May 23, 2008

The Death of Conservatism Is Greatly Exaggerated

Great op ed by FRED D. THOMPSON in the WSJ today. He says in pertinent part::

The power of conservative principles is borne out in the most strong, prosperous and free country in the history of the world. In the U.S., basic constitutional government has been preserved, foreign tyrannies have been defeated, our failed welfare system was reformed, and the confiscatory income tax rates of a few decades ago have been substantially reduced. This may be why the party where most conservatives reside, the Republican Party, has won seven of the last 10 presidential elections.

Still, a lot of the issues that litter the political battlefield today put conservatives on the defensive. What are we going to do to fix the economy, the housing market, health-care costs and education? Some conservatives try to avoid philosophical confrontation with liberals, often urging solutions that would expand the government while rationalizing that the expansion would be at a slightly slower rate.

This strategy simply has not worked. Conservatives should stay true to their principles and remember:

- Congress cannot repeal the laws of economics. There are no short-term fixes without longer term consequences.

- In a free and dynamic country with social mobility, there will be great opportunity but also economic disparity, especially if the country has liberal immigration policies and a high divorce rate.

- An education system cannot overcome the breakdown of the family, and the social fabric that surrounds children daily.

- Free markets, not an expanding and more powerful government, are the solution to today's problems. Many of these problems, such as health-care costs, energy dependency and the subprime mortgage crisis, were caused in large part by government policies.

It's not that conservatives today no longer believe in the validity of these principles. They just find it difficult to stand strong when the political winds are blowing so hard against them. To be sure, standing by conservative principles does not always guarantee success at the ballot box – it did for Ronald Reagan, but not for Barry Goldwater. But abandoning these principles doesn't ensure victory either. Circumstances often play the deciding role. Is there any doubt that the Carter administration's misery index and the Iranian hostage crises allowed Reagan to prevail in 1980?

Read the entire article here.

Posted by Cigar Mike at May 23, 2008 09:59 AM



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Comments

If Hillary or the Oba-munist cadres win I think this will be an even greater boost to the American conservative movement. It would be good for us because the times will be very interesting and we will be kept busy - everyday, monitoring, laughing, crying at times, and blogging like hell (Val get ready for major blogging if the Demos win) on the wacky but destructive going ons of the Left.

Can you imagine the everyday hi-jinks an Oba-munist administration would usher in - I tell you, our ranks will grow ten fold because of this!

Posted by: mandingo [TypeKey Profile Page] at May 23, 2008 11:33 AM

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