taxes
– "Of Populism and Taxes," The Public Interest, Summer 1972.Excerpt: There is no conspiracy—but there is a problem. It is not a problem of income distribution or of inequities of taxation. The problem is the bureaucratization of American… More
The New Road for the Democrats
– “The New Road for the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, October 13, 1972.Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform
– “Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform,” Wall Street Journal, December 15, 1972.What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?
– “What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?” (Lecture at The One-Day Institute, The New York City Council on Economic Education) April 11, 1973.Social Reform: Gain and Losses
– “Social Reform: Gain and Losses,” Wall Street Journal, April 16, 1973.In Defense of Equality
– Michael Walzer, "In Defense of Equality," Dissent, September 1973.Taxes, Poverty, and Equality
– "Taxes, Poverty, and Equality," The Public Interest, Fall 1974.Excerpt: Taxation, poverty, and equality are all and always proper subjects for concern and reformist action. But the first step toward effective reform is to disentangle these three… More
What Is a “Neo-Conservative”?
– “What Is a ‘Neo-Conservative’?” Newsweek, January 19, 1976.Excerpt: 1. Neo-conservatism is not at all hostile to the idea of a welfare state, but it is critical of the Great Society version of this welfare state. In general, it approves of… More
The Republican Future
– “The Republican Future,” Wall Street Journal, May 14, 1976.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” Wall Street Journal, July 12, 1976.Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea
– "Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea," Alternative, October 1976.Reforming the Welfare State
– “Reforming the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, October 25, 1976.Summer Notes and Footnotes
– “Summer Notes and Footnotes,” Wall Street Journal, July 18, 1977.Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections
– “Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections,” The American Spectator, November 1977.Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians
– “Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians,” in Income Redistribution, ed. Colin D. Campbell (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1977).Two Cheers for Capitalism
– New York: Basic Books, March 1978.PART ONE: The Enemy of Being is Having 1. Corporate Capitalism in America 2. Business and the “New Class” 3. Frustrations of Affluence 4. Ideology and Food 5. The… More
Human Nature and Social Reform
– “Human Nature and Social Reform,” Wall Street Journal, September 18, 1978.Excerpt: What it comes down to is that our reformers simply cannot bring themselves to think realistically about human nature. They believe it to be not only originally good, but also… More
Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative
– “Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative,” Public Opinion, October/November, 1979.Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector
– “Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector,” A speech before the Annual Conference of the Council on Foundations, May 30, 1980.Excerpt: I want to make one final point, which is really my original point. Foundations came into existence originally to do all the things that needed to be done that the government did… More
Reason Interview: Irving Kristol
– "Reason Interview: Irving Kristol," Reason, January 1983.Reflections of a Neoconservative: Looking Back, Looking Ahead
– New York: Basic Books, October 1983.I. IN THE BEGINNING… 1. Memoirs of a Trotskyist 2. Memoirs of a “Cold Warrior” II. THE CULTURE OF DEMOCRATIC CAPITALISM 3. The Adversary Culture of Intellectuals 4.… More
“Fairness” and Income Equalizing
– “'Fairness' and Income Equalizing,” Wall Street Journal, May 2, 1984.The Old World Needs a New Ideology
– “The Old World Needs a New Ideology,” Wall Street Journal, April 1, 1985.A White House in Search of Itself
– “A White House in Search of Itself,” Wall Street Journal, May 13, 1985.Reviewing Reagan’s Reviewers
– “Reviewing Reagan's Reviewers,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1985.Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest
– "Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest," The Public Interest, Fall, 1985.Excerpt: Indeed, The Public Interest has always emphasized the modestly positive along with the skeptical. Ours has always really been a meliorist frame of mind. The world is not coming to… More
Congressional Right Has It Wrong
– “Congressional Right Has It Wrong,” Wall Street Journal, November 18, 1985.The David I Knew
– “The David I Knew,” Wall Street Journal, May 9, 1986.Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts
– “Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts" (A symposium), Policy Review, Summer 1986.The Missing Social Agenda
– “The Missing Social Agenda,” Wall Street Journal, January 26, 1987.Not the Deficits
– “Not the Deficits,” Forbes, December 14, 1987.The Bizarre Social Security Surplus
– “The Bizarre Social Security Surplus,” Wall Street Journal, June 17, 1988.End Game of the Welfare State
– “End Game of the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1989.Reply to William Buckley, “In Search of Anti-Semitism”
– “Reply to William Buckley, 'In Search of Anti-Semitism',” National Review, March 16, 1992.When It’s Wrong to Be Right
– “When It's Wrong to Be Right,” Wall Street Journal, March 24, 1993.Two Parties in Search of Direction
– “Two Parties in Search of Direction,” Wall Street Journal, May 12, 1993.A Conservative Welfare State
– “A Conservative Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, June 14, 1993.Too Clever by Half
– “Too Clever by Half,” Wall Street Journal, October 12, 1993.A Tribute to Irving Kristol
– William E. Simon, "A Tribute to Irving Kristol," in The Neoconservative Imagination: Essays in Honor of Irving Kristol, ed. Christopher DeMuth and William Kristol, (Washington, DC: AEI Press, 1995).Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea
– New York: Free Press, 1995.SECTION I 1. An Autobiographical Memoir SECTION II: RACE, SEX, AND FAMILY 2. Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results 3. The Tragedy of “Multiculturalism” 4.… More
An Autobiographical Memoir
– “An Autobiographical Memoir” from Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea, (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1995).Excerpt: Is there such a thing as a “neo” gene? I ask that question because, looking back over a lifetime of my opinions, I am struck by the fact that they all quality as “neo.” I… More
American Conservatism, 1945-1995
– "American Conservatism, 1945-1995," The Public Interest, Fall 1995.Excerpt: THE Public Interest was born well before the term “neoconservative” was invented, and will—I trust—be alive and active when the term is of only historical interest. That… More
Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools
– "Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools," Michigan Law & Policy Review, 1996.Age Before Politics
– “Age Before Politics,” Wall Street Journal, April 25, 1996.Poverty, Crime, and Community Building
– "Poverty, Crime, and Community Building" (A symposium of the Jewish Policy Center), April 29, 1996.The Feminization of the Democrats
– “The Feminization of the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, September 9, 1996.Excerpt: The current breakup experienced by the American family is having a profound effect on American politics, as well as on American society. One can go further and say that the social… More
The Family Way
– Jacob Weisberg, "The Family Way," The New Yorker, October 21 & 28, 1996.Excerpt: Someone imperfectly versed in the idiosyncrasies of American political life might have found Irving Kristol’s seventy-fifth-birthday party a bit peculiar. Gathered to… More
The Welfare State’s Spiritual Crisis
– “The Welfare State's Spiritual Crisis,” Wall Street Journal, February 3, 1997.Excerpt: By now it is obvious to all who wish to see that we are experiencing a profound crisis of the welfare state. Several crises, in fact. There is the financial crisis now evident in… More
Income Inequality Without Class Conflict
– “Income Inequality Without Class Conflict,” Wall Street Journal, December 18, 1997.Arguing the World
– "Arguing the World" (A documentary), written and directed by Joseph Dorman, January 7, 1998.Petrified Europe
– “Petrified Europe,” Wall Street Journal, February 2, 1998.The Coming Clash of Welfare States
– “The Coming Clash of Welfare States,” American Outlook, Winter 1999.Faith à la Carte
– "Faith à la Carte," The Times Literary Supplement, May 26, 2000.Excerpt: With an unprecedented level of prosperity and the end of the Cold War, the American people say they want change—it is practically un-American for someone to say he does not want… More
The Two Welfare States
– “The Two Welfare States,” Wall Street Journal, October 19, 2000.Excerpt: The most notable aspect of the current presidential election has been the division that has emerged between the two versions of the welfare state envisaged by the two parties. An… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is
– "The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is," The Weekly Standard, August 25, 2003.Excerpt: Viewed in this way, one can say that the historical task and political purpose of neoconservatism would seem to be this: to convert the Republican party, and American conservatism… More
My “Public Interest”
– "My 'Public Interest'," The Weekly Standard, December 18, 2006.Excerpt: In 1965, through a series of circumstances that need not be recounted here, the stars became properly aligned so that my wish could become a reality. Dan Bell and I were able to… More
Three Cheers for Irving by David Brooks
– David Brooks, "Three Cheers for Irving," The New York Times, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: Kristol championed capitalism and wrote brilliantly about Adam Smith. But like Smith, he could only give two cheers for capitalism, because the system of creative destruction has… More
A Life in the Public Interest
– James Q. Wilson, "A Life in the Public Interest" The Wall Street Journal, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: The view that we know less than we thought we knew about how to change the human condition came, in time, to be called neoconservatism. Many of the writers, myself included,… More
Irving Kristol’s Gone–We’ll Miss His Clear Vision
– Irwin Stelzer, "Irving Kristol's Gone–We'll Miss His Clear Vision," Daily Telegraph, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving is best known as the godfather of neoconservatism, although his persuasive tools were not those of Tony Soprano or Marlon Brando’s Godfather-figures, but contained in… More
The Practical Liberal by Christopher DeMuth
– Christopher DeMuth, "The Practical Liberal," The American, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving was, from start to finish, a proponent of vigorous government within its proper sphere. He never passed up a chance to enter a dissent, serious or wisecracking, against… More
Irving Kristol’s Clear Thinking
– Jonah Goldberg, "Irving Kristol's Clear Thinking," Los Angeles Times, September 23, 2009.Excerpt: Buckley said that the neocons’ greatest contribution to conservatism was “sociology.” The early National Review conservatism was more Aristotelian, Buckley observed, while… More
Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?
– George Weigel, "Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?" column syndicated by Catholic Press, October 7, 2009.Excerpt: The Public Interest, which was chiefly responsible for brewing the ideas embodied in the welfare reform of the 1990s, was a journal in defense of subsidiarity and in opposition to… More
The Equilibrist
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Equilibrist," National Review, October 19, 2009.Excerpt: LUNCH with Irving Kristol was an experience to remember. I had the pleasure only three times, always in the excellent dining room atop the American Enterprise Institute, but I… More
The Interested Man
– Nathan Glazer, "The Interested Man," The New Republic, November 4, 2009.Excerpt: I think back to these early days because it seems to me that Irving was all of a piece, almost from the beginning. No comment on his passing has failed to mention the young… More
The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol by Eric Cohen
– Eric Cohen, "The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol," National Affairs, Winter 2010.Excerpt: Neoconservatism was, as Kristol always described it, merely a “persuasion” that tried to “imagine the world as it might be,” but also to “live and… More
Remembering Irving Kristol
– James Piereson, "Remembering Irving Kristol," The New Criterion, February 2010.The Neoconservative Persuasion: Selected Essays, 1942-2009
– New York: Basic Books, 2011.Foreword: In Memoriam: Irving Kristol, 1920-2009: William Kristol Introduction by Gertrude Himmelfarb I. IN THE BEGINNING . . . : Enquiry Auden: The Quality of Doubt A Christian… More
Beyond Ideology
– James Q. Wilson, "Beyond Ideology," Wall Street Journal, January 21, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: The essays in “The Neoconservative Persuasion”—all but one never before brought together in a book—are a remarkable introduction to one of the few people who… More
Irving Kristol’s Brute Reason
– Paul Berman, "Irving Kristol's Brute Reason," New York Times Book Review, January 30, 2011.Excerpt: And, in this new spirit, he plunged into his magnum opus, which, instead of a book, was the constructing of something called “neoconservatism.” This was intended to be a new… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion
– Amy Kass, Charles Krauthammer, Irwin Stelzer, Leon Kass, and William Kristol, "The Neoconservative Persuasion" (A panel discussion), February 2, 2011.The Flexible Temperament
– James Piereson, "The Flexible Temperament," The New Criterion, March 2010. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: Kristol’s intellectual contribution was to bring these fundamental ideas into contemporary debates about politics and public policy through his writings in outlets like the Wall… More
Ideas Rule the World
– Franklin Foer, "Ideas Rule the World," The New Republic, March 17, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: We are still living in the world of total ideological combat that Irving Kristol created (or re-created, since it was also the world into which he was born) in the course of… More
The Enduring Irving Kristol
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Enduring Irving Kristol," First Things, August/September 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: In any event, one must remember that it was in the shadow of events eerily similar in many ways to those of our own times that neoconservatism took shape, both in Irving… More
The Art of Persuasion
– Ross Douthat, "The Art of Persuasion," Claremont Review of Books, Fall 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: At times, the essays in The Neoconservative Persuasion suggest that these critics have a point. Neoconservatism may not be a rigid ideology, but even as a “persuasion”… More
The Brooklyn Burkeans
– Jonathan Bronitsky, "The Brooklyn Burkeans," National Affairs, Winter 2014.Excerpt: By the time Kristol and Himmelfarb moved back home to New York in 1958, they were entrenched in the classical-liberal tradition and, therefore, primed to react negatively to the… More
Teaching
Our Boondoggling Democracy
– "Our Boondoggling Democracy," Commentary, August 1958. (A review of The Affluent Society by John Kenneth Galbraith.)Excerpt: The Affluent Society is by far the most serious critique of “welfare capitalism” that has been written in the post-Marxian era. (It is perhaps worth remarking that, though Mr.… More
Big Government and Little Men
– “Big Government and Little Men,” The New Leader, November 26, 1962.A Case of Uneven Development
– “A Case of Uneven Development,” The New Leader, February 18, 1963.Why the Welfare State Doesn’t Work
– “Why the Welfare State Doesn't Work,” Atlantic, June 1963.Is the Welfare State Obsolete?
– “Is the Welfare State Obsolete?” Harper's, June 1963.Age of the Remittance-Man
– “Age of the Remittance-Man,” The New Leader, August 5, 1963.Jobs and the Man
– “Jobs and the Man,” The New Leader, January 6, 1964.The Lower Fifth
– “The Lower Fifth,” The New Leader, February 17, 1964. (A review of Rich Man, Poor Man by Thomas Y. Crowell.)Poverty and Pecksniff
– “Poverty and Pecksniff,” The New Leader, March 30, 1964.Of Death and Politics
– “Of Death and Politics,” The New Leader, January 18, 1965.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” The New Leader, March 1, 1965.What Is the Public Interest?
– "What Is the Public Interest?" (with Daniel Bell), The Public Interest, Fall 1965.Excerpt: The aim of THE PUBLIC INTEREST is at once modest and presumptuous. It is to help all of us, when we discuss issues of public policy, to know a little better what we are talking… More
One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society
– “One Utopian, One Sensible Way to Reconcile State and Society,” Harper's, March 1966. (A review of Freedom Through Power by William Withers and Reclaiming the American Dream by Richard C. Cornuelle.)The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday
– “The Negro Today Is Like the Immigrant Yesterday,” New York Times Magazine, September 11, 1966.The Pauper Problem
– “The Pauper Problem,” The New Leader, December 5, 1966. (A review of The Poorhouse State by Richard M. Elman and The Despised Poor by Joseph P. Ritz.)Common Sense about the Urban Crisis
– “Common Sense about the Urban Crisis,” Fortune, October 1967. (A review of Metropolitan Enigma, United States Chamber of Commerce.)Decentralization for What?
– "Decentralization for What?" The Public Interest, Spring 1968.Excerpt: I began this essay by suggesting that, at this time and this place, bureaucratic nightmares might not be the worst imaginable nightmares. I also believe that, if by some miracle… More
The New Regulators
– “The New Regulators,” Fortune, June 15, 1968. (A review of Report of the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Traffic, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.)The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics
– "The Old Politics, the New Politics, the New, New Politics," New York Times Magazine, November 24, 1968.Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s
– “Ten Years in a Tunnel: Reflections on the 1930s,” in The Thirties: A Reconsideration in the Light of the American Political Tradition, ed. Morton J. Frisch and Martin Diamond (De Kalb, Ill.: Northern Illinois University Press, 1968).The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis
– “The Crisis Behind the Welfare Crisis,” Fortune, June 1969. (A review of The Multi-Problem Dilemma by G. E. Brown.)Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results
– “Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results,” Atlantic, August 1971.Excerpt: Is it surprising, then, that — unmanned and demoralized — he removes himself from family responsibilities that no longer rest on his shoulders? That he drifts out of… More
A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism
– "A Foolish American Ism – Utopianism," New York Times Magazine, November 14, 1971.On the Democratic Idea in America
– New York: Harper, 1972.1. Urban Civilization and its Discontents 2. The Shaking of the Foundations 3. Pornography, Obscenity, and the Case for Censorship 4. American Historians and the Democratic Idea 5. American… More
Our Gang and How It Prospered
– “Our Gang and How It Prospered,” Fortune, April 1972. (A review of The Gang and the Establishment by Richard W. Poston.)Of Populism and Taxes
– "Of Populism and Taxes," The Public Interest, Summer 1972.Excerpt: There is no conspiracy—but there is a problem. It is not a problem of income distribution or of inequities of taxation. The problem is the bureaucratization of American… More
The New Road for the Democrats
– “The New Road for the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, October 13, 1972.Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform
– “Symbolic Policies and Liberal Reform,” Wall Street Journal, December 15, 1972.What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?
– “What Are the Problems Facing an Urban Service-Centered Economy?” (Lecture at The One-Day Institute, The New York City Council on Economic Education) April 11, 1973.Social Reform: Gain and Losses
– “Social Reform: Gain and Losses,” Wall Street Journal, April 16, 1973.In Defense of Equality
– Michael Walzer, "In Defense of Equality," Dissent, September 1973.Taxes, Poverty, and Equality
– "Taxes, Poverty, and Equality," The Public Interest, Fall 1974.Excerpt: Taxation, poverty, and equality are all and always proper subjects for concern and reformist action. But the first step toward effective reform is to disentangle these three… More
What Is a “Neo-Conservative”?
– “What Is a ‘Neo-Conservative’?” Newsweek, January 19, 1976.Excerpt: 1. Neo-conservatism is not at all hostile to the idea of a welfare state, but it is critical of the Great Society version of this welfare state. In general, it approves of… More
The Republican Future
– “The Republican Future,” Wall Street Journal, May 14, 1976.The Poverty of Equality
– “The Poverty of Equality,” Wall Street Journal, July 12, 1976.Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea
– "Socialism: An Obituary for an Idea," Alternative, October 1976.Reforming the Welfare State
– “Reforming the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, October 25, 1976.Summer Notes and Footnotes
– “Summer Notes and Footnotes,” Wall Street Journal, July 18, 1977.Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections
– “Looking Back on Neo-Conservatism: Notes and Reflections,” The American Spectator, November 1977.Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians
– “Thoughts on Equality and Egalitarians,” in Income Redistribution, ed. Colin D. Campbell (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1977).Two Cheers for Capitalism
– New York: Basic Books, March 1978.PART ONE: The Enemy of Being is Having 1. Corporate Capitalism in America 2. Business and the “New Class” 3. Frustrations of Affluence 4. Ideology and Food 5. The… More
Human Nature and Social Reform
– “Human Nature and Social Reform,” Wall Street Journal, September 18, 1978.Excerpt: What it comes down to is that our reformers simply cannot bring themselves to think realistically about human nature. They believe it to be not only originally good, but also… More
Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative
– “Confessions of a True, Self-Confessed – Perhaps the Only – Neoconservative,” Public Opinion, October/November, 1979.Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector
– “Foundations and the Sin of Pride: The Myth of the Third Sector,” A speech before the Annual Conference of the Council on Foundations, May 30, 1980.Excerpt: I want to make one final point, which is really my original point. Foundations came into existence originally to do all the things that needed to be done that the government did… More
Reason Interview: Irving Kristol
– "Reason Interview: Irving Kristol," Reason, January 1983.Reflections of a Neoconservative: Looking Back, Looking Ahead
– New York: Basic Books, October 1983.I. IN THE BEGINNING… 1. Memoirs of a Trotskyist 2. Memoirs of a “Cold Warrior” II. THE CULTURE OF DEMOCRATIC CAPITALISM 3. The Adversary Culture of Intellectuals 4.… More
“Fairness” and Income Equalizing
– “'Fairness' and Income Equalizing,” Wall Street Journal, May 2, 1984.The Old World Needs a New Ideology
– “The Old World Needs a New Ideology,” Wall Street Journal, April 1, 1985.A White House in Search of Itself
– “A White House in Search of Itself,” Wall Street Journal, May 13, 1985.Reviewing Reagan’s Reviewers
– “Reviewing Reagan's Reviewers,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1985.Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest
– "Skepticism, Meliorism and The Public Interest," The Public Interest, Fall, 1985.Excerpt: Indeed, The Public Interest has always emphasized the modestly positive along with the skeptical. Ours has always really been a meliorist frame of mind. The world is not coming to… More
Congressional Right Has It Wrong
– “Congressional Right Has It Wrong,” Wall Street Journal, November 18, 1985.The David I Knew
– “The David I Knew,” Wall Street Journal, May 9, 1986.Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts
– “Who Should Succeed Reagan?: Some Preliminary Thoughts" (A symposium), Policy Review, Summer 1986.The Missing Social Agenda
– “The Missing Social Agenda,” Wall Street Journal, January 26, 1987.Not the Deficits
– “Not the Deficits,” Forbes, December 14, 1987.The Bizarre Social Security Surplus
– “The Bizarre Social Security Surplus,” Wall Street Journal, June 17, 1988.End Game of the Welfare State
– “End Game of the Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, September 11, 1989.Reply to William Buckley, “In Search of Anti-Semitism”
– “Reply to William Buckley, 'In Search of Anti-Semitism',” National Review, March 16, 1992.When It’s Wrong to Be Right
– “When It's Wrong to Be Right,” Wall Street Journal, March 24, 1993.Two Parties in Search of Direction
– “Two Parties in Search of Direction,” Wall Street Journal, May 12, 1993.A Conservative Welfare State
– “A Conservative Welfare State,” Wall Street Journal, June 14, 1993.Too Clever by Half
– “Too Clever by Half,” Wall Street Journal, October 12, 1993.A Tribute to Irving Kristol
– William E. Simon, "A Tribute to Irving Kristol," in The Neoconservative Imagination: Essays in Honor of Irving Kristol, ed. Christopher DeMuth and William Kristol, (Washington, DC: AEI Press, 1995).Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea
– New York: Free Press, 1995.SECTION I 1. An Autobiographical Memoir SECTION II: RACE, SEX, AND FAMILY 2. Welfare: The Best of Intentions, the Worst of Results 3. The Tragedy of “Multiculturalism” 4.… More
An Autobiographical Memoir
– “An Autobiographical Memoir” from Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea, (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1995).Excerpt: Is there such a thing as a “neo” gene? I ask that question because, looking back over a lifetime of my opinions, I am struck by the fact that they all quality as “neo.” I… More
American Conservatism, 1945-1995
– "American Conservatism, 1945-1995," The Public Interest, Fall 1995.Excerpt: THE Public Interest was born well before the term “neoconservative” was invented, and will—I trust—be alive and active when the term is of only historical interest. That… More
Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools
– "Educating the Urban Poor: The (Only) Legitimate Function of the Public Schools," Michigan Law & Policy Review, 1996.Age Before Politics
– “Age Before Politics,” Wall Street Journal, April 25, 1996.Poverty, Crime, and Community Building
– "Poverty, Crime, and Community Building" (A symposium of the Jewish Policy Center), April 29, 1996.The Feminization of the Democrats
– “The Feminization of the Democrats,” Wall Street Journal, September 9, 1996.Excerpt: The current breakup experienced by the American family is having a profound effect on American politics, as well as on American society. One can go further and say that the social… More
The Family Way
– Jacob Weisberg, "The Family Way," The New Yorker, October 21 & 28, 1996.Excerpt: Someone imperfectly versed in the idiosyncrasies of American political life might have found Irving Kristol’s seventy-fifth-birthday party a bit peculiar. Gathered to… More
The Welfare State’s Spiritual Crisis
– “The Welfare State's Spiritual Crisis,” Wall Street Journal, February 3, 1997.Excerpt: By now it is obvious to all who wish to see that we are experiencing a profound crisis of the welfare state. Several crises, in fact. There is the financial crisis now evident in… More
Income Inequality Without Class Conflict
– “Income Inequality Without Class Conflict,” Wall Street Journal, December 18, 1997.Arguing the World
– "Arguing the World" (A documentary), written and directed by Joseph Dorman, January 7, 1998.Petrified Europe
– “Petrified Europe,” Wall Street Journal, February 2, 1998.The Coming Clash of Welfare States
– “The Coming Clash of Welfare States,” American Outlook, Winter 1999.Faith à la Carte
– "Faith à la Carte," The Times Literary Supplement, May 26, 2000.Excerpt: With an unprecedented level of prosperity and the end of the Cold War, the American people say they want change—it is practically un-American for someone to say he does not want… More
The Two Welfare States
– “The Two Welfare States,” Wall Street Journal, October 19, 2000.Excerpt: The most notable aspect of the current presidential election has been the division that has emerged between the two versions of the welfare state envisaged by the two parties. An… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is
– "The Neoconservative Persuasion: What It Was, and What It Is," The Weekly Standard, August 25, 2003.Excerpt: Viewed in this way, one can say that the historical task and political purpose of neoconservatism would seem to be this: to convert the Republican party, and American conservatism… More
My “Public Interest”
– "My 'Public Interest'," The Weekly Standard, December 18, 2006.Excerpt: In 1965, through a series of circumstances that need not be recounted here, the stars became properly aligned so that my wish could become a reality. Dan Bell and I were able to… More
Three Cheers for Irving by David Brooks
– David Brooks, "Three Cheers for Irving," The New York Times, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: Kristol championed capitalism and wrote brilliantly about Adam Smith. But like Smith, he could only give two cheers for capitalism, because the system of creative destruction has… More
A Life in the Public Interest
– James Q. Wilson, "A Life in the Public Interest" The Wall Street Journal, September 21, 2009.Excerpt: The view that we know less than we thought we knew about how to change the human condition came, in time, to be called neoconservatism. Many of the writers, myself included,… More
Irving Kristol’s Gone–We’ll Miss His Clear Vision
– Irwin Stelzer, "Irving Kristol's Gone–We'll Miss His Clear Vision," Daily Telegraph, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving is best known as the godfather of neoconservatism, although his persuasive tools were not those of Tony Soprano or Marlon Brando’s Godfather-figures, but contained in… More
The Practical Liberal by Christopher DeMuth
– Christopher DeMuth, "The Practical Liberal," The American, September 22, 2009.Excerpt: Irving was, from start to finish, a proponent of vigorous government within its proper sphere. He never passed up a chance to enter a dissent, serious or wisecracking, against… More
Irving Kristol’s Clear Thinking
– Jonah Goldberg, "Irving Kristol's Clear Thinking," Los Angeles Times, September 23, 2009.Excerpt: Buckley said that the neocons’ greatest contribution to conservatism was “sociology.” The early National Review conservatism was more Aristotelian, Buckley observed, while… More
Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?
– George Weigel, "Irving Kristol, Catholic Social Ethicist?" column syndicated by Catholic Press, October 7, 2009.Excerpt: The Public Interest, which was chiefly responsible for brewing the ideas embodied in the welfare reform of the 1990s, was a journal in defense of subsidiarity and in opposition to… More
The Equilibrist
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Equilibrist," National Review, October 19, 2009.Excerpt: LUNCH with Irving Kristol was an experience to remember. I had the pleasure only three times, always in the excellent dining room atop the American Enterprise Institute, but I… More
The Interested Man
– Nathan Glazer, "The Interested Man," The New Republic, November 4, 2009.Excerpt: I think back to these early days because it seems to me that Irving was all of a piece, almost from the beginning. No comment on his passing has failed to mention the young… More
The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol by Eric Cohen
– Eric Cohen, "The Moral Realism of Irving Kristol," National Affairs, Winter 2010.Excerpt: Neoconservatism was, as Kristol always described it, merely a “persuasion” that tried to “imagine the world as it might be,” but also to “live and… More
Remembering Irving Kristol
– James Piereson, "Remembering Irving Kristol," The New Criterion, February 2010.The Neoconservative Persuasion: Selected Essays, 1942-2009
– New York: Basic Books, 2011.Foreword: In Memoriam: Irving Kristol, 1920-2009: William Kristol Introduction by Gertrude Himmelfarb I. IN THE BEGINNING . . . : Enquiry Auden: The Quality of Doubt A Christian… More
Beyond Ideology
– James Q. Wilson, "Beyond Ideology," Wall Street Journal, January 21, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: The essays in “The Neoconservative Persuasion”—all but one never before brought together in a book—are a remarkable introduction to one of the few people who… More
Irving Kristol’s Brute Reason
– Paul Berman, "Irving Kristol's Brute Reason," New York Times Book Review, January 30, 2011.Excerpt: And, in this new spirit, he plunged into his magnum opus, which, instead of a book, was the constructing of something called “neoconservatism.” This was intended to be a new… More
The Neoconservative Persuasion
– Amy Kass, Charles Krauthammer, Irwin Stelzer, Leon Kass, and William Kristol, "The Neoconservative Persuasion" (A panel discussion), February 2, 2011.The Flexible Temperament
– James Piereson, "The Flexible Temperament," The New Criterion, March 2010. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: Kristol’s intellectual contribution was to bring these fundamental ideas into contemporary debates about politics and public policy through his writings in outlets like the Wall… More
Ideas Rule the World
– Franklin Foer, "Ideas Rule the World," The New Republic, March 17, 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: We are still living in the world of total ideological combat that Irving Kristol created (or re-created, since it was also the world into which he was born) in the course of… More
The Enduring Irving Kristol
– Wilfred M. McClay, "The Enduring Irving Kristol," First Things, August/September 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: In any event, one must remember that it was in the shadow of events eerily similar in many ways to those of our own times that neoconservatism took shape, both in Irving… More
The Art of Persuasion
– Ross Douthat, "The Art of Persuasion," Claremont Review of Books, Fall 2011. (A review of The Neoconservative Persuasion by Irving Kristol.)Excerpt: At times, the essays in The Neoconservative Persuasion suggest that these critics have a point. Neoconservatism may not be a rigid ideology, but even as a “persuasion”… More
The Brooklyn Burkeans
– Jonathan Bronitsky, "The Brooklyn Burkeans," National Affairs, Winter 2014.Excerpt: By the time Kristol and Himmelfarb moved back home to New York in 1958, they were entrenched in the classical-liberal tradition and, therefore, primed to react negatively to the… More