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To: Strategerist

"The core of the Reagan revolution was lower taxes, stronger defense, and opposition to Communism.

Social Con and religious issues really weren't the center of the Reagan revolution."

The Reagan revolution unquestionably included a commitment to cultural conservatism. He was the first President to publish a book in office, and his book was about life. He started the Mexico City policy. He routinely spoke to the NARB and other religious organizations. In fact, I would argue that without religious and cultural conservatives, Reagan would not have been elected.

Of course you could say that about several groups that made up his efforts: Wall Street, small business, Reagan democrats, post-Wallace populists, anti-communists, and evangelicals helped put this great man into office. Each piece is crucial. No candidate since him has been able to hold the entire coalition together. Which is why he was a revolutionary GOP leader. As he often said, there is not a fiscally conservative party and a morall conservative one, but, rather, one movement and that is a conservative one, through and through.

Now...all that said...let me quickly add that the embrace of the GOP and this President in particular of unlimited government disgusts me beyond belief. And the idea that this President can still have evangelical support by giving us lip service on key issues and a little piety sickens me. The end product of that way of thinking was the Harriett Miers nomination, which was profoundly un-conservative.

What we need is a new generation of conservative leaders, committed to the principles of Reagan through and through, not selectively. Only then will the GOP once again be the truly conservative party...and I believe a continually victorious party.


183 posted on 01/19/2006 7:09:12 AM PST by ConservativeDude
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To: ConservativeDude

Incidentally, I remember reading either an article or a book full of essays on this topic a few years back. William F Buckley wrote one of them, and his conclusion was that obviously an atheist can "be a conservative," but someone antagonistic to the great, civilizing religions of the west or generally to the Judeo-Christian tradition cannot claim to be a conservative. I would add that you can't hate Christianity and be a conservative any more than you can hate capitalism, or high culture, or literacy, or morality itself and be a conservative.


184 posted on 01/19/2006 7:18:45 AM PST by ConservativeDude
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