By Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
In the weeks before David Horowitz’s
passing, he wrote an article and finished another book. In and out of
the hospital, he would call me on the phone to relay another idea for a
series or another article about the Left. When we worked together on an
article about the leftist fifth column, he was exhausted and I told him
we could work on it next week. There would be time. He sighed
skeptically, knowing perhaps what we only know now, but also with a note
of relief.
I was wrong. He was right.
But of all my
mistakes, it was the most understandable. David Horowitz first came down
with cancer after 9/11. He wrote about that in ‘The End of Time’. He
continued fighting cancer and writing about his experiences facing death
in ‘A Point in Time: The Search for Redemption in This Life and the Next‘. He nearly died in 2015 and wrote about that in ‘You’re Going to Be Dead One Day: A Love Story’ and then collected all three together in ‘Mortality and Faith’ in 2019.
David
Horowitz fought off cancer for almost a quarter of a century. Even when
he went into a coma and the doctors expected him to pass right away, he
held on for nearly a week.
The one thing that David would never do is give up.
His
superhuman endurance was not physical, it was a matter of conviction.
Long after his body had failed, he kept going, writing, thinking,
arguing and above all else… fighting.
In his final op-ed, ‘The Biggest Lie of All’,
published weeks before his death, David reproved Republicans for
underestimating Democrats and the Left. That had been his overriding
theme since joining and redefining the conservative movement.
“Republicans,” he would tell me over and over again, “don’t understand
how to fight.” But that’s no longer entirely true. And much of that is
due to him. The passing of David Horowitz is an incalculable loss, but
he lived long enough to see the movement he had helped recreate become
an actual fighting force.
David Horowitz dismissed the Republican
country club circuit for not understanding the enemy. Faced with a
movement that seemed clueless about the scope of the Left, he became its
‘Alinsky’, helping spread awareness of ‘Rules for Radicals’ and laying
out the tactics and principles for a conservative revolution. Horowitz
was dismissive of the think-tanks, many of which later proved to be
rotten with Never Trumpers. The Freedom Center, he would say, “is not a
think-tank, it’s a battle tank.” David was a great thinker, but he was
an even greater warrior.
Horowitz officially made his break when
the Reagan Revolution came along because it was his first glimpse of a
Republican Party that was willing to fight the Left. David Horowitz was
ready for the fight, but too few Republicans were. David Horowitz didn’t
just shock liberals when he left their movement, he shocked many
Republicans with tactics that they thought were too harsh.
When
David Horowitz took the war to college campuses not just with speeches,
but by naming and shaming the radical professors and student activists,
Republicans feared being accused of McCarthyism. Horowitz, a red-diaper
baby, not only dismissed neurotic fears of being called names by
leftists, he welcomed the confrontation and was eager to debate them
anywhere.
While many Republicans pursued respectability politics
and corporate sponsors, Horowitz built the Center for the Study of
Popular Culture, and later the David Horowitz Freedom Center, into the
epicenter of a new movement that would later evolve into MAGA. But David
was MAGA before there was a MAGA and without the movement he helped
build, it might never have come into being.
“Since its formation
in 1988, the Freedom Center has helped cultivate a generation of
political warriors seeking to upend the Washington establishment. These
warriors include some of the most powerful and influential figures in
the Trump administration,” the Washington Post wrote in 2017 and urged
the IRS to investigate the Center. (The resulting investigation aimed at
crippling the Center went on for six years. It only finally concluded
shortly before David’s death.)
President Trump’s 2024 victory
robbed the Freedom Center’s 2024 Restoration Weekend of some key guests,
including Vice President J.D. Vance and the attorney general nominee
(Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth however drove four hours to be
there.) What made the Weekends so special was that they brought together
a rising conservative movement. Not the establishment movement, but a
movement as revolutionary and pugnacious as Horowitz.
The Post’s
accusation that David Horowitz was the secret mastermind behind the
Trump administration was wrong. Horowitz was no mastermind, he was a
visionary. He didn’t tell politicians what to do, he taught them how to
fight. And he told them not to be ashamed of fighting and broke the
moral blackmail and suicidal empathy burned into them by the Left.
Before
the Republican Party was ready for Trump, David Horowitz had to teach
them how to call the Left by its right names. Traitors.
Insurrectionists. The Enemy Within. And he taught them to hit as hard as
possible. Leftist institutions didn’t need to be debated, but
destroyed. This was not an argument to be settled on a CNN panel, but a
war that would end in survival or destruction.
The tragedy is not just that he’s gone, but that he’s missing out on seeing his vision come to life.
David
Horowitz had called for defunding the universities. Now President Trump
is defunding them. After over a generation of fighting the campus wars,
David is not here to see federal law enforcement arresting the student
activists who threw things at him and threatened his life. Leftists, he
argued, were insurrectionists. Now the Trump administration is
considering invoking the Insurrection Act. He had called for a working
class minority populist conservative coalition.
Now it’s here.
“Why
are Republicans so self-destructively polite? Why do they fail to see,
or to identify their opponents as the criminals they are?” he demanded.
Now the politeness is finally done with.
David Horowitz paved the
way for this victory. He held on just long enough to see President
Trump’s first 100 days in office. And as a family man frustrated at
times by the gaps between the worldview of his children and his own, he
lived long enough to see his son support Trump.
David passed away
with the fruits of his lifelong work unfolding all around him. The
David Horowitz Freedom Center is the battle tank that will carry it
forward. His ideas, his fighting spirit and his determination to never
give up lives on within us. Like him, we pull no punches, we tell hard
truths and we take on the enemy within. David lived long enough to see
America win a great victory over the forces that had brought it to the
brink of destruction, but he would have been the first to tell us that
the war isn’t over and that the real battle is about to begin.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.

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