Posted on 09/19/2015 5:43:19 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Last week, National Reviews Jim Geraghty published what may be the most insightful essay yet [1] on the difference between the conservative movement and Donald Trump and his followers. Geraghty has noticed a telling reticence on Trumps part to utter such words as “freedom” or “liberty.” By contrast, Geraghty notes that Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker used the word “freedom” six times in the 179-word announcement of his plan to replace ObamaCare, and Ted Cruz used “freedom” twice and “liberty” eleven times in his announcement speech at Liberty University, not counting references to the university itself.
The reason for this lack of keywords is that Trumps principles are very different from those who are inspired by the likes of the late William F. Buckley; he is indifferent to the size and scope of big government and quite indifferent to Constitutional guarantees of citizens rights. For instance, Robert VerBruggen pointed out several months ago [2] that Trump has not only been a serial abuser of the eminent domain provision of the Constitution but, having lost a case in which the state of New Jersey tried and failed to dispossess an elderly widow of her property on his behalf, even welcomed the disastrous Supreme Court decision in the Kelo case in 2005.
All of Trumps campaign rhetoric centers on power politics strength, American greatness often in terms which would not look out of place in a speech by some nationalistic autocrat. And this doesn’t appear to bother his followers one bit, or at least no more than they are bothered by his disgusting boorishness concerning women (ask Megyn Kelly and Carly Fiorina) or his schoolyard-bully taunts of any Republicans who criticize him (as Bobby Jindal and, most recently, Rick Perry and Ben Carson can testify).
But what I find truly shocking is not Trumps behavior, which has been on display for decades, nor his ability to attract a certain type of follower. What I find shocking is Rush Limbaughs defense of Trump in the face of Geraghtys analysis.
On September 11th, Limbaugh read Geraghtys piece on air, and then responded by alleging that Trump doesnt need to use those keywords because he embodies freedom and liberty in his actions, and is indeed the object of envy for those who don’t innately exhibit those qualities.
The reason Im shocked comes from Limbaugh’s assertion that he hasn’t endorsed any of the candidates. Yet he and several other talk-show hosts have been instrumental in empowering Trump. They imply consent of his boorishness, effectively egging him on to say ever more outrageous things while Limbaugh and company blow on the glowing coals of rage at the perceived Washington establishment, regardless of party. What Limbaugh has done here is to conflate license and libertinism with freedom and liberty, and he’s surely sophisticated and intelligent enough to know the difference.
I am not suggesting that the frustration may not be justified; I’m suggesting that the rage buoying up Trumps campaign is a very dangerous and ultimately counter-productive political emotion, one which threatens to trump (pun intended) the principles on which the movement has been based on for the last 60-odd years.
Far from being a champion of liberty in any rational sense, Trump is the embodiment of crony capitalism. In the first Republican debate, and several times subsequently, he has openly boasted of borderline, if not actual, political corruption, quid-pro-quo contributions and payments he has made to politicians at all levels in order to secure favors for his projects. He is (as I mentioned above) wholeheartedly in favor of government misuse of eminent domain and the disastrous Kelo decision of SCOTUS.
Trump represents, as Leon Wolf has eloquently written in Red State, not any sort of conservatism, but a right-wing mob similar to the left-wing mobs evident in such phenomena as Sanders rallies and BlackLivesMatter. About a month ago, I suggested on this site that this was a worrying phenomenon on the Republican fringe. Now, Im not so sure. As I’m sure Victor Davis Hanson would agree, this was precisely the Achilles’ heel of Greek democracy which made our founding fathers so wary of direct democracy. When any issue passionately polarizes a society with no chance of compromise (e.g., abortion is either the termination of a human life or potential human life, or it is the excision of a group of cells, no more significant than paring your fingernails, two positions between which there can be no compromise), two mobs will materialize and think with their glands rather than their brains, resulting in what the Greeks termed stasis, in effect, civil war. Inevitably, both mobs end up baying for the restoration of order, and usually a tyrant rides to the rescue.
As poet and playwright Zoë Akins first said in the title of a long-forgotten play, the Greeks had a word for it.
Is Trump, together with the American left in general, right? Has the carefully constructed, politically balanced and fine-tuned system created by our founding fathers deteriorated to the point where two angry, unprincipled gangs interested only in crushing the other side and exercising naked power confront each other like schoolboys shouting taunts at each other over a line drawn in the sand?
That, my friends, depends upon us.
Rush is right
National Review = GOPe.
Avner Zarmi and PJ Media—More outed RINOs.
Trump is the logical alternative to the journ-0-list MSM.
After decades of their treason we finally get a guy who shoots down incoming like a Phalanx weapons system.
Donald Trump Breaks Lindsey Graham Like a Boy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3PQOP6eax8
Donald Trump came out tonight for Ethanol (RFA) let’s see if he gets the same treatment Walker got in January.
1) He is just as sick of the GOPe as we are...or
2) He knows his audience and being a good business man he knows it would be suicide to support the GOPe.
Either way....Rush may be a lot of things but stupid ain't one of them.
Trump’s face is blurred out at that link. Wonder why.
Yes, Rush is (always) right and\\He can do anything and I will never criticize him. He is so meritorious of such status
I was going to pick out the most nonsensical sentence and mock it.
It’s hard to isolate it down to one sentence.
So, phooey on the whole article.
Someone with serious balls is desperately needed this cycle. Trump or Cruz. Warts and all.
Rush is usually right.
Trump represents, as Leon Wolf has eloquently written in Red State, not any sort of conservatism, but a right-wing mob similar to the left-wing mobs evident in such phenomena as Sanders rallies and BlackLivesMatter.What a loon (times two, one wrote it, PJMedia's writer cited it).
John McCain is a National Review conservative.
Limbaugh knows this..... when both corrupt political parties and all of the mainstream media come together to try and destroy a candidate.... that is the person we should vote for. Without a doubt.
Damn right Avner.
The RIGHT WING MOB IS COMING.
Which is exactly why the 2nd OBAMA term was necessary.
And make no mistake about it.
When we are done with you commie MF’s, the odds of ANY of you being elected to anything higher than dog catcher are going to be slim.
The enemedia is going to be neutralized as well.
The party is over.
I don’t support Trump but his supporters are not a “mob”. They are ordinary citizens fed up with cowardly Rockefeller Republicans, the MSM and illegals.
And so they are willing to overlook Trumps support for government theft of property. I am not.
My candidate has to pass my basic test of supporting the right to life, liberty and property. From there he/she has to pass the Bill of Rights test. Trump can not get past the first test while Cruz can pass all the tests along with a couple of others.
Trump is changing, so are we. One thing that stays the same?
Inner Uniparty.
Trump supporters also agree with:
A border wall
Deporting illegals
Strong 1st Amendment support
Strong 2nd Amendment support
A successful businessman who wants to turn our economy around
and the list goes on. I dare anyone to tell me what’s crazy about any of that.
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