The age of Reagan, we are told is over. Conservatives have had
their day have been rejected and replaced with liberalism the likes
of which has not been in power since the New Deal From the
breathtaking victories of the Reagan Revolution the fall of the
Soviet Union and the Gingrich take over of Congress we have come to
this an Obama presidency and the most liberal Congress since the
days of LBJ and his Great Society What in the world went wrong?
In a word what went wrong was the abandonment of first
principles It was conservatives becoming more interested in power
and the accompanying glory than in their core beliefs. It was
conservatives being willingly co-opted by the moderate Republicans
to whom winning was the only thing whatever the cost. It was
conservatives supporting things like the Medicare prescription drug
benefit, giveaway farm bills, No Child Left Behind, and bank
bailouts in return for a Christmas card or an invitation to the
White House. Lord Acton famously said that power corrupts and that
absolute power corrupts absolutely. Longshoreman philosopher Eric
Hoffer put it another way when he said that every great cause
becomes a movement, the movement a business, and eventually the
whole thing degenerates into a racket. For some that corruption
blossomed in the Reagan years and came to full bloom over the last
eight. Now we will all pay the price.
I may have missed it but I don’t recall having heard about
individual liberty in the 2008 campaign, or constitutional
government, or traditional values, or the rule of law. Those, along
with a few others, were the foundation of the conservative movement
and it was the dedication of devoted men and women to develop those
principles into policies and to stick to them that eventually beat
back the predominant liberalism of the 1950s, '60s and '70s.
Conservatism in those days offered few opportunities, with the
result that there weren’t many opportunists looking for ways to
enhance their résumés or their pocketbooks. If one did not really
believe in the principles there wasn’t much reason to hook up with
the movement.
There will be much soul searching over the coming months, and no
small number of attempts to rejuvenate the right into a cohesive
and effective force. The philosophical foundations of the
conservative cause are as sound as ever, and the movement has the
resources to assert those principles and a receptive audience as
well. According to a Newsweek poll reported in late
October, people calling themselves conservatives outnumber liberals
by two to one. As the new administration and Congress overreach,
which they are certain to do, opportunities to clearly enunciate
those principles will abound.
As for The American Spectator, our readers can count on
the fact that, as we have always done before, we will report what
the mainstream media will not. To keep up to date with what will be
happening on a day-to-day basis, we urge our readers to visit our
web site, www.spectator.org,
every day —³in fact, several times a day. Philip Klein, who
covered the Obama campaign from the beginning, will report on the
Obama White House and administration, while W. James Antle, III,
another of our able reporters, will keep track of and analyze what
Congress is up to. In addition to the fast-paced reporting that
will appear on our expanded website, the magazine will continue to
provide deeper analysis of what is going on in the political arena
while keeping our finger on the rebuilding of the conservative
movement. And of course in the process we will try to maintain our
sharp sense of humor. What more fun can there be, after all, than
to skewer a self-important liberal from time to time? What a target
rich environment it will be.
Jim | 11.4.09 @ 2:29PM
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