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'Neocon' Becomes a Confusing Code Word
The Tallahassee Democrat ^ | May 2, 2003 | Suzanne Fields

Posted on 05/03/2003 8:44:59 AM PDT by quidnunc

Politics is all about polarities. Republican vs. Democrat, conservative vs. liberal, right vs. left, hard thinking vs. soft thinking. The labels are pervasive, but the ground frequently shifts, requiring a new prefix to freshen up the label.

The word neocon, for example (short for neoconservative), was born of such a shifting of the ground. Coined in the 1970s, the label stuck to Democrats who had watched the Scoop Jackson anti-Communist wing of the Democratic party evaporate before their very eyes. They saw the War on Poverty become a losing battle. On the domestic front, they observed the death of morality as it had been defined for thousands of years in the Judeo-Christian tradition. These Democrats finally concluded that liberalism, as they had known it, was dead.

Irving Kristol, father of the neocons, defined his band of brothers and sisters as "liberals mugged by reality." That reality was the "evil empire" as defined by Ronald Reagan, the leader they championed. The reality extended to a concern for crime and education and what came to be called "family values." A subdivision of the neocons, the "cultural conservatives," were wryly defined as liberals with daughters in junior high.

Jews were prominently identified with the neocons, largely because Norman Podhoretz, editor of Commentary magazine, made the magazine a sounding board for neocon criticism. But Jeanne Kirkpatrick, a Baptist, and William Bennett, a Roman Catholic, were prominent neocon voices from the beginning. So were other Christians. "What are we," they might ask, "chopped liver?"

The Jewish neocons understood what the majority of Jews who vote Democratic didn't — that Jews and Evangelical Christians held many things in common, among them an admiration and affection for Israel.

Such definitions and ideological attitudes are amply documented in the political history of the second half of the 20th century, but the neocon label resurfaces today as many journalists and pundits identify the neocons as a new generation driving the foreign policy of George W. Bush.

It's a label that doesn't quite fit, since those credited with influence are hardly "neo" anything. For the most part, the label is attributed to second-generation conservatives. Some are sons of the Scoop Jackson Democrats whose fathers have the last name of Podhoretz and Kristol, but the label as accurately understood has a much more inclusive intellectual base, including, for example, Vice President Dick Cheney; his wife, Lynne; Condoleezza Rice; Don Rumsfeld; and Paul Wolfowitz, the hugely influential deputy defense secretary.

The term, however, is disingenuously bandied about at dinner tables and policy meetings in London and Paris and elsewhere, where it is colorfully coded to suggest a Jewish conspiracy working on the White House.

-snip-

(Excerpt) Read more at tallahassee.com ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: neocons; suzannefields
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To: Austin Willard Wright
No....I am referring to the party which controls them which is the "same" party which ruled Poland under an iron heal for decades and the *same* party which is currently a member of the Socialist International. By the logic of your "guilt by association" response, I guess we can assume you admire these surrender monkey, opportunist unrepentant socialists.

You are behaving in the same manner you railed against me for. You have not addresses the substance of my posts. Please re-read and look at the examples I listed.

61 posted on 05/03/2003 9:55:40 AM PDT by SunStar (Democrats piss me off!)
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To: Austin Willard Wright
Some of us prefer fact-based argument rather the smears.

Really? Like your "Al Sharpton" insults? What facts have you listed on this thread?

62 posted on 05/03/2003 9:56:37 AM PDT by SunStar (Democrats piss me off!)
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To: Austin Willard Wright
You apparently can not believe that anyone who disagrees with you is even a human being!

Is that an example of your "fact-based" approach, or an example of how you don't attack in your posts?

63 posted on 05/03/2003 9:57:33 AM PDT by SunStar (Democrats piss me off!)
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To: SunStar
Neither of those defintions are appropriate and they diminish all of us.

Btw...I realize you didn't start it.
64 posted on 05/03/2003 9:57:34 AM PDT by wardaddy (I know you rider, gonna miss me when I'm gone)
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To: asneditor
Asneditor wrote: ("And don't give me the Crusades BS") Why? it's true! If you can't stand the heat get out of the kitchen.

Quote from my reply #12 above:

The Crusades weren't "perpetrated", they were Europe's reaction to Islamic expansionism.

Don't forget, until it was overrun by the Muslims the Holy Land was in large part Christian.

Furthermore, Europe itself was in danger of being overrun.

When it comes to the Crusades, the West has no need to apologize.

It is unreasonable to judge the actions of the 10th century Crusaders by modern standards of morality.

Since that time Cristianity went through the Enlightenment and the Reformation and consequently Christians don't generally act like the Crusaders of the First Crusade anymore..

The same can't be said of the Mohammedans.

65 posted on 05/03/2003 9:59:29 AM PDT by quidnunc (Omnis Gaul delenda est)
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To: wardaddy
Neither of those defintions are appropriate and they diminish all of us.

Btw...I realize you didn't start it.

Correct. The truth lies somewhere in the middle of each description. I've been called "statist" on the paleocon boards, as well as "jew-lover"...

66 posted on 05/03/2003 9:59:41 AM PDT by SunStar (Democrats piss me off!)
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To: quidnunc
"The Crusades weren't "perpetrated", they were Europe's reaction to Islamic expansionism. Don't forget, until it was overrun by the Muslims the Holy Land was in large part Christian. Furthermore, Europe itself was in danger of being overrun. When it comes to the Crusades, the West has no need to apologize."

And you imagine that the hundreds of thousands of Jews who were murdered in cold blood in a genocide unmatched until the Holocaust was quite legitimate?

To evade the fact that Christianity was responsible for over two thousand years for the most terrible acts of barbarism against the Jewish people makes you just as guitly as the murderers themselves. You sound not very different from the apologists for 9/11.


67 posted on 05/03/2003 9:59:48 AM PDT by Chipata
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To: Chi-townChief
A chickenhawk is a gay man who preys on post pubescent boys or teens.....what most of the accused priests were guilty of.
68 posted on 05/03/2003 9:59:54 AM PDT by wardaddy (I know you rider, gonna miss me when I'm gone)
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To: SunStar
I have no interest in addressing the substance of arguments of anyone (as part of these arguments) who indiscriminately brands sincere men and women of principle as antisemites. If you want people to address the substance of your argument, stop emulating Al Sharpton..then you might start making headway.
69 posted on 05/03/2003 10:00:06 AM PDT by Austin Willard Wright
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To: SunStar; sheltonmac
Neo-con - A liberal one-world chickenhawk posing as a conservative.

Paleo-con - A former KKK and current anti-semite posing as a super patriot.

How cute. And how wrong.

Neo-con- One willing to sell out all conservative ideals to get into power. Once into power, the ability to continue to sell out conservatism by deeds and actions that even 15 years ago would be called for what it was, liberal. All the while using cute catch phrases to maintain the voting base

Paleo-con- A conservative who believes and remembers the powers the Constitution gives to the federal government. None of which include powers such as found in the Patriot Act, nationalized healthcare, anti-2nd Amendment bills, etc. The Old Right. Does not believe in foreign aid to everyone everywhere

And considering I am not a former KKK member or an anti-semite, your definition is far off base

70 posted on 05/03/2003 10:00:52 AM PDT by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: T'wit
How odd
Of God
To choose
The Jews

Yet not so odd
As those who choose
A Jewish G-d
Yet Spurn the Jews
71 posted on 05/03/2003 10:01:40 AM PDT by Chipata
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To: SunStar
Since your "fact based approach" is predicated on calling others antisemites, including a principled man like Ron Paul sans any evidence, then it is hard to come to any other conclusion
72 posted on 05/03/2003 10:02:00 AM PDT by Austin Willard Wright
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To: wardaddy
POV understood.

Here's the problem, the Republican Leadership etc, developed the theory that they must buy into the systemic social programs (and politically correct thought processes)... just be better at running them than the Democrats (which fortunately ain't that hard). And being oh-so-politically-correct is important if you want the ladies' vote.

This being a two-party system, they'll get the vote of people like me, because they are clearly much the lesser of two evils domestically, and clearly superior internationally.

73 posted on 05/03/2003 10:03:00 AM PDT by Kenny Bunk
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To: SunStar
Ron Paul is definately not a paleo-conservative. Him and Buchannon would bump heads on many major issues including but not limited to: free trade, borders, drugs, and using tax dollars to enforce moral code beyond protection of citizens from harm of others.
74 posted on 05/03/2003 10:03:33 AM PDT by rb22982
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To: Austin Willard Wright
"I have no interest in addressing the substance of arguments of anyone (as part of these arguments) who indiscriminately brands sincere men and women of principle as antisemites"

Hitler and Stalin were men of principle. It just so happens that the principles they espoused were those of the devil.
75 posted on 05/03/2003 10:04:29 AM PDT by Chipata
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To: SunStar
See (and this goes for all in this discussion), definitions have changed. Are changing before our eyes. Paleocons are LOGICALLY what I think the SHOULD be, i.e., the conservative movement before neo-cons arrived. BUT, by current usage, "paleocon" is being applied to a mixed batch of libertarians (Ron Paul, Sam Francis, Joe Sobran, Lew Rockwell, Murray Rothbard), populists (Pat Buchanan), indefinable but kind of fun (Taki) and nutcakes (David Duke -- and what has he ever had to do with conservatism?). Not one of those people is a paleo by MY definition, though Sobran, Francis and Buchanan all used to be once upon a time.

That's what I set out to say: we have a semantic problem. These labels are being used (or misused) in different ways so we aren't communicating. David Frum muddied the waters but good.

I am out of time to discuss this for now... Carry on :-)

76 posted on 05/03/2003 10:05:16 AM PDT by T'wit
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To: SunStar
No, I admire President Bush and his doctrines. You probably prefer Buchanan's worldview.

Most libertarians I know would prefer Bush over Buchanan, including yours truly. I still am not sure why you include Ron Paul in that group.

77 posted on 05/03/2003 10:05:22 AM PDT by rb22982
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To: denydenydeny
"100% Aryan here, by the way."

Unless you are a follow of Hitler this term is, except in a linguistic sense, a nonsense. I assume you mean that you are of German origin.
78 posted on 05/03/2003 10:06:24 AM PDT by Chipata
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To: quidnunc
"It is unreasonable to judge the actions of the 10th century Crusaders by modern standards of morality"

The excuse of evil men throughout the ages.
79 posted on 05/03/2003 10:08:21 AM PDT by Chipata
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To: Ohioan
Well said...as usual.
80 posted on 05/03/2003 10:09:32 AM PDT by wardaddy (I know you rider, gonna miss me when I'm gone)
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