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At Low Ebb ("American conservatism is at one of its low ebbs.")
The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette ^ | May 21, 2006 | Paul Greenberg

Posted on 05/21/2006 12:19:24 PM PDT by quidnunc

American conservatism is at one of its low ebbs.

Conservatives are divided, dejected, and drifting, caught between anger and indecision. The political party they've made theirs is headed for setbacks in this year's congressional elections, and further defeats loom ahead.

Of course I'm talking about the state of American conservatism in 1854, when the Whigs were crumbling fast.

Isn't that just like a conservative, to be always looking to the past to make sense of the present?

In 1854, the party of national unity and free enterprise — the party of Henry Clay, Abraham Lincoln's beau ideal — would come apart over the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which opened the territories to slavery and the country to turmoil.

Without the Whigs, and with the Democrats soon to shatter in turn, the two parties that made up the two-party system could no longer hold the Union together. Soon the greatest of our national tragedies would be upon us: The War.

How did it happen? The forces that had united us lost their hold on public opinion. And as Mr. Lincoln once observed, "With public sentiment, nothing can fail. Without it, nothing can succeed."

One needn't go all the way back to 1854 for examples of midterm elections in which conservatives foundered, and for much the same reason: a failure to shape public sentiment. Call it a failure to engage the issues directly and engage the country's moral imagination.

After the Grand Old Party took a fall in the off-year elections of 1958, Whittaker Chambers wrote a letter to his young friend, William F. Buckley Jr., at the still new conservative magazine, National Review. If the Republican Party, he warned, "cannot get some grip of the actual world we live in and from it generalize and actively promote a program that means something to masses of people — why, somebody else will."

Then the Republican Party, Chambers warned, "will become like one of those dark little shops which apparently never sell anything. If, for any reason, you go in, you find, at the back, an old man, fingering for his own pleasure, some oddments of cloth (weave and design of 1850). Nobody wants to buy them, which is fine because the old man is not really interested in selling. He just likes to hold and to feel."

Some of us can remember the intellectual atmosphere of the 1950s, when to be a conservative was considered less a persuasion than an eccentricity.

At the time, the Hiss-Chambers case had divided Americans into two hostile camps. Lionel Trilling, a professor of literature at Columbia and the author of The Liberal Imagination, scandalized his colleagues in the academic establishment when he described Whittaker Chambers as "a man of honor." It was Professor Trilling who, on scanning the political scene, made one of the most memorably wrong political analyses of his time. He announced that he could see no conservative ideas in prospect — only "irritable mental gestures which seek to resemble ideas."

Lionel Trilling's assessment was all too accurate at the time. With a few exceptions like Whittaker Chambers and young Buckley, American conservatism in the '50 s was as bereft of any real ideas as the Whigs had been a century before.

Conservative thought had lost its traction with the American people during the Great Depression and never regained it. The right was fast retreating into its dark little shop, where it would fall prey to the paranoia of outfits like the John Birch Society. And once conservatives let themselves be identified with bullies like Joe McCarthy, the very phrase, "conservative intellectual," would acquire the air of an oxymoron.

Who with any political sense in the '50 s would have predicted that, by the end of the century, conservatism would come to dominate American political thought, and that the audacious Bill Buckley would begin an intellectual renaissance that only now has begun to fade?

How did it happen? It came to pass because American conservatism was able to articulate the country's values in a way that made sense to a new generation of Americans.

And what are those values? A faith in freedom — in the right to life, liberty and our own property. In foreign affairs, conservatives would display a constancy of purpose that would prevail despite unsteady allies abroad and the old lure of isolationism at home. Who, besides Ronald Reagan, would have thought that the end of the Soviet Union would come not with a bang but a whimper? And with it, the end of the Cold War and the nuclear arms race between the world's two great superpowers. Talk about seizing the moral imagination… .

A battle is always raging for the soul of American conservatism. It is a battle between those who would find a familiar place to hunker down, and those who would risk engagement with ideas and the world. There have always been those who would reduce the conservative impulse to something narrow and mean and afraid — an exclusive little club restricted to Our Kind of People, rather than a great, open, embracing faith.

The great political achievement of Ronald Reagan was to transform a cozy club into a populist movement, and his example remains instructive. Like Lincoln before him, The Great Communicator was willing to accept the know-nothings' votes, but he drew the line at substituting their prejudices for his principles. In Mr. Lincoln's day, the Know-Nothings actually had a party, and its bogeyman was the Roman Catholic church. Today's demagogues use the latest wave of immigrants to much the same effect.

This era's struggle for the soul of the Republican Party can be seen up close and all too personal here in Arkansas. The party of Lincoln is being told it should demand that all illegal immigrants be deported, even if that means breaking up families, disrupting the economy and denying mothers medical care and their children an equal right to a college education.

Does anyone think these children will forget how their families, their mothers and fathers, were treated once they grow up to become voters, as they surely will? Childhood hurts endure, and their fruit is bitterness. Do we really want to let that kind of bitterness take root? Immigrant families once instilled an undying gratitude and reflexive patriotism in their children. Are we going to plant resentment instead?

Cracking down on these newcomers and their children may be a good way to win the next election — and lose the next generation. In short, if Jim Holt is the Republican Party's future, it doesn't have one.

If these are times that try conservatives' souls, it might be instructive to inquire: How did conservatism make such a great comeback in American politics and thought? And how revive its appeal now?

Beyond specific policies and programs, there was something vital in the conservative cause that would prove irresistible to Americans. It was a recognition of the central, animating spirit behind values like family, community, country and Constitution. Call it the spirit of liberty. Its fruit is generosity and fellowship, not fear and suspicion. It unites, not divides. The spirit of liberty cherishes the liberty of others as well as our own. It respects — no, reverences — the innate dignity of each human being. It is the spirit of Lincoln, and it waits to be revived again.

Our faith in liberty may be obscured from time to time, but it is always there. All we need do is articulate it, act on it, and it will shine again. If this is a low ebb for American conservatism, there is a tide in the affairs of men, and, out in the future's depths, the next great wave of conservative sentiment is forming even now. It will yet prove cleansing, uniting, lifting, and restore the nation's confidence. No, I can't prove it, but I believe it.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial
KEYWORDS: 109th; conservatism; paulgreenberg
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To: FlingWingFlyer

I agree. They said the same thing about Lincoln before all his opponents pulled out in 1864, and the same thing about Reagan after his 1976 loss. What's happening is that the conservatives, for the first time really in 12 years, are flexing their muscles and this time we aren't going to be satisfied with a symbolic "Contract" with America that is partially passed. This time we insist on action.


41 posted on 05/21/2006 2:35:44 PM PDT by LS
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To: LS

You and me both. Conservatives are about to show the people we have been electing that we sent them to Washington for a reason. Status quo is on its way out.


42 posted on 05/21/2006 2:40:13 PM PDT by FlingWingFlyer (* Steroids are just a way to "level the playing field.")
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To: FlingWingFlyer

Warning: it won't happen instantly. Our primary here in OH proved that. It will take some selective weeding of RINOs who are vulnerable to primary challengers. But it will happen.


43 posted on 05/21/2006 2:56:39 PM PDT by LS
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To: MNJohnnie
"Low ebb? IN case the fool missed it, Conservatives are within one vote and a Senate Majority Leader of controlling all 3 branches of the Fed Government for the 1st time since 1932."

That isn't even close to true unless you buy the farce that Republican=conservative. Bush is no conservative and neither are a very good percentage of Republican senators. The House is the only chamber that you could safely call remotely conservative and even they are pretty wild spenders.
44 posted on 05/21/2006 3:16:55 PM PDT by SmoothTalker
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To: SmoothTalker
Conservatives are a heartbeat away from controlling all three branches of the US Federal Govt for the 1st time since 1932 and they are at a LOW ebb?

Gee I did not realize emotionally hissy fits by pseudo Conservative Talking Heads about a political glass not 100% full some how trumped LBJ's landslide in 1964 or the aftermath of Watergate or Jimmy "Peanut Head" Carter's Presidency or the 8 years of Clintonittes.

My bad, I was under the impression that Conservatives were the ones who thought their politics, not FELT them. I see. Now it all about how the Perpetually Pissed FEEL. Gee SORRY you are all mad. Get over yourselves. NO one gets 100% of what they want. Posting complete nonsense rants because YOU are not getting 100% of what YOU want in Politics is the behavior of spoiled brat children. All Life requires compromise. Anyone who cannot understand that a glass 60% full of pure Conservative Water is far better then a glass 100% full of Leftist poison has no business lecturing other people on politics.

Take your pet issue. Illegal Immigration. Prop 187 would have gone a LONG way to preventing most of what you spend all your Free Republic time posting about from happening. A Leftist Judge just imposed their emotional whimsy and overturned the will of the votes. Now we have this mess.

Real Conservatives understand just how utterly vital the Judiciary is to our future as a nation. Pseudo Conservative petulant brats rant and rave because their own emotional whimsy is not being imposed by Presidential decree.

The Perpetual Whiners better wake up to the reality of American Politics. We are a Constitutional Republic, NOT the President Dictatorship the Always Bitching seem to fantasies we are. 100% of their personal political whims cannot be imposed upon the American people the second they wish them. They better go take some basic Civic since they seem horribly confused. They seem to believe that the US form of Govt works like their favorite TV show tells them it does. It does NOT.

45 posted on 05/21/2006 3:55:36 PM PDT by MNJohnnie (Conservative, The simple fact about DC is this . "There is more work to do"...)
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To: KDD

Good comment, and I agree.


46 posted on 05/21/2006 4:38:06 PM PDT by Malesherbes
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To: Torie
Did it ever occur to you, that if such folks can't secure a job, and make a living, that most of them might leave?

Yes, that possibility did occur to me, and then I observed the reality that being unemployed in America is still a far, far better way to live than living in some utterly corrupt third world toilet.

And, when you consider the plethora of social services available and the pandering politicians willing to ignore eligibility requirements to provide those services, then one can only conclude that there is no reason for them to leave.
47 posted on 05/21/2006 4:58:11 PM PDT by rottndog (WOOF!!!!--Keep your "compassion" away from my wallet!)
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To: rottndog

Illegals unemployed in the US is an absolute hell. You don't get a damn thing, except emergency medical care, and free education for your kids.


48 posted on 05/21/2006 5:01:00 PM PDT by Torie
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To: sinkspur
We have a guest worker program right now.

Really? Than can you please explain to me the mechanism by which the "guest" part of "guest worker" is enforced?

Also--Can you please show me where "guest worker" programs have been successful anywhere else in the world? (definition of successful="guest workers" go home.)
49 posted on 05/21/2006 5:20:39 PM PDT by rottndog (WOOF!!!!--Keep your "compassion" away from my wallet!)
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To: quidnunc

A misapplication of history, convincing only to those who share the writer's prejudices. He also deliberately neglects the incredible cost of his solution and the bankrupting of Social Security and Medicare by 2010 if this amnesty goes through as planned. That's when we'll see real bitterness and diviseness that will harm the country for generations.


50 posted on 05/21/2006 5:23:28 PM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: rottndog

I heard an NPR piece on the radio about the guest workers that harvest potatos in Idaho. They come by bus from Mexcio, and leave by bus to Mexico. The problem with the program, is that the government takes months to process the paper work. The guest workers get paid more than the illegals (about 2 bucks an hour more), but have higher productivity, according to one farmer who was interviewed.


51 posted on 05/21/2006 5:25:37 PM PDT by Torie
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To: sinkspur
a true intellectual conservative like Medved

Medved is indeed very intelligent and he has a good radio show, but he sure as heck isn't conservative.

52 posted on 05/22/2006 11:58:30 AM PDT by jmc813 (The best mathematical equation I have ever seen: 1 cross + 3 nails= 4 given.)
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