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Where is Conservatism Headed?
The Imaginative Conservative ^ | October 12, 2014 | Claes Ryn

Posted on 12/15/2015 1:51:06 PM PST by don-o

As this article will discuss the state and future of the so-called "conservative movement," it is only fair to inform readers not familiar with the author's views that he has long been a critic of prominent features of that movement. He has complained about its obsession with politics and its disproportionate interest in public policy and economics. For a society really to change, its mind and imagination need to be transformed. The author has complained about the movement's propensity for formulaic thinking, its blithe acceptance of the anti-historical theorizing of Leo Strauss and the Straussians, and about purported conservatives' thinking and acting like French Jacobins. He has criticized the movement for being less and less attentive to philosophy and the arts. Its trend-setters have been intellectual activists, journalists, and heads of foundations and think tanks rather than serious thinkers. Intellectual and moral confusion made it susceptible to manipulation by people with access to money and the media. The decline of the movement and of America was put into relief by absurd claims that conservatism had "triumphed."

These arguments will not be repeated here; they are in print in various places.[1] It should also be stated that, needless to say, the so-called conservative movement has had many admirable features. Some of its members resisted the trends that brought it to its present low point. Unfortunately, as it tries to recover, it may ignore those voices again and repeat its old mistakes.

To understand the predicament of the conservative movement it is important to realize that it originated as a largely political alliance. It was cobbled together out of diverse intellectual currents. Some of these were philosophically remote from each other, but could agree on a limited range of political objectives, particularly opposing communism and defending limited government. But not even those objectives were understood in the same way by all. With the fall of communism the lack of intellectual coherence became more glaring than ever.

If self-described American intellectual conservatives were to be asked to give a summary definition of conservatism, most would probably say that it is a belief in freedom, minimal government and a strong defense. Advocating "principles" of this kind is what Rush Limbaugh means as he now stresses the need for more "philosophy." But this definition suggests an ideological rather than a philosophical frame of mind. It says nothing about what must surely be distinctive to conservatism--that it is conservative of something, a heritage that it wants creatively to preserve. Neither does the definition say anything about adapting a universal higher purpose to historical circumstance.

In addition, each component of the mentioned definition can be given vastly different interpretations. Here it is only possible to take up one, the belief in freedom--an issue that illustrates well the deep intellectual confusion within the movement. It was a simplistic, unhistorical understanding of freedom that made it possible for neo-Jacobins to invade the movement and cause disaster in U.S. foreign policy.

All know the story of Benjamin Franklin being asked at the end of the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention what it had accomplished. He answered, "A republic, if you can keep it." Whatever his precise meaning, the Constitution could be sustained only if Americans would shoulder high responsibility. For liberty under law to be possible they had to keep their passions in check, exhibit the constitutional personality. The following words of Edmund Burke are relevant: "Men are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put moral chains upon their own appetites...Society cannot exist unless a controlling power upon will and appetite be placed somewhere, and the less of it there is within, the more there must be without."[2] In other words, people wishing to be free have to exercise exceptional self-control. Human nature being torn between higher and lower potentialities, the latter have to be reined in. Without this self-restraint, no freedom. To the extent that order does not come from within, it has to be imposed externally. This was the moral-spiritual ethos of the American constitutional republic, which was deeply rooted in classical and Christian civilization as transmitted through British culture.

Most of today's defenders of the U.S. Constitution proceed on the superficial assumption that it could be revived if only more people could be persuaded of its correct interpretation. But the original Constitution and the liberties from which it is undistinguishable presupposed Americans with certain historically formed character traits that could buttress them. Thus, for ordered liberty to be restored today, an older type of American, endowed with the constitutional personality, would first have to reemerge and begin to transform society.

But many so-called conservatives understand ordered liberty very differently, for example, as John Locke does. According to Locke, freedom is not the fruit of protracted moral and other struggle over time. It existed even prior to civil society, back in a purported state of nature in which freedom was simply bestowed on human beings. It is a free gift. "We are born free as we are born rational," Locke asserts. [3] Freedom does not result from individuals' taming their lower selves with the aid of civilization. No, nature fully equipped men to live to advantage. They left the state of nature only to remedy a few "inconveniences" relating to the safety of private property.

Unlike Burke, Locke has little or no awareness of what ordered liberty owes to history. He explains the existence of freedom in the state of nature by conveniently reading back into that state personality traits and ideas that could have evolved only in an advanced society. Seemingly an advocate of rationality and empiricism, Locke is first of all a liberal dreamer, an ideologue. He takes his bearings not from actual, historical experience but from purely hypothetical theorizing, rather naïve theorizing at that. His notion of the social contract could be given a more charitable interpretation, but a fondness for ahistorical Lockean speculation is not indicative of conservative leanings.

Locke has been a major source for the notion that freedom will flourish if only external impediments are removed. Just get rid of bad government! As combined with American nationalistic conceit, this kind of romantic dreaming helped form what this writer calls the new Jacobinism. The latter assigns to America the task of ushering in freedom and democracy everywhere. In the words of one conservative hero: "The American dream lives--not only in the hearts and minds of our own countrymen but in the hearts and minds of millions of the world's people in both free and oppressed societies who look to us for leadership." "America has always recognized our historic responsibility to lead the march of freedom."[4]

The ideology of freedom does not ask whether the preconditions for freedom are present in a particular society. It simply assumes that freedom will blossom once dictators have been kicked out. Utopianism used to be a monopoly of the left. In recent decades it has been the stock-in-trade of putative "conservatives."

The just-quoted conservative hero is Ronald Reagan. His speeches were filled with the romantic rhetoric of freedom. Like Locke, Reagan had little grasp of the moral and cultural preconditions of freedom. He proclaimed: "Liberty, just as life itself, is not earned but a gift from God."[5] Members of the conservative movement cheered Reagan's anti-communism and desperately wanted a political leader. Because of wishful thinking and lack of intellectual discernment they swallowed the sentimental dreaming. Operation global freedom was constrained in Reagan's case by the Cold War, but, with 9/11 as the pretext, George W. Bush could commit the United States to removing remaining obstacles to freedom in the world, starting in the Middle East. The ideological and political momentum for launching this grandiose project and for going to war against Iraq had been generated by the neoconservative network inside and outside of government, which, in concert with Big Oil, gave Bush its enthusiastic support.

To a Burkean or an American of similar outlook it is clear that the ideology of freedom misunderstands the origins of freedom. It is not surprising that such ideas should produce disastrous practical consequences.

Real freedom grows out of historically evolved character traits and institutions. It cannot strike roots in inhospitable soil. This is as true in the marketplace as in politics. You want maximum economic freedom? Then make sure that there is morality and culture that foster a maximum of individual responsibility. In an economy manned increasingly by gamblers and crooks and dominated by greed and short-sightedness the line between honesty and crime dissolves, and the misuse of economic freedom invites the imposition of external controls.

Has the conservative movement long protested the kind of economism that ignores the moral and cultural preconditions of a sound economy? Has it bemoaned the emergence of a crass, callous new economic elite? Has it called for the moral and cultural reinvigoration that might shore up economic and other freedom? Those setting the tone have not.

The new Jacobins and the worshippers of the free market in the abstract do not care about historical circumstances, only about adherence to their abstract "principles." With friends like them freedom does not need enemies. Even after the disasters in foreign and domestic policy in recent years the so-called conservative movement may not want to give up ideology and romantic dreaming, but chapter eleven reorganization demands it.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: conservatism
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1 posted on 12/15/2015 1:51:06 PM PST by don-o
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To: don-o

It is headed down the tubes if Trump becomes its standard bearer.


2 posted on 12/15/2015 1:52:58 PM PST by The Ghost of FReepers Past (Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light..... Isaiah 5:20)
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To: don-o

Ask Wiley Coyote.. Meeep meeeep


3 posted on 12/15/2015 1:59:08 PM PST by NormsRevenge (SEMPER FI!! - Monthly Donors Rock!!)
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To: The Ghost of FReepers Past
If conservatism doesn't include controlling the immigration invasion and the rape trade that is killing the industrial base then maybe conservatism doesn't rally mean anything. IMO You have to be a an America first Patriot to be a Conservative.

A gloBULList libertarian may (confusedly)think he is conservative but really he has nothing to do with the attitude and goals of the founders. This is a good discussion to have .

4 posted on 12/15/2015 2:04:25 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: don-o
Real freedom grows out of historically evolved character traits and institutions. It cannot strike roots in inhospitable soil. This is as true in the marketplace as in politics. You want maximum economic freedom? Then make sure that there is morality and culture that foster a maximum of individual responsibility. In an economy manned increasingly by gamblers and crooks and dominated by greed and short-sightedness the line between honesty and crime dissolves, and the misuse of economic freedom invites the imposition of external controls.

Has the conservative movement long protested the kind of economism that ignores the moral and cultural preconditions of a sound economy? Has it bemoaned the emergence of a crass, callous new economic elite? Has it called for the moral and cultural reinvigoration that might shore up economic and other freedom? Those setting the tone have not.

One problem is that all this is global, not merely local or national.

The trends that Ryn criticizes may be more a part of our world than the "soil" he wishes to preserve.

Another problem is that politics are so polarized that cutting across political lines as Ryn does is hard to do.

If you feel free markets are threatened, you're less likely to condemn culturally deplorable aspects of free market society.

5 posted on 12/15/2015 2:05:56 PM PST by x
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To: central_va

Reading the article is a good idea. Really.


6 posted on 12/15/2015 2:06:36 PM PST by FourPeas (Tone matters.)
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To: don-o

A very good article, and timely. Thank you for posting it.


7 posted on 12/15/2015 2:07:23 PM PST by Psalm 144 (100th anniversary of Turkish genocidal jihad against Armenian Christians during WWI)
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To: don-o
The just-quoted conservative hero is Ronald Reagan. His speeches were filled with the romantic rhetoric of freedom. Like Locke, Reagan had little grasp of the moral and cultural preconditions of freedom. He proclaimed: "Liberty, just as life itself, is not earned but a gift from God."

Who is this guy who wrote this? Ronald Reagan is right about liberty. It is a gift. Liberty is from God. Rights and freedom are what we do with that liberty given to us by God.

"Little grasp of the moral and cultural preconditions of freedom"?

This man knows so little. I would be ashamed to have signed my name to this article.

8 posted on 12/15/2015 2:08:19 PM PST by Slyfox (Ted Cruz does not need the presidency - the presidency needs Ted Cruz)
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To: Psalm 144

You are welcome. It is good to get away from the present moment and think more broadly.


9 posted on 12/15/2015 2:09:03 PM PST by don-o (I am Kenneth Carlisle - Waco 5/17/15)
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To: The Ghost of FReepers Past

Author’s point is that it already has. Forget the politics. The foundation culture is laid waste.


10 posted on 12/15/2015 2:09:20 PM PST by Psalm 144 (100th anniversary of Turkish genocidal jihad against Armenian Christians during WWI)
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To: FourPeas
Some so called expert is missing the boat, i did a search for wall, fence, illegal immigration, legal immigration, H-1B and found nothing. So how good can this turd sandwich be?
11 posted on 12/15/2015 2:09:48 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: don-o

Yes it is. Very old school, and refreshing.


12 posted on 12/15/2015 2:09:53 PM PST by Psalm 144 (100th anniversary of Turkish genocidal jihad against Armenian Christians during WWI)
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To: don-o

GloBULLists, open border whores and the Cheap-Labor-Express took over the Conservative movement. That is the problem.


13 posted on 12/15/2015 2:12:36 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: Slyfox
The answer is right there in the essay

Unlike Burke, Locke has little or no awareness of what ordered liberty owes to history. He explains the existence of freedom in the state of nature by conveniently reading back into that state personality traits and ideas that could have evolved only in an advanced society.

14 posted on 12/15/2015 2:14:16 PM PST by don-o (I am Kenneth Carlisle - Waco 5/17/15)
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To: central_va

Conservatism is broader than one issue. IMO, you get the big picture conservatism with one candidate. We shall see if conservatism is alive or dead with this vote.

Court appointments is probably the biggest issue of all. For as long as liberals have been packing the courts with leftist ideologues, there may be nothing we can do on any issue that the liberal justices won’t knock down. Trump insulted Scalia. For years and years the battle has been fought by the liberals in the courts. Conservative nominees have been blasted and dragged through kangaroo confirmation hearings trying to take them out, some successfully and some not. They are then still blasted endlessly by the left. To take Scalia’s words out of context and imply he was a racist is just unforgivable. It is fundamentally NOT conservative, NOT seeing the big picture and history of the battle, and NOT at all what we need going forward.


15 posted on 12/15/2015 2:17:03 PM PST by The Ghost of FReepers Past (Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light..... Isaiah 5:20)
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To: don-o

16 posted on 12/15/2015 2:17:30 PM PST by KeyLargo
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To: Psalm 144

There is still hope unless we give up.


17 posted on 12/15/2015 2:18:06 PM PST by The Ghost of FReepers Past (Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light..... Isaiah 5:20)
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To: The Ghost of FReepers Past

I quite agree with you, but the real war is cultural rather than political. A healthy culture will produce and healthy polity. There is no such thing as a healthy political structure arising from a corrupted culture, or being imposed on one.


18 posted on 12/15/2015 2:23:22 PM PST by Psalm 144 (100th anniversary of Turkish genocidal jihad against Armenian Christians during WWI)
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To: central_va

Pretty much says it all, right there.

You exemplify the problem quite well.


19 posted on 12/15/2015 2:23:50 PM PST by FourPeas (Tone matters.)
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To: FourPeas

Bulls eye.


20 posted on 12/15/2015 2:24:43 PM PST by don-o (I am Kenneth Carlisle - Waco 5/17/15)
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