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

24Aug/10Off

A View From The Left: E.J. Dionne

imagesFrom time to time I post the column of a prominent liberal commentator so as to give you, my readers, a view from the Left of the political spectrum.  This is, un-apologetically, a conservative website, but I am a firm believer in the idea that when once the average American has heard the best arguments each side has to offer, the conservative case will rise to the top every time.

E.J. Dionne is a columnist for The Washington Post and his latest effort is scathing critique of the current conservative movement in the United States.  Dionne beings by pointing out that the Democrats' mantra that the GOP is the "party of no" may not work as well as it has in the past.  Even a committed progressive liberal like old E.J. can read the "stop spending us into oblivion" writing on the wall.  However, the logic Dionne employs to explain why this is so is, shall we say, lacking.

With more than a third of conservative Republicans declaring that our Christian president is a Muslim, just saying no to him is a more than adequate motivation to spend a few minutes with a ballot.

And "no" is certainly more powerful than the mixed messages Democrats are putting forward. In their sweeping victories of 2006 and 2008, Democrats picked up dozens of seats in very conservative districts. Many of these incumbents don't want to be associated in the least with the remarkable record their party has built in this Congress for fear of tying themselves to Obama or the party's congressional leadership, or both. But this means that Democrats are defending their achievements half-heartedly, while Republicans are assailing them without mercy and, often enough, without much concern for accuracy.

No evidence cited for the claim that "more than a third" of Republicans believe President Obama is a Muslim, but why get bogged down in the messy details when their is a great opportunity to bash conservatives, right?

Notice also the tone-deaf nature of Dionne's praise for "the remarkable record their party (the Democrats) has built."  I understand that someone on the far-Left would look at the unprecedented levels of spending, debt/deficit accumulation, and political chicanery to ram through 2,000 page bills that the majority of Americans do not want that have typified this Congress since the beginning of 2009 and be pleased, but is he joking when he condemns moderate Democrats for running as far and as fast as they can from a president with a hovering-around-40% approval record and a congress with a 16% one?

Here is the thrust of Dionne's piece:

The principled case that must be made is that the brand of conservatism seeking power this year is irresponsible, incoherent and untrue to the best of its own traditions. That's clear enough at the most basic level of policy: Conservatives can say that they are deeply worried about deficits, or they can insist that tax cuts matter most. But when they say they can reduce taxes and trim deficits at the same time, they are either deluded or deceptive, and they are playing voters for fools.

But there is something far more troubling at work: the rise of an angry, irrational extremism -- the sort that says Obama is a Muslim socialist who wasn't born in the U.S. -- that was not part of Ronald Reagan's buoyant conservative creed. Do Republican politicians believe in the elaborate conspiracy theories being spun by Glenn Beck and parts of the Tea Party movement? If not, why won't they say so?

He concludes with:

What the current right has on offer is far worse than anything Bush put forward, which means that this election isn't even about whether we'll go back into the ditch. It's about whether a movement that's gone over a cliff will be rewarded for doing so. A victory for this style of conservatism will be a defeat for the kind of conservatism the country needs. And that's a worthy matter to put to the voters.

The brand of conservatism seeking power is "dangerous" and "incoherent"?  Which part?  The "Let's get back to the adhering to the Constitution" part, or maybe the "Let's stop spending irresponsibly" part, or could it be the "Let's protect our borders" aspect of the modern conservative movement that frets E.J. so much?  I know that most conservatives (and many Democrat-voting Americans) want to see marriage remain the same institution it has always been (one man-one woman), so it might be that "radical" view that keeps progressive liberals like Dionne up at night.

I agree with him though when he says we need to put this entire matter to the voters.  I'm sure he'll have a wonderful excuse why it is the Democrats take a wood-shed beating come November, something about how the Right has "tapped into the anger" of Americans and how the surge in support for conservatives and Republicans will be short-lived.  But for now, we can agree that November is very important to the fate of the nation and to the very different, divergent worldviews liberals and conservatives have.

Comments (4) Trackbacks (0)
  1. I believe this November’s election will be a, if not the, turning point in America’s future. If Progressives hold on to the majority of the seats in both Houses, their policies will be unchecked and 2012 may not matter as much as we think it will.

    It bothers me that so many liberal/progressive thinkers and columnists continue to push the meme that Tea Party members (and today’s Republican party) are extremists. What have they done exactly that makes them think they are extremists? What acts of extremism have they carried out?

    Thanks for posting. I rarely have the stomach to make it through WP, NYT and other articles like this. Having a counter point to their fluff pieces made it less stomach churning. It was nice feeling that I could weather the storm of their ignorance since I knew there was some sense of reality in at the end.

  2. It is hard to over-estimate the damage that was done to the Republican Party and conservatism over the last 10 years. We should expect to take our lumps in the liberal media and truthfully, we’ve earned them. By and large we were asleep at the wheel during the Bush administration. I hope that we’ve learned our lesson. Presently, we’re just going to have to suffer on up through the conditions as we get our Party and our conservative philosophy fully rehabilitated and win back the trust of the American people. If we take the House and maybe even the Senate in November, I hope our team has the mettle to see this through.

  3. It is amazing that all the liberal talking heads come up with the same catch-phrases simultaneously, such as, a few weeks ago, when (I believe this was the occasion) the Obama family went on vacation to Martha’s Vineyard and were seen enjoying themselves on the water and in various ice cream shops around that community, while the Gulf Coast was still struggling with the oil spill. All of a sudden, several of the liberal talking heads began saying that “the optics of this vacation don’t look good”. Optics? Where did that word come from if not spun out by a central scripting source? We know now about the “Journolist”, which may be a similar resource to whatever it was that decided to use the word “optics”. E.J. Dionne must be a subscriber to that script, as many of the comments he writes are repeated ad nauseum by his fellow travelers. And I get a chuckle from those who state that Glenn Beck said this or did that. As one of Beck’s fairly regular viewers, I am amused when he is described as having done something that he has not done; but there’s that “central scripting” thing again, I suppose.

  4. I think the left never really goes on the defensive. They coin terms like in the above post and attack with very provocative words like “extremism” in that article. I think the way conservatives used to “counter attack” is call them a socialist or a communist or budget busters. Somehow those words don’t sound so threatening as they used to. Or people just don’t believe they pose a threat.

    Also, one of the foundations of the American system of free enterprise is property rights. These rights, in a large, sense no longer exist because of the decades long use of transfer payments to support anything and everything–from poor people to corporations, home buyers, drug companies and even foreign countries. I often wonder if the concept of “Property Rights” is even understandable to ordinary people in this day and age.

    If going back to a Constitutional meaning of property rights is extreme and people become convinced of that, then we are all in trouble.
    rcf in Colorado

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

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