William F. Buckley, Jr.: Pied Piper for the Establishment

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What happens when the most famous “conservative” voice of an era is working for the other side? William F. Buckley, Jr.: Pied Piper for the Establishment indicts Buckley’s career — from CIA ties to his campaigns against Robert Welch and The John Birch Society — and reveals how his polished rhetoric helped neutralize authentic resistance. McManus reveals the hidden story of how Buckley carried liberalism under a conservative banner, leaving a legacy still shaping the Right today.

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Conservatives hailed William F. Buckley, Jr. as the movement’s leading light, but behind the sharp wit and Ivy League charm lay a different mission. William F. Buckley, Jr.: Pied Piper for the Establishment uncovers how Buckley’s career, influence, and alliances served not to strengthen conservatism, but to blunt it — turning a potential revolt into a guided march toward acceptance of the liberal order. William F. Buckley Jr. captures this betrayal in full.

McManus traces Buckley’s ambitious rise, from CIA connections and media acclaim to his carefully orchestrated attacks on Robert Welch and The John Birch Society. He documents how Buckley dismissed evidence of conspiracy, shielded figures like Henry Kissinger and Nelson Rockefeller, and worked to steer authentic opposition into controlled, establishment-friendly channels. The book’s evidence runs from roll-call votes to Buckley’s own published words, leaving no doubt about the pattern.

Robert Welch’s foreword, “False Leadership,” written before his death in 1985, provides a searing first-hand account of Buckley’s maneuvers — especially the Stamford episode where Buckley mocked Welch’s warnings before a sympathetic crowd. Welch’s experience gives the book its edge: an insider’s testimony that Buckley’s opposition was not a matter of mistaken judgment, but deliberate sabotage of the conservative cause.

McManus also places Buckley in the larger framework of neoconservatism, globalism, and moral compromise. Chapters explore his alliances with Rockefeller Republicans, his role in undermining anti-Communist momentum, and his legacy in shaping a conservative brand safe for the very establishment it claimed to oppose.

For readers determined not to be misled by polished voices and false friends, this book is more than history — it is a manual for discernment. By revisiting the Buckley story, McManus issues a warning to the present: watch carefully who claims the mantle of leadership, and determine their character not by rhetoric, but by results. (2025ed, 259pp, pb)

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