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The Myth of the Good Conservative
National Review Online ^ | June 15, 2012 | Jonah Goldberg

Posted on 06/15/2012 11:32:22 PM PDT by neverdem

My daughter learned a neat rhetorical trick to avoid eating things she doesn’t like. “Daddy, I actually really like spinach, it’s just that this spinach tastes different.”

Democrats and the journalists who love them play a similar game with Republicans and conservatives. “Oh, I have lots of respect for conservatives,” goes the typical line, “but the conservatives we’re being served today are just so different. Why can’t we have Republicans and conservatives like we used to?”

Q: What kind of Republicans are extremists, racists, ideologues, pyschopaths, radicals, weirdos, hicks, idiots, elitists, prudes, potato-chip double-dippers, and meanies?

A: Today’s Republicans.

“The Republican Party got into its time machine and took a giant leap back into the ’50s. The party left moderation and tolerance of dissent behind.” So reported the Washington Post’s Judy Mann — in July of 1980.

Today, of course, the 1950s is the belle époque of reasonable conservatism. Just ask New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, or, for that matter, President Barack Obama, who insists that the GOP is in the throes of a “fever” and is displaying signs of “madness.” It’s his humble wish that the GOP will regain its senses and return to being the party of Eisenhower.

Today’s intellectual conservatives, likewise, are held against the standard of yesterday’s and found wanting. New York Times Book Review editor Sam Tanenhaus wrote a book on “the death of conservatism” a few years ago (inconveniently, right before conservatism was dramatically revivified by the Tea Party, which helped the GOP win historic victories in the 2010 elections), in which he pined for the conservative intellectuals of the 1950s and 1960s.

Of course, the Tanenhauses of their day were horrified by the very same conservative intellectuals. Within a year of William F. Buckley’s founding of National Review in 1955, liberal intellectuals insisted that the magazine’s biggest failure was its inability to be authentically conservative. The editor of Harper’s proclaimed the founding editors of NR to be “the very opposite of conservatives.” Liberal titan Dwight Macdonald lamented that the “pseudo-conservative” National Review was nowhere near as wonderful the old Freeman magazine.

Again and again, the line is the same: I like conservatives, just not these conservatives.

As far as I can tell, there are competing, or at least overlapping, motives for this liberal nostalgia for the conservatives and Republicans of yesteryear. Some liberals like to romanticize and glorify conservatives from eras when they were least effective but most entertaining. Some like to cherry-pick positions from a completely different era so as to prove that holding that position today is centrist.

But whatever the motivation, what unites them is the conviction that today’s liberals shouldn’t cede power, respect, or legitimacy to today’s conservatives. Hence when compassionate conservatism was ascendant, liberals lamented that the GOP wasn’t more libertarian.

When, in response to the disastrous explosion in debt and spending over the Bush/Obama years, the GOP enters a libertarian phase, the same people who insisted they’d love Republicans if they became libertarian are horrified by their “social Darwinism.”

The latest twist on this hackneyed hayride is the renewed caterwauling about how Ronald Reagan couldn’t even get elected today.

Former Florida governor Jeb Bush reignited the topic by lamenting how Reagan couldn’t be nominated today because the GOP has become too rigid and ideological for even the Gipper. I think Jeb Bush is one of the best conservative politicians in the country, but this was not his best moment. Assuming Mitt Romney gets the nomination, here are the GOP nominees since Reagan left office: Bush I, Dole (Gerald Ford’s running-mate in 1976), Bush II, McCain, and, finally, Romney — the Massachusetts moderate the Tea Party spent much of the last months lambasting as, well, a Massachusetts moderate.

Look at all those crazy right-wingers!

Looking at that record, any rational person would conclude that Reagan couldn’t get elected today because the party has become too liberal.

Of course, the reality is more complicated than that. But the idea that Reagan’s problem today would be his moderation is quite simply ridiculous.

Look where G. W. Bush’s moderation got him: denounced as a crazed radical by much of the liberal establishment, despite having run as a “compassionate conservative” and, once in office, expanded entitlements and worked closely with Teddy Kennedy on education reform.

Right on schedule, Dubya is now entering the rehabilitation phase.

It’ll be some time before liberals bring themselves to say, “I miss George W. Bush.” But already the New York Times is proclaiming that Bush represented “mainstream conservatism,” unlike today’s Republicans, of course.

As always, the problem with conservatism today is today’s conservatives.

— Jonah Goldberg, an editor-at-large of National Review Online, is the author of the recently released book The Tyranny of  Clichés. He can be contacted by e-mail at JonahsColumn@aol.com, or via Twitter @JonahNRO. © Copyright 2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.  



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 06/15/2012 11:32:26 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

I may have missed it, but I still haven’t heard this exact wording: “I didn’t leave the conservatives, the conservatives left me.”


2 posted on 06/16/2012 3:34:53 AM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: neverdem

The “Reagan couldn’t get nominated” line is really interesting in light of how much the Democrats have radicalized over the past 40 years. They all claim to still love JFK, but could he be their nominee now?


3 posted on 06/16/2012 3:58:04 AM PDT by cdcdawg
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To: neverdem

Referring to Jeb Bush as a “best conservative” tells me all I need to know about Jonah’s (or The Nep, as Trixie calls him on her website) poor understanding of conservative principles and those who hold to them.


4 posted on 06/16/2012 4:19:36 AM PDT by T-Bird45 (It feels like the seventies, and it shouldn't.)
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To: T-Bird45

Yep, I pretty sorry and telling statement from Jonah:

” I think Jeb Bush is one of the best conservative politicians in the country...”


5 posted on 06/16/2012 4:37:08 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: cdcdawg
They all claim to still love JFK, but could he be their nominee now?

Very good point. Answer: Hell, no.

And right about now would be a good time to start throwing that at the head of Axelrod Downlow Obama. High, inside -- and "in your ear".

6 posted on 06/16/2012 4:45:51 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: T-Bird45
....Jonah’s (or The Nep, as Trixie calls him on her website) ...

Could you elucidate a little? I've never heard that nick and don't understand the reference.

Also, which Goldberg is which? There's a guy who keeps writing in NRO and National Review that it's time to quit opposing the radical homosexualists/pederasts. Is JG him?

7 posted on 06/16/2012 4:49:53 AM PDT by lentulusgracchus
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To: lentulusgracchus

Jonah is the son of Lucianne Goldberg, founder/owner of the website Lucianne.com. She was a well-known poster here prior to founding her site and known back in the day by her screen name, Trixie. When Jonah’s articles are featured on L.com, the editor/Lucianne refers to him as The Nep (nepotism).

As to whether he has supported the homosexual agenda in NRO, I really can’t say and would have to research to give you an answer.


8 posted on 06/16/2012 5:11:21 AM PDT by T-Bird45 (It feels like the seventies, and it shouldn't.)
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To: neverdem
Republicans should support the Constitution.

Limited government.
Personal freedom.
First amendment (Christianity is not illegal).
Second amendment (guns are not evil).
And limited foreign military adventures.

These guidelines can last for centuries and if you stick with them, it can be challenging for opponents to say "You had better ideas 30 years ago."

As far as I'm concerned, this is precisely what the Tea Party was doing.

9 posted on 06/16/2012 5:29:41 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Obama needs more time. After all -- Rome wasn't burned in a day.)
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To: neverdem

Good article.


10 posted on 06/16/2012 10:52:05 AM PDT by x
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To: T-Bird45
Referring to Jeb Bush as a “best conservative” tells me all I need to know about Jonah’s (or The Nep, as Trixie calls him on her website) poor understanding of conservative principles and those who hold to them.

Jonah said "one of the best conservative politicians in the country." He's talking, I guess, about people who've been elected to office and run something sizeable. That's a pretty small subset. For all I know, he may be right.

11 posted on 06/16/2012 10:55:07 AM PDT by x
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