Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Sir Roger Scruton: How to preserve freedom in the West
Sir Roger Scruton: How to preserve freedom in the West
Jan 5, 2026 5:01 AM

One of the leading philosophers of our time says Western culture will have to be handed down outside the ivory towers and college lecture halls – and he has strong reason to believe that its promulgators will be successful. Sir Roger Scruton’s optimism is not unfounded; he found the dissident, underground munities munist-dominated Europe had a greater thirst for truth and Western culture than their contemporaries in the politically correct West.

Scruton reminisced about his career as a pioneering thinker – and target of leftist opprobrium – while receiving the Jeane Kirkpatrick Award for Academic Freedom on Thursday night at Encounter Books’ twentieth anniversary gala.

In his native UK, he found his lectures – whether on conservative philosophy or subjects such as aesthetics – boycotted, canceled, or shouted down. Decades before the term became accepted, Scruton had been “deplatformed.”

“I’ve enjoyed the increasing certainty that there is a real distinction between true and fake knowledge, between truth and ideology, between the affirmation of an inheritance and resentment at one’s inability to receive it,” he said. “The culture which has been entrusted to the universities to pass on is no longer passed on, because those charged with doing so no longer believe in it.”

The trends holding academia in thrall lack not merely the content but the methodology of prior scholarship. “The new curriculum is a curriculum of foregone conclusions,” he said.

More bluntly, he said, new subjects amounted to “nonsense.”

“Nonsense is extremely useful, as I’m sure you’ve all realized, if you want to affect a major change in the culture,” he said. “If you’re speaking nonsense, nobody can correct you.”

Yet Scruton found hope in an unexpected place. Through “accidental circumstances,” he came to give underground lectures in Prague and other Soviet-dominated nations during the Cold War. His pupils, blacklisted from Marxist universities for refusing to countenance the regnant mythology of their society, huddled in “little rooms, with the secret police standing outside the door, waiting to pounce at any moment.”

…And pounce they sometimes did. Scruton found himself detained and then expelled from Czechoslovakia. Larry Arnn, the president of Hillsdale College, said Scruton had managed the rare feat of being “reviled by munist world and munist part of the liberal world at the same time.” But Vaclav Havel would one day give Scruton the nation’s Medal of Merit. In the meantime, Scruton had another reward.

Transmitting a culture of freedom

Scruton said in Prague, “for the first time in 10 or 15 years, I breathed the air of free inquiry.”

“That was an extraordinary thing, to recognize that there really is such a thing as free inquiry. That is what leads to knowledge,” Scruton said. “The lesson of this for me is that real knowledge and real culture can be transmitted outside the universities, and must be transmitted outside the universities when the universities are in the control of the indoctrinating Left.”

Scruton’s insight found an echo in the evening’s other award recipient, philanthropist Rebekah Mercer, who received the Encounter Prize for Advancing American Ideals. Victor Davis Hanson described her as a woman who “does not privilege the received wisdom of the status quo.” Rather than focus on university-age adults, she aimed to inculcate a sense of American values in the classroom of her own family.

“I raise my children with a reverence, gratitude, and understanding for the cornucopia of blessings that is America,” she said.

“I homeschool them to educate them properly about history, economics, philosophy, and civics, to name a few vital areas of now arcane knowledge,” Mercer told a rapt audience. “In an age when American values are disparaged – and their protectors routinely depicted as villains, and bigots, and sowers of hate – it is more vital than ever to speak up for those values and to pass them on to our children. The future of this precious land, and the future of our progeny, depend on it.”

The failure of those values stare at us from the headlines daily, she said. “The disrespect our elected officials have shown the Constitution for over more than a century has allowed the government to mushroom to a size inconceivable to our founders.”

Equally inconceivable was the notion of using anything other than gold or silver as legal tender, a policy that she pounded with cynical, tax-and-spend electoral strategies to create a raging federal leviathan.

Politicians “have laid off their constitutionally mandated power of the purse to massive, unelected, inept, and ineffective bureaucracies,” Mercer said. “The Tenth Amendment to our Constitution was designed by our founders as an emergency brake to the accumulation of centralized power. They knew that too much power concentrated in too few hands, isolated from most of the country’s population, would corrode the mechanisms of government and drag us inexorably into corruption.”

Corruption can only be checked by right action based on right belief and right reason. The dissemination of these values is the reason Encounter Books was founded, she said.

The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation launched Encounter Books in 1998, and it has published such renowned authors as Thomas Sowell, George Gilder, and James L. Buckley, as well as foreign authors including Kenneth Minogue, Humberto Fontova, Daniel Hannan, and Ryszard Legutko.

Roger Kimball – who has led the publishing house to new heights of success over the last 12 years – read a letter of congratulations from President Donald Trump to the event’s VIP attendees. These included Sebastian Gorka, Victor Davis Hanson, John Fund, Alejandro Chafuen, Wesley J. Smith, Debra Saunders, Donald Devine, Ryan T. Anderson, Hans Von Spakovsky, Rob Bluey, Nick Gillespie, and scores of other luminaries in the media, publishing, think tanks, and government.

Scruton closed his speech by saluting his fellow “pariahs.”

“It’s been a great adventure for me to be so hated by people I hold in contempt,” he said.

However, those who attended the event – which concluded with a toast from Richard Graber of the Bradley Foundation – were united, not by their kinship as mutual objects of hatred, but by mon love of Western culture and values. And their pledge to continue sharing those eternal and time-tested verities, circumventing academia if necessary, so that future generations may breathe the air of free inquiry.

Ben Johnson.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
What do you mean by ‘social justice’?
On NRO, John Leo points out how Glenn Beck missed the mark in his recent criticism of “social justice” churches (the reductio ad Hitlerum fallacy, again). But Beck is on to something, Leo says: When Glenn Beck urged Christians to leave churches that preach social justice, he allowed himself to be tripped up by conventional buzzwords of the campus Left. In plain English, “social justice” is a goal of all churches and refers to helping the poor and seeking equality....
Read My Lips
“…we are setting an ambitious goal: all students should graduate from high school prepared for college and a career – no matter who you are or where e from.” – Barack Obama, Saturday Radio Address. A few years ago I asked a friend and business owner why he put value on a college diploma when talking with entry level talent who had majored in subjects incredibly tangential to his job descriptions. He answered, “Well, it shows they can finish something.”...
Love Glenn Beck as you would love yourself
Acton es new blogger — and long time friend — Rudy Carrasco to the PowerBlog. He also writes at Urban Onramps. Don’t miss Rudy at Acton on Tap on March 31 (6 p.m. at Derby Station, East Grand Rapids, Mich.) — Editors +++++++++ I haven’t seen the video of Glenn Beck’s call to “run away” from churches that teach social justice. Nor have I read much on the responses by the many – see the Sojo God’s Politics blog for...
The Perils of Obedience
On his blog, Marginal Revolution, Tyler Cowan links to an article about game show, The Game Of Death, that was recently broadcast on French television. According to the article (“Torture ‘Game Show’ Draws Nazi Comparison“) the program, “had all the trappings of a traditional television quiz show, with a roaring crowd and a glamorous and well-known hostess.” For all that it appeared to be a typical game show, what “contestants . . . did not realise [was that] they were...
NIV Stewardship Study Bible: ‘A remarkable resource…’
Rev. Jerry Hoffman, Director of the Center for Stewardship Leaders at Luther Seminary, reviews the NIV Stewardship Study Bible. “What I found was a remarkable resource that leads one to see how strong the stewardship thread exists throughout scripture…. I anticipate using this resource in my writing, preaching and teaching,” he says. To keep abreast of the different resources available on stewardship, e of a fan of the NIV Stewardship Study Bible on Facebook and follow the Twitter feed @Oikonomeo,...
“Out of The City of Nazareth…”
If you listen to the radio, you’ve probably noticed mercials promoting the U.S. Census. Where I live, stations are intermittently mercials for the 2010 Census almost every time I’ve turned the dial. One of mercial messages contains a story about crowded buses and the need for folks munities plete the census so they get more money from the federal government and can buy more buses. Huh? The advertising budget just to promote this enterprise was initially publicized at $350 million....
Catholic Health Care Rifts
As rumors of congressional action on health-care reform continue to swirl (it will happen Sunday, maybe?), fissures in the American munity are ing increasingly evident. The rift is highlighted in the current, in some ways unprecedented, public dispute between two important Catholic voices. By size and clout, the principal health-related organization of a Catholic identity is the Catholic Health Association. The official organ of the American Catholic bishops as a collective is the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. Although...
Poll: Thumbs down on the Sin Tax
From “56% Oppose ‘Sin Taxes’ on Junk Food and Soft Drinks” on Rasmussen Reports: Several cities and states, faced with big budget problems, are considering so-called “sin taxes” on things like junk food and soft drinks. But just 33% of Americans think these sin taxes are a good idea. A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey shows that 56% oppose sin taxes on sodas and junk food. Twelve percent (12%) are undecided. Many of the politicians who are pushing these...
What Griffiths Said
In this week’s Acton Commentary I expand on a minor meme floating around the web towards the end of last year that criticized the purported claim made by Lord Brian Griffiths, a Goldman Sachs advisor and vice chairman: “The injunction of Jesus to love others as ourselves is an endorsement of self-interest.” I do a couple of things in this piece. First, I show that Griffith’s claim was rather different than that reported by various news outlets. Second, I place...
Melanchthon on the Gospel’s Social Implications
The hugely influential reformer Philip Melanchthon (1497-1560) writes in mentary on Romans 13: Meanwhile, the Gospel teaches the godly properly about spiritual and eternal life in order that eternal life may be begun in their hearts. In public it wants our bodies to be engaged in this civil society and to make sure of mon bonds of this society with decisions about properties, contracts, laws, judgments, magistrates, and other things. These external matters do not hinder the knowledge of God...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved