There
is no doubt that the onset of the Obama administration has energized
conservative intellectuals. A year ago conservatives were trying to
reconcile themselves to the McCain candidacy — an eventuality that
filled us with dismay as we contemplated yet another fake conservative
presidency and the further dilution of the Reagan brand of conservative
republicanism. Then, as the threat of an ultra-liberal Obama presidency
loomed larger in the summer and fall of 2008, we exhorted ourselves to
a more fervent support of John McCain — realizing that his election,
dismal as the prospect might be, was the only hope of preventing the
catastrophe that we believed an Obama presidency promised. But our
hearts were not in it. When Obama triumphed, we licked our wounds,
muttered pathetic excuses like "Bush and the Republican Congress
brought this on with their profligate spending and betrayal of bedrock
conservative principles," and took some solace from the "moderate" or
"centrist" feints that Obama engaged in during the transition period.
We were hoping against hope that the newly arrived messiah — a
designation not inappropriate to the manner of treatment accorded him
by the media — might turn out to be more of a pragmatist, perhaps even
a centrist, than his meager record and public utterings predicted that
he would be. The dispirited nature of many of our columns, blogs and
op/ed pieces during that period reflected the depth of our
disappointment, the dejection we were experiencing and the slim reeds
of hope at which we were clutching. Alas, not surprisingly, the reeds
were ephemeral and the age of Obama has ushered in precisely the far
left agenda that we feared.
Therefore, we are no longer able to deceive ourselves that President
Obama might govern to some extent like Clinton did — i.e., from the
center (sort of). And worse still, the new messiah might not — as many
of us hoped — turn out to be as incompetent as the feckless Jimmy
Carter. So now that we are truly frightened by the prospect of the
great damage Mr. Obama might wreak in the next four or eight years, our
juices have started flowing again, our batteries are charged and
conservative outlets are overflowing with spirited, passionate and
fervent pleas to the American people to recognize Mr. Obama for the
dangerous, leftist radical that he surely is and barely attempts to
conceal.
The examples are legion, but I would like to cite one specific piece by David Limbaugh in the Washington Times
(3/28/09) entitled "Capital Arrogance." There is much in this trenchant
column that highlights the threats posed by Obama and his Congressional
allies, but I wish to focus on one specific paragraph:
The liberals see they now have a chance to actualize their vision for an America
remade in their image and radically at odds with the vision of this
nation's Founders. It doesn't matter that there couldn't be a worse
time in our history for implementing their reckless policies. They know
they may not get another chance in their lifetimes to work such
mischief. Even though it will break the federal bank, us, our children
and our grandchildren, it's all going to be OK because they will
finally have achieved their statist vision for America.
There are four critical points raised here by Limbaugh:
- Obama and his liberal henchmen have a fundamentally different vision for America from that of our Founders.
- They perceive that this period presents them with perhaps a unique opportunity to implement that vision.
- The damage to our country by the actualization of that vision,
while calamitous at any time, will be especially bad at this time
because of the severe economic distress in which we find ourselves.
- The Obama regime is oblivious to the consequences that the
realization of its vision will have on the people of our country; its
adherents care only that their utopian dream of a society of equals
(their brotherhood of man), guaranteed by an all powerful, "benign"
State, is in their view the right way to organize society, and that
even if it means a lower standard of living, a diminished status in the
world, and an erosion of our individual liberties, the new society will
be a far fairer, more just and healthier nation than it was or ever
could be under the old system.
Unfortunately, Limbaugh, like many conservative pundits, offers us
little or nothing in the way of advice for preventing the calamity that
he so acutely predicts. Many fear– and I worry that they might be
correct — that there is no forestalling the radical remake of the USA
that the age of Obama will usher in. Well, I am not ready to surrender
just yet. I would like to make a strategic suggestion for combating
Obama's false nirvana. But before I do, let me say a little more about
Limbaugh's four points — especially the first and last.
Different Visions. One could go on at great length
here; let me just say that the Founder's vision of the USA
incorporated: a limited government, empowered primarily to ensure the
liberty of the people — thus, to defend the homeland, maintain the
worth of the currency, guarantee the validity of contracts, ensure the
rule of law, and not too much else; a virtuous populace, whose morals
were derived from traditional Western religion and whose primary
organization was based on the family (in the classic sense); an economy
characterized by free markets and democratic capitalism; checks and
balances between the federal government and those of the States, with
all unenumerated powers reserved to the States and the people; a set of
precious individual rights (life, liberty, freedom of speech, assembly
and religion, and the right to bear arms) that could not be
circumscribed by the government; and a respect for and adherence to the
Constitution as the fundamental law of the land that could only be
altered through an elaborate process, which required a broad consensus
of the people.
Obama's and modern liberals' vision of America is totally different.
In short the fundamental guiding principles are not liberty and
freedom, but rather equality and fairness; they take their inspiration
from the ideals of the French, not the American Revolution. These
include: a benign, but very powerful central government that sets and
enforces the rules for virtually all aspects of American life; the
elevation of tolerance, a non-judgmental perspective and equity far
above all else in determining relationships between people; the belief
that inequalities between individuals that result from a free market
system are absolutely unacceptable and thus the economy must be
strongly regulated — and occasionally controlled — by the government in
order to spread the wealth and promote the three principles above; the
certainty that American culture is no worthier than any other,
therefore merits no celebration and should in fact be infused by
cultures from around the world; conflict resolution by negotiation only
and a strong aversion to military force — even in defense; the further
belief that religion is superstition and inferior to rationalism; all
forms of family structure are as valid as the "traditional" family; and
finally, the Constitution is a "living" document that guides us but
does not bind us.
The two long lists above could be fleshed out further, but you get
the idea. Plainly, these are starkly different visions for the future
of America.
Unique Opportunity. Due to the
egregiously poor performance of the Republican Party (in both the
executive and legislative branches) over the last decade, the
electorate grew fed up and installed an ultra-liberal regime to govern
the country. Something like this has happened three times in the last
century — the administrations of Wilson, Roosevelt and Johnson. (The
analogy is imprecise.) Liberals look back on these as golden ages;
conservatives view them as tragedies that have had permanently
devastating consequences for American society. We largely avoided
permanent tragedies in the last two Democratic administrations– because
Carter was incompetent, and Clinton was not a fanatical true believer;
besides, he was checked by Gingrich. But today there is no Gingrich, no
Reagan, and the overwhelmingly liberal Democratic Party has a good
chance to bring about a fourth great leap to the left in America. They
sense — not without justification — that this leap might put America
irrevocably over the top. Social justice will reign and individual
liberty will be a memory, and there will be no going back. They might
be right — we will know soon enough.
Special Circumstances. Here I don't see eye to eye
with Limbaugh. Yes, Roosevelt engineered his leap to the left during
the Depression and he used it for cover to enact his socialist
programs. But both Wilson's and Johnson's surge to port were
perpetrated in not particularly perilous times. Yet they both still
managed to leave us with a sorry legacy. We are still coping with the
tragedy of the 16th Amendment to the Constitution that
enabled the federal income tax. And the social, moral and economic
havoc that resulted from Johnson's Great Society continues to poison
our nation. Obama will almost certainly, like Roosevelt, use the
current economic crisis as an excuse to enact his ultra-left program
for America. (After all, his right-hand man, Rahm Emanuel, has already
informed us that this crisis is too great an opportunity to waste.) But
economic distress or not, whichever of Obama's socialist, collectivist,
egalitarian and pacifistic policies he is able to implement will be
calamitous for America, even if the Stock Market was not doing a swan
dive and the Mullahs were not splitting the atom.
Liberal Motivation. In this fourth point, Limbaugh
is spot on. How can anyone survey the history of liberalism/socialism
in the world over the last century and not conclude that it has been an
abject failure? In its mildest form, Euro-socialism, it has resulted in
the decaying societies of Western Europe — plagued by low birth rates,
out of control welfare costs, high unemployment and low productivity,
inability to project force and defend themselves, and a growing,
subversive immigrant population that is needed to fund the entitlement
programs. Canada fits that model as well. In its most virulent form,
Nazism and Communism, it has resulted in horrors almost beyond human
imagination. Well, I believe that liberals can ignore these results and
continue to have faith in their leftist ideas for one of three reasons.
Either the liberal is blind to the damage; or he sees it but believes
the principles have not been applied correctly and that America is a
special case in which liberalism can co-exist with classic American
ideals in order to improve our country; or he flagrantly does not care.
In the first instance, much of the populace simply does not
recognize or does not understand the wreckage of liberalism's failures.
They are so brainwashed by the media, the schools, the librarians, the
ad agencies, the lawyers, the foundations and all the other opinion
molding organs that have been thoroughly captured by the Left, that
they believe — among other fairy tales — that Roosevelt's New Deal
pulled the US out of the Great Depression; that Great Society programs
have produced a more just society — not one characterized by welfare
dependency, out of wedlock births, rampant pornography, a permanent
underclass and wanton crime; and that the Income Tax and the alphabet
soup of federal regulatory agencies allow the Federal Government to
assume its rightful place as the most important component of US
society, providing vital support for education, energy, transportation,
housing and virtually every other facet of American life. In the second
instance, we encounter the "well-intentioned liberal." The Democratic
Party is well-stocked with them. They are confident that they can
fine-tune and spruce up American society according to more humane
egalitarian principles in order to smooth the rough edges caused by
rugged individualism. They do not believe that the fundamental
character of the American experiment in freedom will be altered by
their policies, rather it will be perfected. We will acknowledge our
past flaws like slavery, maltreatment of American Indians and
suppression of women's rights, and by correcting them and other
deficiencies in our society, we will create a more enlightened country
that remains true to its fundamental creed as expressed in the
Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights. Finally, in the
third case, doctrinaire liberals/socialists do not care about the
carnage because they would have you believe that America is an unjust,
unfair, bigoted and corrupt nation that must be completely remade. They
do not see prosperity and success as the nation's primary goals, rather
equality and fairness should reign supreme. Liberty and freedom are not
nearly as important as social justice, multiculturalism and
environmental justice — whatever that is. In which of these three
categories Obama fits is a topic for a future article.
All that said, what is my strategic suggestion for turning the tide?
The inspiration comes from the enemy. How did we reach this point? Why
do the consequences of the Reagan and Gingrich Revolutions seem so
meager today? Reagan won the Cold War, rebuilt America's economy and
restored the military. Gingrich — admittedly with Clinton's help–
balanced the budget. How did the Left bear those defeats and rise to
the seemingly impregnable heights it occupies today? I believe the
seeds were sown roughly a century ago, to a great extent by the
socialist, Italian philosopher, Antonio Gramsci, who preached that the
way to convert the democratic, capitalistic countries of Western
Civilization into socialist utopias was to capture the culture. Take
over all the prime cultural institutions of the nation, convert the
people to believers in the new culture and the politics would surely
follow. Whether on purpose or inadvertently, that is exactly what the
Left did. Led by early revolutionaries like John Dewey, Upton Sinclair
and Woodrow Wilson, followed over several generations by Roosevelt and
the New Dealers and then Johnson and the 60s radicals, the Left took
control of all the organs of society that determine the culture: the
media, educational system, legal profession, foundations, mainline
churches, even big business to some extent. When the average American
believes that abortion is a fundamental right, that the wall between
church and state should be insurmountable, that Hollywood starlets have
something to say about politics that is worth listening to, that it is
alright for politicized teachers to have more influence over children
than their parents, that soft core porn is acceptable fare for 8PM TV,
that business is greedy and the government is competent and fair, that
it is OK for athletes to tattoo their bodies, strut like peacocks and
be role models for our children, then what chance does conservative
politics really have against the liberal onslaught? With that cultural
background it is not surprising that people vote for Barack Obama and
Nancy Pelosi.
So what are we to do? Take back the culture! Simple to say; hard to
do. Yes, we have to continue to do battle in the political arena.
Reagan's and Newt's victories in the political and economic spheres
were fantastic. But these two gentlemen did not seriously contest the
cultural battlefield. And without some advance in that arena, we are
seeing that the political and economic victories cannot be
consolidated. They are swept away by the influence of the filthy
cultural tide that blankets America from the Left. We tend to see the
battle between the Left and the Right as a political battle between
liberals and conservatives. It is. But it appears that it is more
fundamentally a social, cultural battle. It is good to know that Edmund
Burke's ideas can defeat those of Voltaire, that Adam Smith was wiser
than Karl Marx, that Milton Friedman outshines John Maynard Keynes. The
problem is that no one on the Right has taken on Gramsci. We need to
have conservative philosophers and cultural icons that state the case
for and epitomize the worth of traditional Western culture. More
mundanely, we need to nurture conservative film makers, fund
conservative law schools, build conservative foundations (like
Heritage, but more of them), defend and expand talk radio, establish
conservative newspapers (like the Washington Times, but more
of them), concoct an organization to counter the NEA in the minds of
the country's teachers, abandon the mainline churches and support
religious institutions that champion traditional values, etc. It might
take a hundred years to achieve success; after all it took the Left a
century to reach the dominance it currently enjoys. If we don't do
this, then the America that we have loved and which has proven to be
such a boon to the peoples of the world will surely — perhaps slowly,
but maybe not so slowly — wither into one more Euro-socialist State.
Then the light from mankind's last best hope will have gone out.