A Voice in the Wilderness In Defense of "Mere Conservatism"

30Oct/09Off

Off for a few days…

I've been in Grand Rapids, MI attending a few events hosted by The Acton Institute and the American Enterprise Institute. Last night I spoke briefly at Acton's Annual Dinner, sharing some of my experiences at Acton conferences from the perspective of a graduate student.  This morning I was also privileged to sit-in on a stimulating discussion on the topic of "Is Capitalism Worth Saving: The Cultural Case for Free Enterprise."

If you are unfamiliar with The Acton Institute, read my column from this summer on what this fantastic think-tank is all about.

Blogging will be slow for a day or two here at AVITW, but next week I'll have more to share from my time in Michigan.

Until then, enjoy this fascinating video from Acton on the current health care debate:


28Oct/09Off

Obama = Caesar?

The National Endowment for the Arts is perhaps the single biggest waste of tax dollars currently on the books.  The government (a.k.a. the American taxpayer) is footing the bill for "art" to be made.  Think about that.  How bad must one be as an artist to need federal subsidization in order to be an artist?

little_caesar-7893061Well, the president of the NEA, Rocco Landesman, recently said in a speech:

This is the first president that actually writes his own books since Teddy Roosevelt and arguably the first to write them really well since Lincoln. If you accept the premise, and I do, that the United States is the most powerful country in the world, then Barack Obama is the most powerful writer since Julius Caesar. That has to be good for American artists.

Caesar, huh?  Really?

I wonder why the president of an organization dependent on government funds would so ardently endorse and support someone like Barack Obama?  This type of praise is not only ridiculous, it may possibly be flat-out wrong that Obama even wrote his own books.  Almost no public figures do.

More on NEA and their recent attempts to pay artists to make and promote pro-Obama art:


27Oct/09Off

The Health Care Debate Is About More Than Health Care

Since July the seemingly singular focus of the White House and leadership in Congress has been health care reform.  In the midst of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, one caused in large part by out of control spending and fiscal irresponsibility at every level of society and government, President Obama insists that handing control of 1/6 of the economy over to Uncle Sam is the answer to all our worries.  It doesn't even pass the smell test.

Arthur Brooks, writing in the Wall Street Journal, believes that the Democrats have been losing this health care debate because of the deeper, ideological, philosophical issues at stake.

According to the Gallup polling organization, the percentage of Americans who believe the cost of health care for their families will "get worse" under the proposed reforms rose to 49% from 42% in just the past month. The percentage saying it would "get better" stayed at 22%.

Many are searching for explanations. One popular notion is that demagogues in the media are stirring up falsehoods against what they say is a long-overdue solution to the country's health-care crisis.

Americans deserve more credit. They haven't been brainwashed, and they aren't upset merely over the budget-busting details. Rather, public resistance stems from the sense that the proposed reforms do violence to three core values of America's free enterprise culture: individual choice, personal accountability, and rewards for ambition.

I agree completely with Mr. Brooks' assessment of the situation.  I would encourage you to read the rest of his column here, and forward it along to friends and family.  Those of us who believe that real change would be removing government as much as possible from our health care system, that Tort Reform is critically necessary to lower costs, and that it would be an unmitigated disaster to add more than $1 trillion to our deficit need to stand together and rationally make the case for alternative solutions to the problems facing health care in this country.


26Oct/09Off

Feminism and Happiness

mohlerDr. Albert Mohler of Southern Theological Seminary covers some of the most interesting topics and stories on his blog, and his recent entry on the topic of feminism is no exception.

In it, Mohler highlights some recent articles and studies that center around the question, "Why are many women unhappy?"

This issue came to light last month in a fascinating essay by Maureen Dowd of The New York Times. Dowd, whose columns often reveal the nation's Zeitgeist, cited the fact that a number of major studies indicate that "women are getting gloomier and men are getting happier." She asked: "Did the feminist revolution end up benefiting men more than women?"

A very similar set of questions arises from TIME magazine's current cover story and special report, "The State of the American Woman." As the cover of the magazine explains, "A new poll shows why they are more powerful -- but less happy."

Mohler continues:

Reporter Nancy Gibbs traces the vast changes brought about by the feminist revolution. "It's funny how things change slowly, until the day we realize they've changed completely," she observes.

Along the way, Gibbs also traces more fundamental changes. With remarkable understatement she simply notes "the detachment of marriage and motherhood" among other transformations. "Women no longer view matrimony as a necessary station on the road to financial security or parenthood," she explains.

Nevertheless, "Among the most confounding changes of all is the evidence, tracked by numerous surveys, that as women have gained more freedom, more education and more economic power, they have become less happy."

Read the rest of the Time article here, and the rest of Mohler's insightful commentary here.

I'd love to hear from some of the ladies out there what they think of all this.


25Oct/09Off

Milton Friedman: “How To Stay Free”

Democracies have only recently been considered desirable. Historically, it was feared that democracies always self destruct when citizens, forgetting that you cannot remove want and misery through legislation, insist on government actions that physically and morally bankrupt their nation. Friedman explains why the United States has so far avoided this outcome and how we can continue to do so.

From time to time I post video from the mind of the late, freat Milton Friedman.  If you want to know some of the very real differences between Right and Left in this country, you need to hear from Dr. Friedman what free markets are all about, and why there is such an intimate connection between political and economic freedom.

In 1980 PBS ran a 10-part miniseries based on Friedman's book Free to Choose, which includes a documentary on each chapter, followed by lively debate and discussion between some of the elite economic minds on the Right and Left.  Below is Part 10, "How to Stay Free."

Watch it.  Please.


23Oct/09Off

Fox News Banned From Pay Czar Interview

It's fairly important to the story here that you take a moment and watch this:

From the mind of Charles Krauthammer we read the following:

The White House has declared war on Fox News. White House communications director Anita Dunn said that Fox is "opinion journalism masquerading as news." Patting rival networks on the head for their authenticity (read: docility), senior adviser David Axelrod declared Fox "not really a news station." And Chief of Staff Emanuel told (warned?) the other networks not to "be led (by) and following Fox."

Meaning? If Fox runs a story critical of the administration -- from exposing White House czar Van Jones as a loony 9/11 "truther" to exhaustively examining the mathematical chicanery and hidden loopholes in proposed health care legislation -- the other news organizations should think twice before following the lead.

The signal to corporations is equally clear: You might have dealings with a federal behemoth that not only disburses more than $3 trillion every year but is extending its reach ever deeper into private industry -- finance, autos, soon health care and energy. Think twice before you run an ad on Fox.

I do have to at least eat some crow and say that the other reporters from networks at loathsome as MSNBC did come to the defense of Fox News when the administration attempted to bar them from interviewing the "Pay Czar" Ken Feinberg.

Part of me wants to think that this whole thing, this "war" between Fox News and the White House, is nothing more than the staged brain-child of Fox News' Roger Ailes and David Axelrod.  The two met in New York last month when the president was in town for the United Nations General Assembly.  Not much attention was paid to the story at the time, but the pessimist in me says that these two strategic masterminds concocted the entire ordeal as a way to give both sides what they want: Fox News sees higher ratings, and the White House has a scapegoat (the Left's favorite scapegoat) to bash while continuing to work behind-the-scenes on health care.

But in such matters I suppose I defer to the experience and wisdom of someone like Chuck Krauthammer.

There's a principle at stake here. While government can and should debate and criticize opposition voices, the current White House goes beyond that. It wants to delegitimize any significant dissent. The objective is no secret. White House aides openly told Politico that they're engaged in a deliberate campaign to marginalize and ostracize recalcitrants, from Fox to health insurers to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

What do you think about this whole thing?


21Oct/09Off

Mere Conservatism: Theology

by: R.J. Moeller

(Note: If you haven't read the Mere Conservatism Intro yet, take a minute and familiarize yourself with what we're trying to accomplish with this series of essays.)

CharltonHestonTheTenCommandmentsC101021021Theology, history, and economics are the three prisms through which my conservative view of the world can be most clearly seen and understood.  Obviously these are three broad categories to draw upon, but stick around for the next few weeks as I will be narrowing down what it is I mean by each of these loaded terms.

I completely appreciate that for many Americans the word “theology” is perhaps scary, confusing, misunderstood, or meaningless.  It’s okay to admit that, even if you consider yourself a spiritual person.

Theology is simply the study, or understanding, of God.

Every person has a theology, even atheists, for they make the bold claim that there is certainly no God.  Please keep in mind that we are leagues away in this intellectual journey from making declarations as to which God is the true Higher Power.  I’m merely attempting to help define theology, and then explain the type of theology that I believe usually leads to a conservative outlook on life.  If you consider yourself liberal (or anything else) and find that you agree with my sentiments today, then perhaps we aren't as far apart as our partisan prejudices would have us believe.

The presupposition of my definition for theology is that one has already actually thought about God; that you have thought about what you think about a Higher Power.  It is nearly impossible to separate the question of God from our own experiences of asking the “Why am I here?” and “What is my purpose?” questions that rightly plague us all.  You can brush these questions off for much or all of your life, but the intellectually honest person is confronted with them and eventually says, “Results be damned: I’m getting to the bottom of life’s meaning and God’s existence.”

On a side note: If you have never reached this point of candid self-reflection in your life, I do not intend to debate the existence of God here and now, but we cannot avoid Him in a discussion of Americans, let alone of American conservatism.

As we continue our dialogue about theology, add on to the layers of existential soul-searching I just mentioned the practical, daily implications of those eternal questions.  For example, issues such as abortion, murder, capital punishment, and war carry with them critically important moral conundrums that no responsible citizen should ignore.  Underlying all of this, in the context of a free society like our own, is the question of “rights.”

Here is where I believe the theology of an American matters to their neighbor.  Again, don’t confuse theology with “religion.”  You belong to a religion, but you believe in a particular theology.

The question before us, as fellow citizens of a representative republic, is the genesis of our rights.

Where do they come from?  Does everyone have them?  Can they be taken away?  Should they ever be taken away?  What can and/or should be done if they are taken away?

Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, believed in a Higher Power, but in one who created the world, wound it up like a watch, and then walked away to let things play out as they will.  Jefferson believed that like a watch there were certain truths, what one might call Natural Laws, which governed the universe.  He was what is known as a “deist.”

He was also a lawyer and a rationally thinking man.

The core of his reasoned defense for America’s right to be free from British tyranny was this: “All men are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights.”  This is, in my opinion, the single most distinctive thing about America.  The Jewish people of the Old Testament were the first to claim that mankind was made in God’s image.  Jefferson, a deist no less, and our remarkable Founding Fathers took the logical next step and said “If God created us, then our rights come from Him, not a king.”

These "truths" were considered to be "self-evident"...as in, "You have to go out of your way to ignore or deny them."

How does one explain where rights come from without a Higher Power?  How does one explain the history of this blessed nation without coming in to contact with a Higher Power?

If it is not God, then our rights are in my opinion arbitrary and illusionary.  If our rights do not come from someone or something higher than ourselves, namely a Creator, then we are entirely dependent on the whims of the State.

You don’t have to worship on Sunday morning at Sarah Palin’s church or profess belief in a Six-Day Creation to acknowledge the importance of this point.  You don’t have to (and shouldn’t) be the type of person who calls America the “Second Israel” to appreciate the uniqueness of this country’s fundamental claims about life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

The irrefutable genius of our Founders was this: led by their undeniable Judeo-Christian theological influences and values, they conceived a way to ground our national system in theology without forcing people to be religious.  You can believe whatever it is you want about God, Jesus, Buddha or the Hale-Bopp Comet.  Just remember that this freedom comes from the worldview of our Founders that recognized that our Creator affords each of us a similar freedom while on this earth to accept or reject Him.  The system He set up isn’t dependent upon our liking it, but merely accepting it.

The Founding Fathers were saying. “Go ahead and pray (or not pray) to God in any way you see fit – but we believe in a Higher Power and the only possible chance for sustained freedom and liberty we can see is a nation where everyone, especially those who are lent power to lead, is held to a higher standard.”GK1

And from this a second, and for now, final, theological conclusion can be drawn: mankind is messed up.  We are “fallen,” the God-fearing man or woman might say.  This should be the most obvious theological point in the world.  No one disputes that the world has problems.  Our neighbors have problems.  We have problems.  Things aren’t as they should be a lot of the time.

As G.K. Chesterton (pictured right) phrased it in Orthodoxy, "Certain new theologians dispute original sin, which is the only part of Judeo-Christian theology which can really be proved."

Many secular-progressives excitedly say that while the Declaration of Independence may contain some “quasi-religious rhetoric,” that the real test is the Constitution and its alleged lack of “God language.”  Argument won, right?

Well, first of all, there shouldn’t be any argument about the historical fact that the men who put together the framework for our republican democracy, who wrote the Bill of Rights, who signed the Declaration, who led the colonial troops in to battle were predominantly and overwhelmingly religious, theological dudes.  This is simply the historical narrative of the country we all happen to live in.

No one wants a theocracy, but to write the Judeo-Christian heritage out of our nation’s history is preposterous and should not be taken seriously.  For better or worse, this is who we are.

But more importantly, I contend that the Constitution is implicit in its theology.  The very first thing our Framers wrote down was the concept of freedom of religion.  Want to take a guess what (or Who) was on their minds when they wrote that?  Certainly they were wanting to protect against a State-run church, the kind they had (have) back in Europe, but the reality of a Creator loomed in the words and on the pages of nearly everything these visionary men spoke and wrote.

Was anyone expecting James Madison and the boys, to prove how much they believe in a Higher Power,  would have to have thrown in an “Oh by the way, God rules and someday secular atheists like Chrisopher Hitchens will drool,” shout-out in the first ten amendments?  If they had included a specific “Jesus is my Homeboy clause” in the Bill of Rights it would have flown in the face of the liberty-based sentiments from the Declaration that was their case to the world as to why they deserved to be free.

Just because haters on the secular Left and zealots on the religious right don’t seem to comprehend these subtle, yet profound, truths about the Founders intentions doesn’t mean we all miss them.

The Constitution is also inherently theological regarding my second point from before: the fallen state of mankind.  The separation of powers would not be necessary in a world where enough hope, change, progress, and blaming Fox News for its “bias” could solve all social, political and moral ills.  Of course we need protection from those who inevitably do wrong, and consequently we must have debates and votes regarding how much of our liberties we are willing to exchange for security.

Compromise is a reality of life.  But so are sin and crime and murder and ponzi schemes and everything in between realities of life.  The Founders believed things could be better, but never perfect.

They also believed that a significant contributor to ensuring things would be perennially worse was the centralization of power in the hands of a few “elites” who promised the rest of the population that they knew what was best.

From these two fundamental theological concepts - the existence of a Creator who grants us our rights and the natural depravity of man - a coherent, cohesive, and typically conservative worldview begins to form.

If you came to my church on Sunday or asked me over coffee to explain my religious faith in Jesus Christ, I’d be more than happy to share my life and my doctrinal beliefs regarding the God of the Old and New Testament.  I could draw upon deeper biblical insights to explain why I believe Scripture and Christian teaching and tradition point people to a conservative worldview.

But in the public square, in the marketplace of ideas, in a free society that should welcome all points of view, and in an essay attempting to define the basic theological ideas pertinent to a conservative outlook on life, I only need the two I’ve already stated.

This is just the first stop on our intellectual journey, but it is a big one.

(Read "Mere Conservatism: History" here)


21Oct/09Off

What in the world is going on in D.C.?

Take a peak a few of the recent stories coming out of Washington, and tell me if there are any common themes.

From The Hill we get this headline: "Democrats lock Republicans out of Committee Room".

Rep. Edolphus Towns (D-N.Y.) locked Republicans out of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee room to keep them from meeting when Democrats aren’t present.

Towns’ action came after repeated public ridicule from the leading Republican on the committee, Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), over Towns’s failure to launch an investigation into Countrywide Mortgage’s reported sweetheart deals to VIPs.

Nice.

Then there is the concerted effort by the highest office in the land to undermine and attack one single news network that never has more than about 3 million people watching.

The White House is calling on other news organizations to isolate and alienate Fox News as it sends out top advisers to rail against the cable channel as a Republican Party mouthpiece.

ObamaWhen asked about this insane, and ironically, Nixonian, plan to go after Fox News, Press Secretary Robert Gibbs had this fascinating exchange with Jake Tapper (the only non-Fox News employee who has asked any questions about the executive office attempting to silence their critics):

Tapper: It’s escaped none of our notice that the White House has decided in the last few weeks to declare one of our sister organizations “not a news organization” and to tell the rest of us not to treat them like a news organization. Can you explain why it’s appropriate for the White House to decide that a news organization is not one –

(Crosstalk)

Gibbs: Jake, we render, we render an opinion based on some of their coverage and the fairness that, the fairness of that coverage.

Tapper: But that’s a pretty sweeping declaration that they are “not a news organization.” How are they any different from, say –

Gibbs: ABC -

Tapper: ABC. MSNBC. Univision. I mean how are they any different?

Gibbs: You and I should watch sometime around 9 o’clock tonight. Or 5 o’clock this afternoon.

Tapper: I’m not talking about their opinion programming or issues you have with certain reports. I’m talking about saying thousands of individuals who work for a media organization, do not work for a “news organization” -- why is that appropriate for the White House to say?

Gibbs: That’s our opinion.

If you've ever heard anything more foolish than a liberal Democrat's White House staff accusing Fox News of being the only network with a "perspective" or "agenda", I'd love to be made aware of it.

Oh, and don't forget this administration's deep and profound "respect" for business and the free market:

The uneasy relationship between the Obama White House and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has steadily eroded over the past several months, with the business group's opposition to health care and climate change legislation triggering an all-fronts backlash from the administration.

The administration is now trying to neutralize the Chamber by doing an end-run around the group and dealing directly with its members.

During remarks in early October, President Obama named and shamed the Chamber for opposing a consumer protection agency.

And the White House again criticized the group Tuesday, telling Fox News in an e-mail that the group's opposition to reform efforts gives the administration pause.

All this from the man who promised to be a "new kind" of leader, someone who could "clean up Washington."  What the American people are quickly remembering is that politicians are politicians, no matter how badly we want them to be saviors or messiahs.

Secular-progressive liberals have a totalitarian instinct.  Politicians in general have a totalitarian instinct.

What do you think you get when you create a hybrid of a secular-progressive liberal and a politician?  Barack Obama.  Nancy Pelosi.  Harry Reid.

What country can preserve its liberties if its rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? -Thomas Jefferson


20Oct/09Off

Obama’s Justice Department Condescending to Black Voters

Hopefully that headline grabbed your attention.  Sadly, it is true and no gimmick.  The Department of Justice has ruled that a town in North Carolina is not allowed to remove party affiliations from all local ballots.

The Justice Department has overruled a small North Carolina city's attempt to end the use of party affiliation in local elections, according to a report in The Washington Times.

According to the article, the Justice Department ruled that party affiliations are needed in part to protect equal rights for black voters. The department determined that white voters in Kinston, N.C., would only cast their ballots for black candidates if they run as Democrats.

So who cares?  What's the big deal?  I'm sure Bush did stuff like this anyway, right?

This town in North Carolina voted to do away with party affiliations so that candidates would have to run on merit, ideas, and their own track-record.  Novel idea, no?  But that isn't good enough in Obama's America.  Race MUST be involved in everything.  The town in question is 2/3's black, which means that for this law to have passed in the first place, the same black people who allegedly wouldn't know who to vote for if there isn't a "D" in front of the candidate's name knew enough about what they want from their government to endorse this idea.

Also important to this story is the fact that the Obama Justice Department that spent its time worrying over this local issue in rural NC has been exposed as being racially selective in the issues it tackles.

The decision was made by the same department official who dismissed a case against New Black Panther Party members in Philadelphia.

So black militants who intimidate voters in Philly from casting their ballot for anyone but Barack Obama is a non-story, not worthy of the Department of Justice's time...yet a town of black voters deciding they do no want political affiliations to be placed on local ballots requires immediate attention and action.

Follow that logic.


19Oct/09Off

Prager, Milwaukee, and Me

prager in milwaukeeI should've posted something on this last Friday, but I didnt.  So you're getting it today.

My boy Prager was in Milwaukee last Thursday night and spoke on "The Moral Case for Conservatism" to a lively crowd on University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee's campus.  The lecture was fascinating, the Q & A engaging, and Dennis was gracious as always when I went up after the talk and got to chat with the Big Guy himself.  As you might remember, I was privileged to travel to Los Angeles last May and spend a day in-studio with Dennis and his producer Allen Estrin while Prager conducted his daily radio talk show out of the KRLA studios in Glendale, CA.

If you ever get the chance to see Dennis speak live, take it.

Even just as important to this story is where me and my kimbohomeboys ate dinner at in Milwaukee.  A few nights before heading up to Wisconsin I was watching The Food Network and saw a clip of my favorite show, Diners, Drive-ins and Dives, with my other boy Guy Fieri who was in Milwaukee at a place called The Comet Cafe.

Check out their menu and, FYI, I had the meatloaf sandwich.

But the big event of the night was the Kimbo Burger (not listed on the menu) that one of my buddies ordered.  The sandwich cost more than $15 and instead of traditional buns used two giant grilled cheese sandwiches to encapsulate the smorgasbord of unhealthy goodies within.


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What is “Mere Conservatism”?

The basic ideas, ideals, and values that generally define and characterize the central tenets of what today might be termed "modern conservative thought."

We believe that a proper understanding of history, economics, and theology leads to certain conclusions. Many of these are the same conclusions our Founding Fathers arrived at in constructing a "more perfect union."

All ideas and opinions are welcome; not all are correct.

Mere Conservatism Links:
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