Posted on 05/27/2019 5:56:57 AM PDT by vannrox
Conservatives must realize that in terms of creed and culture, we are past the point of no return. It's time for an offensive strategy.
In 2004, Samuel Huntington published Who Are We? on the disintegration of American identity. At the time of its publication, Huntingtons willingness to even bring up identity as an issue was radical, even after sterilizing it. The idea that there was a coherent we half a century after progressives had sunk their teeth into American institutions of power, wasand still istransgressive.
Huntingtons project, so radical to his critics, was simply to rediscover conservatism in terms of culture: to ground conservative politics in something deeper than abstraction. Huntington insisted that America was an essentially WASP conception, but wanted little to do with the white part, or even the more narrowly ethnic Anglo-Saxon part. Essentially, Who Are We? provided an academic justification for why English-derivative culture provided the essential support for Protestant-derivative creed in America. When James Nuechterlein reviewed the book in Commentary, he called it defiantly unfashionable and counter-cultural.
In the Claremont Review of Books, Charles Kesler refined Huntingtons thesis, concluding: The American creed is the keystone of American national identity, but it requires a culture to sustain it. The republican task is to recognize the creeds primacy, the cultures indispensability, and the challenge, which political wisdom alone can answer, to shape a people that can live up to its principles.
Unfortunately, as a member of Generation Z, I must say I find this learned debate of limited value. More broadly, the way that mature, polite, and self-described principled conservatives talk about the Republic strikes me as endearing but overly sentimental. These boomers write nostalgic love letters to a world I never knew. They talk about the American creed as if a collective agreement on 18th-century political philosophy was enough to unite our country not only in the past, but to keep it united even now.
I truly respect their devotion to values and principles and their hope that the classical republican ideal is recoverable in a multicultural liberal democracy, as if the balkanization process has not already begun. From my vantage, it seems as if we are already living in a hollowed-out shell of a once-great nation where there is diminishing allowance for dissentand, therefore, diminishing possibilities for recourse. Conservatives have not met the challenge. Whether to Huntingtons standards or to Keslers, they have decidedly failed in the republican task.
If, in the early 2000s, Americans were concerned for the viability of a society wherein broken families and communities were becoming the norm, we seem to accept one now where brokenness is the normand our elites, at least, have just stopped pretending to care. We now reside in a kind of bizarro-land, or, as some in my generation have termed it, clown world.
Clown world is one of the of the most striking memes to emerge in the realm of online political commentary lately. Like any spicy meme, it has been copied and edited by countless different groups, including some vile ones. But its reach is the product of a simple, philosophically devastating message. Clown world is used to describe instances of abasement that at any other point in history, to any person of dignity, would be regarded as incomprehensibly evil or stupidso outrageous that they must be a joke. State-enforced sexual transition hormones for children! Drag queen story hour! Voting rights for terrorists! This is Aristophanes with a shot of Nietzsche.
Nowhere is clown world more strongly advocated than in the supposedly neutral free market, where mainstream and powerful institutions like Chase Bank, the social media giants, and Delta airlines enforce even the most nihilistically absurd or self-refuting tenets of liberal secularism. Multinational corporations now actively participate in the demoralization of the country by cloaking themselves in the new public virtue and punishing consumers for wrongthink. The new culture of decadence and the new creed of self-actualization is anything but fringeit is celebrated by mainstream media and enforced by corporate policy.
Huntington at least implicitly acknowledged what so many, out of ignorance or opportunism, had failed to notice about the nature of conservative politics: its inability, in the mirrored halls of the American funhouse, to conserve anything that was once good and wholesome about American life. Todays de-emphasis, if not outright mockery, of the nuclear family and the virtue culture Huntington so loved, with its ethic of loyalty, hard work, charity, and civil leadership, is the current byproduct of the failed effortsor outright abdicationof the older generations of conservatives.
The resistance to insist on the American way, for no other reason than it is ours and that this is reason enough, has resulted in the Rights effectual acceptance of the Lefts constantly moving goalposts of woke sensibility. In other words, conservatism gave up on culture. So afraid was the Right of charges of identity-based discrimination that they gradually ceded the whole symbolic, moral, and linguistic ground to the Left, relegating themselves to the objective realms of economy and war.
This, ultimately, is why Huntington remains notableand controversial: he tried to reground conservatism in creed and culture, believing this revival might serve as a last bulwark against the deconstruction of American identity.
But conservative pundits continued to emphasize disembodied principles. They delayed action. They forwent dignity for the libertine. And as nascent clown world found no substantial pushback from their supposed enemies, it metastasized into a public dogmaan evisceration and replacement of both American culture and creed.
Conservatives allowed themselves to be forced to compete in the realm of performative wokeness where radical and bloodthirsty leftists set the narrative. Stupidly, the cheap Right still folds in behind the progressive vanguard with every new project, attempting to convince Leftist-created voting blocs that we are the true torchbearers of liberality. Capitalism crushed the patriarchy! The GOP is actually the party of immigration! Conservatives are the real liberals!
No more. The (small-r) republican task should no longer be played as a game of liberal one-upmanship with progressives. What we now face is a culture and a creed subverted beyond recognition. Treating any of its distorted major features as something to be conserved would be like applying makeup to a rotting corpse.
It is interesting to analyze why liberalism failed, or why multiculturalism is a bankrupt philosophy, but there comes a point at which a good diagnosis must be met with a good prescription. Allow me, just now old enough to apprehend the freak show for what it is, to put something radical to my conservative forbearers: Little about the present state of American life is worth conserving. Nothing of what the Founders envisioned remains.
The republican task can no longer be to speak sweetly of principles. The new republican task is to prioritize, unify, and galvanize the people who share a clear vision of the reality we now inhabit.
To adequately address this realityto demolish the funhouse mirrors of clown worldwill require radically rethinking the failed framework of policy on the Right. This will mean abandoning our timid relationship with state power for the time being. For years, weve been boxing with an MMA fighter. That is to say, we play by rules our opponent disregards. We play for points; they play for damage.
While we have state power, keeping in mind that the days when Republicans will still be able win an election are numbered, we must use it to regulate big Tech. While were at it, lets enforce the obscenity laws already on the books (and pass others if need be to make pornography effectively illegal). How about we roll back no-fault divorce, and prosecute the likes of the Sackler family and other elites who manufactured the opioid crisis and otherwise prey upon the American people?
Culture warriors must realize the nations center of gravity is not liberalism itself; it is instead the families who are brought up to value it. Philosophy lives in the people. Good philosophy, or a true understanding of political principles and purpose, can only exist in a well-formed person.
If the Right continues to stand by in their characteristically spineless defensive position as those families in heartland America are used, abused, atomized, and demoralized by enemy forces foreign and domestic, nothing will be recovered in the short or long term.
Put simply, the way forward is to inspire and pave the path for young patriots to reconstitute a republic when the current clownish surveillance state inevitably falls apart. It is to gird their loins for the coming collapse; and, after so much ground has been so carelessly given up, to gain a mild advantageno matter the cost. Conservatives must realize that in terms of creed and culture, we are past the point of no return. For ourselves and our posterity, its time for an offensive strategy.
Well, yeah, but...the radical call for the destruction of America as we know it strikes me as throwing the baby out with the bathwater. A collapse is coming—we can all feel it—but to engineer it seems unwise and foolish. Let’s change our strategy to Never Back Down & Always Fight Back and our tactics to Always Use Their Own Rules Against Them. Engineering the collapse is like using the nukes first. I’m afraid there won’t be much good left over if we take that route.
The role of principles is to be a guide to be able to live the life proper to a rational being. A rational being has no choice about the necessity to integrate his observations, his experiences his knowledge into abstract ideas. His only choice is whether his principles are true or false, rational or irrational, consistent or contradictory.
Cut the cable tv is a good start. Cable free since 2007.
The Right puts up their dukes, Marquis of Queensbury style, and the Left just kicks them in the nuts. The “republican task” has been to lose with dignity.
"Ideas have consequences." - Weaver
Decades of liberal/progressive efforts to censor, erase and deny the underlying ideas of liberty upon which the U. S. Constitution was framed have had consequences, but that idea will continue to sustain those who honor the idea that the rights to life and liberty were, and are, "endowed by their (the People's) Creator."
Our Constitution embodied a UNIQUE IDEA. Nothing like it had ever been done before. The power of the idea was in the recognition that people's rights are granted directly by the Creator - not by the state - and that the people, then, and only then, grant rights to government. The concept is so simple, yet so very fundamental and far-reaching.
CREATOR |
People |
Government
|
America's founders embraced a previously unheard-of political philosophy which held that people are "...endowed BY THEIR CREATOR with certain unalienable rights.." This was the statement of guiding principle for the new nation, and, as such, had to be translated into a concrete charter for government. The Constitution of The United States of America became that charter.
Other forms of government, past and present, rely on the state as the grantor of human rights. America's founders, however, believed that a government made up of imperfect people exercising power over other people should possess limited powers. Through their Constitution, they wished to "secure the blessings of liberty" for themselves and for posterity by limiting the powers of government. Through it, they delegated to government only those rights they wanted it to have, holding to themselves all powers not delegated by the Constitution. They even provided the means for controlling those powers they had granted to government.
This was the unique American idea. Many problems we face today result from a departure from this basic concept. Gradually, other "ideas" have influenced legislation which has reversed the roles and given government greater and greater power over individuals. Early generations of Americans pledged their lives to the cause of individual freedom and limited government and warned, over and over again, that eternal vigilance would be required to preserve that freedom for posterity.
Footnote: "Our Ageless Constitution," W. David Stedman & La Vaughn G. Lewis, Editors (Asheboro, NC, W. David Stedman Associates, 1987) Part III: ISBN 0-937047-01-5
This is a thoughtful piece.
I believe it’s time to define the core of conservative thought and project it in such a way as to rally young people who are able to think for themselves.
If they are thinking, their life experiences are beginning to lead them to conservatism (”a liberal who’s been mugged”).
How do we do that?
1. Take back the schools, which must be done on a local level.
2. Support Trump unfailingly. I can’t imagine anyone else who could do what he’s doing.
3. Check the media and big tech bias. This will take a long time. It could involve monopoly breakups, enforcing laws for equal access to all ideas (free speech), more...
4. Enforcing rule of law, not subjective game playing. This means people actually go to jail for crimes, even the influential and wealthy.
5. Break the stranglehold of academia by enforcing the law and encouraging competition. Use technology to make upper education more accessible and affordable. Get the government out of the student loan business and let the free market serve those students who can perform (academically and financially).
6. More... this is just a top-level list.
The hard work is in organizing, mobilizing, and fighting the battle.
Taking back the schools means getting elected to your State Legislature and Governorship...as well as school boards...or finding a way to make parents abandon public education totally. The State and Federal government owns much of education, especially $$$.
And who says we don't teach our kids anything useful?The new culture of decadence
A government that takes over 1/7 of the economy with a billnew creed of self-actualization is anything but fringe
no one has read sort of defines decadence.
Self-actualization is not decadence, son. It's a goal.or outright abdicationof the older generations of conservatives.
We lost that battle to the 'generation Z' of the sixties.But enough's enough. You write well, my son, and think with a vigor
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