Posted on 07/15/2014 11:47:00 AM PDT by cotton1706
In what was clearly intended to be a snarky, hip rebuke of former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Tea Party supporters, and other limited government advocates, the Washington Post's domesticated, in-house conservative Michael Gerson inadvertently exposed his true colors. By so doing, he articulated the gaping divide in the Republican ranks.
After a string of juvenile insults of various leaders of the limited government movement, Gerson bottom lined it, approvingly quoting from a recent National Affairs piece by Phillip Wallach and Justus Myers:
Tea Partiers and other limited government advocates "seek to break with the past in a very different manner repudiating 80 years of institutional development and reinventing American as a nation that rejects the substantive role for regulation or a social safety net.
And there you have it. Honesty from a liberal masquerading as a conservative. Yes, Mr. Gerson, millions of us do seek a break from the collectivist past built by your Bull Moose cronies.
The Regulatory State is killing our nation, destroying the very concept of private property and consigning us into a Kafkaesque world ruled by an army of Lois Lerner clones.
By defining the battle lines as those who oppose the leftist slide of government and those, like you, who want to make it more efficient and effective you have shown beyond all doubt that the Establishment GOP is suffering from Stockholm Syndrome. In the Eisenhower era, this was called "Modern Republicanism."
Like Patty Hearst, you have been a captive of the intellectual thugs of the Left your own personal Symbionese Liberation Army so long that you now see their cause as your own.
They define the agenda, they decide what is relevant and what isnt, they determine what speech and topics are allowed and which are impolitic.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonexaminer.com ...
Fixed it.
"Bull Moose" refers to Teddy Roosevelt's Progressive Party. We don't want to go down a path we recognize as leading to disaster. But you, GOPe, carry on.
Lots of those out there today.
Reminds me of Hayek's "The Constitution of Liberty"
The picture generally given of the relative position of the three parties (ed: socialism, conservatism, classical liberalism) does more to obscure than to elucidate their true relations. They are usually represented as different positions on a line, with the socialists on the left, the conservatives on the right, and the liberals somewhere in the middle. Nothing could be more misleading. If we want a diagram, it would be more appropriate to arrange them in a triangle with the conservatives occupying one corner, with the socialists pulling toward the second and the liberals toward the third. But, as the socialists have for a long time been able to pull harder, the conservatives have tended to follow the socialist rather than the liberal direction and have adopted at appropriate intervals of time those ideas made respectable by radical propaganda. It has been regularly the conservatives who have compromised with socialism and stolen its thunder.Hayek's article is food for thought. We need a party of liberty.[Conservatism] by its very nature it cannot offer an alternative to the direction in which we are moving. It may succeed by its resistance to current tendencies in slowing down undesirable developments, but, since it does not indicate another direction, it cannot prevent their continuance. It has, for this reason, invariably been the fate of conservatism to be dragged along a path not of its own choosing. The tug of war between conservatives and progressives can only affect the speed, not the direction, of contemporary developments.
The article is about the Washington POS... I have an extra T, do with it as you wish.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.