Max Lerner
Max Lerner (December 20, 1902 – June 5, 1992) was a Russian-born American journalist, author, and educator whose syndicated column offered commentary on American politics, culture, and society for over four decades, primarily in the New York Post.[1][2] Born in Minsk to Jewish parents who immigrated to the United States in 1907, Lerner earned a bachelor's degree from Yale University and pursued graduate studies, later teaching political science at institutions including Harvard University, Williams College, and Brandeis University, where he served as a professor from 1949 until 1977.[1][2] Lerner's career spanned journalism and academia, beginning with editorial roles in publications like The Nation and the left-leaning newspaper PM, before launching his nationally syndicated column in 1949 that reached readers through outlets including the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.[2][3] His writings chronicled U.S. presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George H.W. Bush, emphasizing themes of democracy, power, and national character, as seen in books such as America as a Civilization (1957), which examined the strengths and tensions of American society, and It Is Later Than You Think (1938), advocating for active democratic engagement amid economic crisis.[1][4] Earlier works included analyses of the U.S. Supreme Court in Nine Scorpions in a Bottle (1955, revised 1966), reflecting his early expertise in constitutional issues developed during the New Deal era.[1][5] While praised for his incisive observations on power's perils and America's unfinished potential, Lerner's liberal-leaning perspectives drew criticism for occasional idealism over pragmatism, particularly in his support for New Deal policies and later reflections on Cold War tensions.[6][3] His columns and books, collected in volumes like The Unfinished Country, influenced mid-20th-century intellectual discourse by urging a balanced appreciation of America's democratic experiment amid ideological conflicts.[7] Lerner's enduring legacy lies in bridging journalism and scholarship to dissect the human dimensions of political leadership and societal evolution.[1]Early Life and Education
Birth and Immigration
Max Lerner was born Maxwell Alan Lerner on December 20, 1902, in Minsk, then part of the Russian Empire (now Belarus).[8] His family, facing the uncertainties of life in the Pale of Settlement amid rising antisemitism and economic hardship in the region, decided to emigrate.[3] In 1907, at the age of four, Lerner immigrated to the United States with his parents, passing through Ellis Island as part of the wave of Eastern European Jewish migration seeking opportunity and safety.[8] The family initially settled in New York City before relocating to New Haven, Connecticut, where Lerner would later pursue his education.[8] He acquired U.S. citizenship through his parents' naturalization process during this period.[7]Academic Formations
Max Lerner attended Yale University, majoring in literature, and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1923. Following his undergraduate studies, he briefly pursued legal education at Yale before shifting to graduate-level work in political science and economics. Lerner then enrolled at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, where he conducted advanced studies leading to a master's degree. He completed his doctoral training at the Robert S. Brookings Graduate School of Economics and Government in Washington, D.C., earning a Ph.D. in 1927; this institution, affiliated with the Brookings Institution, emphasized public administration and policy analysis during its brief existence from 1924 to 1928. His academic path reflected an early interest in blending humanistic inquiry with social scientific methods, influenced by Yale's rigorous liberal arts curriculum and the policy-oriented focus of his graduate programs.[1][9][2][3]Professional Career
Academic Roles
Lerner began his academic career teaching political science at Sarah Lawrence College from 1932 to 1935.[8] He also held instructional roles at the Wellesley Summer Institute and Harvard Summer School during this period.[8] Following a brief stint as a lecturer in Harvard's government department, Lerner joined Williams College in 1938 as professor of political science, a position he held until 1949.[1] In 1949, Lerner became professor of American civilization at Brandeis University, where he remained until his retirement in 1973, marking his longest academic association.[10] He held an endowed chair there and was active in the university's founding, contributing to its early development as a center for liberal arts and Jewish studies.[11] During his tenure, Lerner taught required undergraduate courses on American civilization, blending historical analysis with contemporary political commentary to engage students in broader intellectual debates.[12] Lerner occasionally took on visiting or adjunct roles elsewhere, including at Harvard University, Williams College beyond his primary appointment, and Pomona College, allowing him to maintain ties with multiple institutions while prioritizing his syndicated journalism.[2][13] His teaching emphasized interdisciplinary approaches to government, history, and civilization, reflecting his own scholarly evolution from early radical influences toward a pragmatic liberalism.[14]Journalism and Syndication
Lerner's journalism career gained prominence during the 1930s and 1940s through editorial roles and contributions to progressive publications. He served as editor of The Nation from 1936 to 1938, where he shaped the magazine's coverage of domestic and international affairs amid the Great Depression and rising global tensions.[2] Following this, he became an editorial writer for the experimental New York newspaper PM, launched in 1940 as an ad-free, liberal-leaning daily that emphasized photography and investigative reporting; Lerner contributed columns there from 1944 to 1948, focusing on cultural ethics, public policy, and postwar reconstruction, with selections later compiled in books such as Public Journal: Essays on the Crisis of Postwar Culture.[6][15] PM's demise in 1948 marked the end of this phase, after which Lerner transitioned to broader syndication.[2] In 1949, Lerner launched a syndicated column for the New York Post, initially appearing alongside his work for the short-lived New York Star, which folded that year.[10] The Post column, known for its incisive analysis of American politics, civil liberties, and intellectual trends, ran continuously for over four decades until Lerner's death in 1992, amassing approximately 6,000 pieces that critiqued events from the Cold War to presidential administrations.[6][3] Widely distributed via the Los Angeles Times Syndicate for more than 20 years, it reached national audiences in hundreds of newspapers, establishing Lerner as a prominent liberal voice often engaged in public debates with conservatives and fellow progressives.[2][13] His syndication amplified themes from his academic background, such as the tensions between individualism and state power, though critics noted the columns' occasional idealism amid shifting political realities.[1] Beyond newspapers, Lerner's journalistic output included articles for magazines like The New Republic and radio commentary, extending his influence into mid-century public discourse.[6] These efforts solidified his role as a bridge between scholarly analysis and popular commentary, with syndication ensuring accessibility to diverse readerships despite the era's ideological polarizations.[2]Political Views and Intellectual Contributions
Early Leftist Influences and Stalinism
Lerner's early intellectual formation occurred amid the ferment of progressive and socialist thought in American academia during the interwar period. After earning his bachelor's degree from Yale University in 1923 and a law degree there in 1926, he pursued graduate studies in economics and politics at the Robert Brookings Graduate School from 1926 to 1927, where exposure to institutionalist and reformist economics critiquing unregulated markets fostered his leftist inclinations. His subsequent role as an assistant editor for the Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences (1927–1932), a project featuring contributions from Marxist-leaning scholars, further embedded him in debates romanticizing planned economies as alternatives to capitalist instability.[16] By the 1930s, amid the Great Depression, Lerner aligned with intellectuals viewing the Soviet Union as a bold social laboratory challenging Western individualism. As associate editor of The Nation (1936–1938), he helped shape a outlet that, while increasingly aware of Stalin's purges, initially highlighted USSR industrialization and collectivization as models of egalitarian progress, downplaying authoritarian costs in favor of anti-fascist solidarity during the Popular Front period (1935–1939). Lerner's own writings from this era, such as contributions advocating robust state intervention, reflected sympathy for Soviet-style experimentation without endorsing party membership or full ideological conformity, positioning him as a typical fellow traveler among Jewish progressives seeking systemic overhaul.[16][9] This affinity extended into World War II, where Lerner, writing for PM (1943–1948), defended the U.S. alliance with Stalin's regime as essential to defeating Nazism, emphasizing shared antifascist imperatives over domestic repressions like the Gulag or show trials. Such stances drew accusations of Stalinist apologism from conservative and libertarian critics, who argued they excused totalitarian brutality under pragmatic guises; for instance, Murray Rothbard later condemned Lerner's broadcasts and columns for parroting Soviet rationales even post-1945. Yet Lerner rejected explicit Stalinism, framing his support as tactical realism rather than doctrinal allegiance, and by 1939's It Is Later Than You Think, he urged "militant democracy" to counter both fascist and communist threats, signaling early fissures with uncritical leftism.[17][18][16] Lerner's trajectory mirrored a generational pattern: initial leftist enchantment with Soviet promises yielding to postwar disenchantment as evidence of systemic terror mounted, paving his shift toward anti-totalitarian liberalism. This break intensified after 1946, amid revelations like those in correspondence over Edmund Wilson's anti-Stalin critique and Trotskyist analyses, underscoring Lerner's pivot from sympathy to condemnation of Stalinist orthodoxy.[8][16]Mature Liberalism and Nuanced Positions
In the post-World War II era, Max Lerner espoused a pragmatic liberalism that emphasized democratic collectivism and the mediation of conflicting social forces, as articulated in his extensive New York Post columns starting in 1949, where he championed civil liberties and progressive reforms while rejecting dogmatic ideologies.[1] This maturity was evident in his 1957 book America as a Civilization, which depicted U.S. society not as a resolved ideal but as an ongoing tension between opposing "poles"—such as big versus small property or regional extremes—favoring moderation and institutional brokerage over absolute judgments or revolutionary overhauls.[19][9] Lerner warned against the perils of ideological extremes, portraying political parties as pragmatic mediators rather than heroic or corrupt entities, and American thought as a complex interplay of rationalism and mysticism exemplified by figures like Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne.[19] By the 1960s, Lerner's nuanced positions included sharp critiques of the New Left's radicalism, such as his opposition to the 1968 Columbia University student protests, which he viewed as disruptive excesses rather than constructive dissent.[9] He aligned intellectually with Daniel Patrick Moynihan, sharing a willingness to challenge the doctrinaire left's sacred cows on issues like social policy and cultural upheaval, while retaining commitments to welfare-state liberalism tempered by anti-totalitarian vigilance.[9] In foreign policy, Lerner advocated an "antiwar elite" prioritizing intellectual acuity over military buildup, as in his 1959 Douglass College speech decrying the "intelligence gap" more than the missile gap.[1] His support for human rights extended to insisting in 1950 that Soviet Jewish emigration to Israel proceed "no matter how politically impractical or economically unfeasible," reflecting a principled stand against authoritarian restrictions.[1] This "liberal centrist" stance, as Lerner later described his own evolution, positioned him against both right-wing McCarthyism and left-wing countercultural alienation, earning criticism from extremists on either side while fostering a humanism wary of mediocrity and cultural disintegration.[9][1] Through such positions, he sought to preserve liberal democracy's adaptive resilience amid Cold War tensions and domestic upheavals.[19]Controversies and Criticisms
WWII Internment Support
Max Lerner supported the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, viewing it as a necessary measure for national security amid the perceived threats following the Pearl Harbor attack on December 7, 1941.[20] As a prominent liberal intellectual and columnist for the newspaper PM, Lerner prioritized wartime exigencies over strict adherence to civil liberties, reflecting a deference to executive authority under President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[20] Lerner's endorsement aligned with the position of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), where he served on national governing bodies alongside figures like Morris Ernst. In June 1942, the ACLU's national board approved a resolution by a two-to-one margin affirming the federal government's power to designate military zones and exclude individuals—citizens included—whose presence endangered security, without requiring martial law.[20] This policy underpinned Executive Order 9066, signed by Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, which authorized the removal of over 120,000 persons of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast to inland relocation centers.[20] In editorials for PM, such as those published in early 1944, Lerner defended aspects of the relocation process, arguing that while sympathies could be extended to affected loyal Nisei, the broader security rationale justified the measures.[21] His stance exemplified a pattern among New Deal-era liberals who subordinated individual rights to collective war efforts and political allegiance to Roosevelt, contrasting with Lerner's opposition to racial discrimination in other contexts, such as against African Americans.[20] Postwar assessments have critiqued this position as a temporary abandonment of libertarian principles, influenced by the era's pervasive fears of espionage and sabotage, despite scant evidence of disloyalty among the interned population.[20]Ideological Shifts and Attacks from Right and Left
Lerner's ideological evolution extended beyond his mature liberalism, incorporating greater sympathy for free-market principles and skepticism toward the cultural excesses of the 1960s counterculture and New Left movements. By the late 1970s and 1980s, he had shifted toward neoconservative positions, aligning with figures like Sidney Hook and endorsing Reagan administration policies that emphasized anti-communism and limited government intervention in social spheres.[22][12] This progression reflected a broader disillusionment with radical collectivism, favoring pragmatic individualism over expansive state-driven reforms he had earlier championed.[9] Criticism from the left intensified as Lerner distanced himself from the New Left's revolutionary impulses, which he viewed as contemptuous of institutional experience and overly permissive. Youthful activists and radicals dismissed him as emblematic of an outdated establishment, particularly after his critiques of their anti-authority ethos in columns decrying the "distrust of everyone over thirty."[23] Earlier, during his tenure at The Nation in the late 1930s, owner Maurice Wertheim accused him of betraying leftist purity by backing Franklin D. Roosevelt's policies, including court-packing, leading to Wertheim's sale of the publication in 1938.[9] From the right, Lerner faced accusations of subversion and softness on communism during the 1950s McCarthy era, with patriotic organizations branding him a risk for his defenses of civil liberties and criticisms of anti-communist overreach, such as in his 1950 New York Post column warning of a "hate campaign" mirroring totalitarian tactics.[1][24] Invitations for him to speak at colleges in the 1950s and early 1960s drew backlash from conservative groups, who pressured hosts for platforming a perceived fellow traveler despite his staunch anti-Stalinism.[1] Conservative reviewers like Russell Kirk faulted his enduring faith in labor unions as naive, even as his later market sympathies failed to fully redeem him in their eyes.[25] These attacks underscored Lerner's liminal status, rendering him a target for ideological purists on both flanks.Major Works
Key Books and Essays
Lerner's first major book, It Is Later Than You Think: The Need for a Militant Democracy (1938), urged Americans to adopt an active, interventionist stance in defending liberal democracy against fascist and communist threats, drawing on historical analogies to warn of complacency's dangers amid Europe's turmoil.[26] [27] This 260-page work positioned itself as a timely manifesto, emphasizing economic planning and cultural renewal to counter totalitarianism without abandoning core freedoms.[18] Subsequent collections like Ideas Are Weapons (1939) and Ideas for the Ice Age (1941) compiled his essays from outlets such as The Nation, critiquing isolationism and advocating intellectual tools for navigating the Great Depression and impending global conflict.[2] Public Journal (1945) gathered columns from his tenure at PM newspaper, reflecting on wartime policy, civil liberties, and postwar reconstruction, including defenses of measures like Japanese American internment as pragmatic necessities despite their tensions with individual rights.[2] In The Mind and Faith of Justice Holmes (1943), Lerner curated and analyzed Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.'s speeches, letters, and dissents to illuminate his pragmatic jurisprudence, free speech advocacy, and evolutionary view of law.[4] His magnum opus, America as a Civilization: Life and Thought in the United States (1957), spanned over 1,000 pages in dissecting American society—from economics and politics to arts and religion—as a distinct, dynamic civilization marked by individualism, technological drive, and pluralistic tensions, though critics noted its breadth sometimes sacrificed analytical depth for breadth.[28] [29] Later works included Nine Scorpions in a Bottle: Great Judges and Cases of the Supreme Court (1965), profiling justices like Holmes and Brandeis through key decisions, portraying the Court as a contentious arena of judicial philosophy.[30] Values in Education (1976) applied his liberal humanist lens to schooling reforms, stressing moral education amid cultural shifts. Posthumously compiled essays in Wounded Titans: American Presidents and the Perils of Power (1996) examined executive leadership's psychological burdens, drawing from his columns on figures from Roosevelt to Nixon.[4] Lerner's essays, often syndicated via the New York Post from 1949 onward, totaled thousands, frequently blending historical insight with commentary on power dynamics, though their optimistic liberalism drew charges of naivety from both conservatives and radicals.[2]Comprehensive Bibliography
Max Lerner's published oeuvre includes over a dozen books, primarily on political philosophy, American democracy, and intellectual history, alongside edited anthologies and thousands of essays and syndicated columns. Archival records preserve drafts, galleys, and correspondence related to these works, highlighting his evolution from militant liberalism in the 1930s to reflective humanism in later decades.[10] Books:- It Is Later Than You Think: The Need for a Militant Democracy (New York: Viking Press, 1938; revised edition, 1943).[10][31]
- Ideas Are Weapons: The History and Uses of Ideas (New York: Viking Press, 1939).[10]
- Ideas for the Ice Age: Studies in a Revolutionary Era (New York: Viking Press, 1941).[10]
- The Mind and Faith of Justice Holmes: His Speeches, Articles, and Letters (ed., Boston: Little, Brown, 1943).[10]
- Public Journal: Marginal Notes on Wartime America (New York: Viking Press, 1945).[10][32]
- The Portable Veblen (ed., New York: Viking Press, 1948).[10][33]
- Actions and Passions: Notes on a New Bill of Rights (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1949).[10]
- America as a Civilization: Life and Thought in the United States Today (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1957).[10][34]
- The Unfinished Country: A Book of American Symbols (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1959).[10]
- The Essential Works of John Stuart Mill (ed., New York: Bantam Books, 1961).[10]
- The Age of Overkill: A Study in Nuclear Impasse (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1962).[10]
- Education and a Radical Humanism: Notes on the Liberation of Man (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1962).[10]
- Tocqueville and American Civilization: A New United States (ed. with introduction, New York: Harper & Row, 1969).[10]
- Nine Scorpions in a Bottle: Great Judges and Cases of the Supreme Court (New York: W.W. Norton, 1990).[4][30]
- Wounded Titans: American Presidents and the Perils of Power (New York: Viking, 1990).[5][4]
- Wrestling with the Angel: A Memoir of My Triumph over Illness (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990).[30]