Conservatism is Dead; Long Live Conservatism?

It seems like just yesterday that many were reading
liberalism’s epitaph. After the Reagan years, Republican
Revolution of 1994, retreat of the gun-control hordes after Al Gore’s 2000
defeat, and George W. Bush’s two successful presidential runs, many thought
conservatism was carrying the day.
Ah,
if only.
We
might ask: With conservatives like President Bush and many of the other
Republicans, who needs liberals?
While
the media has successfully portrayed the Republicans as the party of snake
handlers and moonshine, the difference between image and reality is
profound. Bush has just spun the
odometer, proposing the nation’s first ever $3 trillion budget. On matters pertaining to the very survival of
our culture – the primacy of English, multiculturalism, the denuding of our
public square of historically present Christian symbols and sentiments –
Republicans are found wanting. As for
illegal immigration, both the president and presumptive Republican nominee
support a form of amnesty.
Yet
many would paint America as under the sway of rightist politics, and some of
the reasons for this are obvious. Some
liberals know that the best way to ensure constant movement toward the left is
by portraying the status quo as dangerously far right. If you repeatedly warn that we teeter on the brink
of rightist hegemony, people will assume that to achieve “balance” we must tack
further left toward your mythical center.
Then we have conservatives influenced by the natural desire to view the
world as the happy place they’d like to inhabit. Ingenuous sorts, they confuse Republican with
conservative, party with principles, and electoral wars with the cultural
one. But there’s another factor: One can
confuse conservative with correct.
When
is the right not right, you ask? When it
has been defined by the left.
The
definition of “conservative” is fluid, changing from time to time and place to
place. Some “conservatives” embrace an
ideology prescribing limited government – one remaining within the boundaries
established by the Constitution – and low taxation. They favor nationalism over internationalism;
prefer markets mostly unfettered by regulation; eschew multiculturalism,
feminism, and radical environmentalism; and take pride in our history and
traditions.
But
there have been other kinds of conservatives.
In the Soviet Union, a conservative was quite the opposite, a
communist. Then, when Dutch politician
Pim Fortuyn was assassinated in 2002, BBC News ran the headline, “Dutch far-right leader shot dead.” “Far-right” indeed. Fortuyn was quite liberal by our standards; he
was a pro-abortion, openly-homosexual ex-sociology professor branded a rightist
mainly because he wished to stem Moslem immigration into Holland. Moreover, his fear was that zealous Moslems
posed a threat to the nation’s liberal
social structure.
So
here’s the question: What definition of conservative would a communist or
European statist conform to? Answer: That
which states, “One who favors maintenance of the status quo.” This brings us to a central point:
As
society is successfully transformed by those who detest the status quo, the
status quo changes. This means that the
great defender ideology of the status quo, conservatism, will change with it.
“Progress should mean that
we are always changing the world to fit the vision; instead we are always
changing the vision.” -- G.K. Chesterton
Both
liberals and conservatives have shape-shifting visions. This is because the definitions of conservative
and liberal are determined by the “position” of the given society ‘s political
spectrum. Shift that spectrum left or
right by altering the collective ideology of a nation, and the definitions of
those two words will change commensurate with the degree of that shift. This is why a Pim Fortuyn is viewed as
conservative in Western Europe. In a
land of Lilliputians, even Robert Reich seems like a giant.
This
isn’t to say there is no difference between liberal and conservative
visions. Liberals construct their vision
based on opposition to the conservative one; conservatives’ vision is a product
of the now accepted, decades-old vision of the left. Thus, liberals promote today’s liberal
vision; conservatives defend yesterday’s liberal vision.
“The whole modern world has
divided itself into Conservatives and Progressives. The business of
Progressives is to go on making mistakes. The business of the Conservatives is
to prevent the mistakes from being corrected.” -- G.K. Chesterton
Perhaps
one reason we’re losing the culture war is that it’s easier to convince people
to try new liberal mistakes than retain old liberal mistakes that have been
tried and found wanting. Regardless, we
will continue losing unless we change our thinking radically.
Wars are not won by being
defensive. Yet conservatives are seldom
anything but, because they’ve been trained to mistake defense for offense. When 13 states voted to ban faux marriage in
2004, some proclaimed it a great victory for conservatism. But it only was so if the conservatism you
subscribe to merely involves maintenance of a liberal status quo, for it was a
successful defensive action, not an offensive one. Who was proposing the societal change to
which the vote was a response? The left
was. What kind of change was it? One that would move us in the liberal
direction.
So it is always. We play defense when, instead of striving to
eliminate hate-crime laws, we merely fight proposals to make “transgendered” a
protected category; when we accept the Federal Department of Education and
simply use it to effect “conservative” education reform (read: No Child Left
Behind Act); when we simply try to ensure that the separation of church and
state ruling is applied in “conservative” ways; when we combat the
tax-and-spend crowd by not taxing but then spending;.
In contrast, the left is as
steadfastly offensive as it is dreadfully offensive. If its minions’ scheme to legally redefine marriage
fails today, they’ll try again tomorrow.
If a socialized medicine plan doesn’t pass congressional muster, it will
reappear five or ten years hence. If a
new tax is too rich for present tastes, they’ll wait for a more gluttonous
palate. Or they’ll sneak a different new
tax into an innocuous sounding bill or accept a slight increase to an old tax,
then another, and another, and another . . . .
They simply have to wait for the political spectrum to shift a bit
further left.
This brings me to another
important point. We often talk of
compromise, but does compromising with those who always advance but never
retreat constitute fairness? The left
proposes policy, “settles” for a half-measure, and we leave the table thinking
it an equitable outcome. The problem is
that since virtually all the changes suggested are liberal in nature, constant
compromise and granting of concessions guarantees constant movement toward the
left. So we see erstwhile secure
territory that is now under attack and revel in victory when we repel a few of
the enemy's charges. But we don’t
realize that we are defining victory as a reduction in the rate of loss of our
heartland, while the enemy defines it as the expansion of its empire. We compromise our way to tyranny.
It’s like a young boxer who
never throws punches and, consequently, becomes quite adept at blocking vicious
blows – and inured to taking them. He
emerges from the ring with a twinkle in black and blue eyes, flashes a smile
revealing two lost teeth, proudly shows off bruised forearms and says, “Look,
Dad! I blocked ninety percent of the
punches today! This is my greatest
victory ever!”
Yes, perhaps it’s a
figurative victory insofar as exhibition of defensive skill goes. As for real victory, thus engaging opponents
time and again doesn’t even bring the Pyrrhic variety. It only guarantees slow, torturous losses,
perpetual injury, and one day, perhaps, a knock-out.
This places the current
presidential race in perspective. When some
Republicans lament the absence of good “conservative” primary contenders, they
often act as if our statist front-runners are visited upon us by an invisible
hand, as if their ascendancy was despite the culture and not because of
it. In reality, these politicians are
merely products of a society that has long been in the grip of Gramschian operatives
in academia, the media, and Hollywood, leftists who have been crafting their
message, scheming, indoctrinating, and socially re-engineering the public for
decades.
Besides, can we really say
those candidates aren’t conservative? With
the political spectrum having shifted so far left, perhaps people such as Bush,
McCain, and Huckabee really are today’s conservatives, defenders of a statist
status quo.
Perhaps, just maybe, we (me,
and you if you’re in my camp) are something else.
After all, I criticized Mitt
Romney for forcing Massachusettsans
to buy health insurance, but a recent
poll indicates that a majority of
Republicans support such coercion.
And if some of these people are “conservatives,” I’m certainly am not
one.
I’m a revolutionary.
I don’t want to preserve the
status quo, I want to overthrow it. I
want to pull the statist weeds up by the roots and burn them in freedom’s fire,
just like our Founding Fathers did. Do
you think they were conservatives? Conservatives
don’t start revolutions; they simply make sure their shackles are made no
heavier.
Political victory rests on
cultural victory, and changing the culture starts with changing our
mentality. We have only two choices: We
can be revolutionary.
Or we can be wrong.
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