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Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Conservatism's Buzzkill
By Jonah Goldberg
Poll
Will Hillary Clinton fight for the nomination past June 1st?


Conservatives, much like liberals and independents — as well as anarchists, Marxists, flat-Earthers and every other creedal crowd — all think they’re right. It’s axiomatic: Why hold one position if you think another viewpoint is better? The trouble for conservatives, much like the problem faced by those other groups, is that their worldview isn’t overwhelmingly popular.

Oh, conservatism is more popular than a lot of things we call popular these days; more people call themselves conservatives than Red Sox fans, for instance. But the ideal conservative program of a federal government strictly limited to constitutional responsibilities and nothing else would fare miserably at the polls. Almost as badly as an ideal socialist program.

This point is difficult for political activists of either stripe to concede. After all, both sides are certain they have staked out the intellectually superior ground. So they fixate on tactics, packaging and spinning. A lot has been written, including by myself, about how liberals consider political strategy more important than ideas. But it’s worth noting that conservatives fall prey to such lines of thinking too, even as we take pride in our squabbles about liberty versus virtue.

This is one reason Republicans are so fixated on finding the next Ronald Reagan — someone who can articulate conservatism and carry 44 states doing it. Virtually every Republican debate so far has had moments that sound like the climax of “Spartacus,” with each candidate rising to proclaim, “I am the Gipper!”

The problem is that conservatism, even Reagan’s brand, wasn’t as popular as we often remember it. Government spending continued to increase under Reagan, albeit a bit more slowly. Today, the U.S. population is 30 percent larger but government spending is 84 percent greater (adjusting for inflation) than it was when Reagan delivered his 1981 inaugural address. That was the speech in which he declared: “In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem,” and vowed to “curb the size and influence of the federal establishment.”

In 1964, political psychologists Lloyd A. Free and Hadley Cantril famously asserted that Americans were ideologically conservative but operationally liberal. Americans loved Barry Goldwater’s rhetoric about yeoman individualism, but not if it meant taking away their Social Security checks or farm subsidies. “As long as Goldwater could talk ideology alone, he was high, wide and handsome,” Free and Cantril wrote. “But the moment he discussed issues and programs, he was finished.”

Goldwater went to Tennessee to blast the Tennessee Valley Authority, God bless him. That was like going to a brothel to denounce prostitution, or to Iowa to denounce ethanol — but I repeat myself. He carried only six states in the 1964 presidential election.

Liberals have an inherent advantage. As long as they promise incremental, “pragmatic” expansions of the government, voters generally give them a pass. And every new expansion since FDR and the New Deal has created a constituency for continued government largesse. Continued...

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About The Author

Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online.

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Predictable pablum from neo-con Goldberg
I really loved this line:

"Conservatives, much like liberals and independents — as well as anarchists, Marxists, flat-Earthers and every other creedal crowd — all think they’re right."

Comparing conservatives -- the real ones, not the fake Goldberg types -- to Marxists and other dingbats.

Man, the guy must be totally and pathetically desperate! That was a page right out of the Democrat activist playbook as typified by Hillary's "vast right-wing conspiracy", except this time Goldberg thinks he and the other GOP bobble-heads are the victims of the conspiracy.

What a simpering wimp. Pathetic.

Conservatives are right.
We don't just believe it, we know it. Every day, the government and liberals only validate that assertion, demonstrating their abject incompetence and their desire to control the lives of those they deem inferior.

Perhaps a platform of government strictly restrained by Constitutional limits is a bit of a buzzkill. This is because it's not the easy way; we're asking people to look to themselves and their own communities to guide their own lives. If you want your children to be educated, you should pay for it yourself! If you want health care, pay for it yourself! If you want a sound retirement, that's right, plan ahead and pay for it yourself! Don't demand that others pay it for you! That is theft, and is the height of selfishness and arrogance. This is a tough message to take, but in the end it is the best expression of individual freedom.

We've bore witness to the abject failures of both government and the liberalism that worships the capitol steps, and it's time that we all acknowledge that socialism is not only a bad policy, it is evil, and paves the way for a totalitarian regime.

This is the message that needs to be espoused over and over, but this alone won't be enough. The basis for this message must be reasserted, which is a Judeo-Christian one. A Third Great Awakening may be necessary for people to look to themselves an their own communities rather than the federal and state governments to solve problems. Read Dinesh D'Souza's latest book What's So Great About Christianity for an idea of what I'm talking about.

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