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The Accidental Conservative
reason.com ^ | December 2, 2002 | Tim Cavanaugh

Posted on 12/05/2002 8:38:29 AM PST by dr_who

Who would have suspected that George W. Bush, a president who came into office vowing to "change the tone" of the meretricious Clinton era (a dark age when America howled under the twin lashes of peace and prosperity), would emerge as the country's leading exponent of situational ethics?

Maybe true conservatives always understood. Ever since Ronald Reagan ended his second term with the Department of Education still intact, it's been clear how little even a committed ideologue can achieve in real politics. So it's hardly surprising that Bush, who ran the most content-free campaign since some nameless William Henry Harrison stooge coined the slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler too," would produce something less than a 21st century Goldwater administration.

What's striking, however, is how regretful, hesitant and feckless Bush manages to seem whenever he does something that might agree with conservative principles. A real Republican would beam with pride after freezing the pay raises of civilian federal workers and proposing a new regime to let private companies bid for up to half of all civil work currently done by the government. Instead, Bush sounds like Dean Wormer invoking a little-known codicil in the Faber College Constitution that gives the dean absolute power in times of campus emergency.

"A national emergency has existed since September 11, 2001," Bush wrote in his announcement of the pay raise reductions. "Full statutory civilian pay increases in 2003 would interfere with our Nation's ability to pursue the war on terrorism." The precedent established here—using the US Legal Code's emergency powers language—is disturbing enough; the code allows the President to fiddle with everything from immigration levels to copper mining to military officers' commissions in times of national emergency, even an open-ended emergency like the current one.

Most telling, though, is the way this follows Bush's pattern of using circumstances to dictate what should be principled actions. Thus, the Bush tax cut is justified not by an ethical opposition to taxation but, as Reason writer Glenn Garvin has noted, by "the Keynesian argument that it would stimulate a lagging economy." (You can see how well that worked.) Important decisions about privacy and military commitments (issues that long ago, before President Nixon invented post-ideological Republicanism, were the purview of conservatives) are held hostage to whatever real and perceived emergencies the great society is confronting. The party of limited government has now created a cabinet-level Department of Homeland Security that immediately dwarfs the Departments of Education and Energy (neither of which Bush shows any inclination to do away with).

And then there are the areas where Bush actually aims to out-Democrat the Democrats. The son of the Education President has already dumped school vouchers. His conversion to Nader/Buchanan protectionism in the form of tariffs to protect the moribund domestic steel industry was motivated not by a shift in Bush's thinking but by his need to address the tight results of Rust Belt voting in 2000. Midwestern farm states have come in for similar largesse in the form of $170 billion in agribusiness subsidies. How completely "faith-based" charitable initiatives will involve Washington in formerly civil matters remains to be seen. Is it any wonder that the erstwhile head of the faith-based disbursement program is now crying the blues about Karl Rove's "Mayberry Machiavellis" and their distance from anything like political principle?

These half-maneuvers are more amazing when you consider that Bush's political position is the strongest of any president in recent memory, and that he has had uncanny success in damning opinion in order to get his way. On the Kyoto Protocol, the international criminal court, the ABM treaty and even the buildup for war with Iraq, Bush has repeatedly asserted his own will and found little but barking where fierce resistance was expected. Indeed, by choosing Henry Kissinger to head the September 11 investigation (was the altar- and Worldcom-bound Rudy Giuliani too busy to give the whitewash a fig leaf of seriousness?), Bush seems to be engaging in a Washington version of an Andy Kaufman routine—seeing how brazenly he can defy the audience before somebody starts heckling.

For slavish devotees of power, the spectacle of a Republican president racking up victories is still heady stuff, no matter what the cost in political content. But here's a lesson in the recent past: Once there was a Democrat in the White House, who scored victory after victory, on free trade, welfare reform, defense budgets, and other formerly conservative issues. Most liberals were happy enough just to see him winning, but after eight years of Bill Clinton, what did they have to show for it? It's not too late to learn history's lessons: Two members of Congress are already vowing to sneak that pay raise through, despite the President's action last week. Does anybody doubt that when the "compromise" reaches Bush's desk, he'll sign it?

Tim Cavanaugh is Reason's Web editor.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: annoying; box; bush; keywords; libertarians; paleolist; republican; victories

1 posted on 12/05/2002 8:38:29 AM PST by dr_who
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To: dr_who
Bush has even refused to countermand the "don't ask, don't tell" crap of the x42 administration. He is NOT a conservative.
2 posted on 12/05/2002 8:40:49 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: Nasty Nas
Yes. So? I also think that it is a very bad idea to have women in combat or on warships.
4 posted on 12/05/2002 8:50:35 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants
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To: Nasty Nas
Let me guess....YOU just signed up on FR TODAY!?
5 posted on 12/05/2002 9:02:04 AM PST by goodnesswins
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To: goodnesswins
Let me guess....YOU just signed up on FR TODAY!?

Well, the good news is, it pushes us over 93,000 members...

6 posted on 12/05/2002 9:16:27 AM PST by backhoe
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: Nasty Nas
Let me guess, you are a staunch believer in homosexuals being completely banned from the military. Am I right?

------------------------

If he isn't, I am. Homosexuality is a serious mental disorder which has as much place in positions of responsibility as schizophrenia or psychopathic personalities. You got a problem with that?

9 posted on 12/05/2002 9:45:01 AM PST by RLK
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To: Nasty Nas
First, homosexuality is a deviant behavior. It is NOT a genetic disposition. People willing to commit one deviant behavior are far more likely to commit others.

Second, the situations and housing conditions in which the military men and women are put is stressful at best. To add sexual tensions, love affairs, and attractions to it is simply asking for trouble. Don't try to argue that homos are not attracted to heteros because they are attracted to members of the same sex, regardless of sexual orientation.

Third, homosexual men have been proven to have MUCH higher incidences of STD's and many other communicable diseases. A ship with 5,000 men on it doesn't need a bunch of hepatitis infected fudge packers among it's ranks.

Fourth, do you REALLY believe that rules will deter more than a tiny portion of behavior? No, it only makes them more careful.

Give me a while and I will give you more reasons.
10 posted on 12/05/2002 10:03:09 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants
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To: dr_who
These half-maneuvers are more amazing when you consider that Bush's political position is the strongest of any president in recent memory

And the writer doesn't see the obvious connection? The President is extremely popular. What the writer should realize is that his views represent a small minority of voters.

11 posted on 12/05/2002 10:03:18 AM PST by Huck
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To: *Paleo_list; *libertarians
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
12 posted on 12/05/2002 10:04:27 AM PST by Free the USA
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To: Blood of Tyrants
From what I've heard from them, homosexuals don't like "Don't ask, don't tell either." Apparently, the removal of homosexuals from the armed forces has increased since Clinton issued that directive.
13 posted on 12/05/2002 10:07:05 AM PST by Celtjew Libertarian
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To: Celtjew Libertarian
They don't like it because they want to be openly homosexual like the perverts that march around in the "gay pride" parades in San Fransciso.
14 posted on 12/05/2002 10:33:58 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants
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To: Celtjew Libertarian
Clinton misled the gays into thinking he supported their cause like he misled every other group who voted for him. Once in the Military gays discovered that the policy still forbids active gays from serving. Also there comes a point in many servicemen’s enlistment when they think about changing their mind and getting out, claiming to be gay is one way to be discharged from your commitments. Most servicemen get past their second thoughts and serve out their enlistment.
15 posted on 12/05/2002 10:37:32 AM PST by Libertarianize the GOP
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To: Blood of Tyrants; RLK; Nasty Nas
Guess you guys haven't heard the jokes about submarines.

Seriously, how many homos actually WANT to join the military? Gay men aren't exactly the most physical of the species.

Additionally, do you guys have any proof that it is NOT a genetic disposition or that gays are pre-disposed to psychological disorders like schizophrenia?
16 posted on 12/05/2002 10:43:36 AM PST by jjm2111
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To: jjm2111
Seriously, how many homos actually WANT to join the military? Gay men aren't exactly the most physical of the species. Additionally, do you guys have any proof that it is NOT a genetic disposition or that gays are pre-disposed to psychological disorders like schizophrenia?

----------------------

Item number one, this isn't about physical prowess. It's about political aspects of a movement in which they are determined to impose themselves and their wishs yupon others and this nation. Much military service is not physically demanding.

Item number two, there are about five types of homosexuality. Many of those types have been shon to be psychotherapeutically curable.

Item number three, genetic predispositions don't concern me. Down's syndrome is a genetic disorder. That doesn't meand I want someone with that disorder as my cardiac surgeon under a multiculturalism love-in affirmative action program.

17 posted on 12/05/2002 11:06:51 AM PST by RLK
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To: Huck
Really? Which ones? Tax cuts? Dissolving the Department of Education? School Vouchers? Free trade?
18 posted on 12/05/2002 4:56:16 PM PST by dr_who
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To: RLK
"Item number two, there are about five types of homosexuality."

I've never heard of that, can you elaborate?
19 posted on 12/06/2002 5:55:46 AM PST by jjm2111
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