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Conservatism Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

by Jim Kalb <skarpheddin@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 2, 2008 at 09:26 PM

Conservatism FAQ
			  June 1, 2008 Version

This FAQ, posted monthly, attempts to deal with questions and
objections regarding conservatism. Additional questions and comments
are welcome. The conservatism discussed is traditionalist American
conservatism; other varieties are touched on in section 6, and their
adherents are urged to draft additional FAQs. For further discussion
and relevant links, see the Traditionalist Conservatism Page,
http://turnabout.ath.cx:8000/node/7.

A current version of this FAQ can be obtained by sending the message
"send usenet/news.answers/conservatism/faq" by email to
mail-server@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 A hypertext version is available at
http://turnabout.ath.cx:8000/node/3.

Questions

1 General principles

   1.1 What is distinctive about conservatism as a political view?

   1.2 Why is tradition a source of greater wisdom?

   1.3 Why isn't it better to reason things out from the beginning?

   1.4 What's the difference between following tradition and refusing to
   think?

   1.5 Why can't tradition be an ac***ulation of ignorance, error and
   vice as easily as of wisdom?

   1.6 How can anyone know his own tradition is the right one?

   1.7 What about truth?

   1.8 There are conflicting traditions even within a single society.
   Which gets treated as "ours?"

2 Tradition and change

   2.1 Why not just accept change?

   2.2 Isn't conservatism simply another way of saying that people who
   currently have wealth and power should keep it?

   2.3 Wouldn't we still have slavery if conservatives had always been
   running the show?

3 Social and cultural issues

   3.1 What are family values and what is so great about them?

   3.2 Why can't conservatives just accept that people's personal values
   differ?

   3.3 Why are conservatives such theocrats?

   3.4 Why do conservatives always want to force their values on
   everybody else?

   3.5 What role do conservatives think government should play in
   enforcing moral values?

   3.6 Aren't conservatives racist ***ist homophobes?

   3.7 What happens to feminists, homo***uals, racial minorities and
   others marginalized in a conservative society?

   3.8 What about freedom?

   3.9 And justice?

4 Economic issues

   4.1 Why do conservatives say they favor virtue and community but
   favor laissez-faire capitalism?

   4.2 Why don't conservatives care about what happens to the poor,
   weak, discouraged, and outcast?

   4.3 Shouldn't the government do something for people for whom the
   usual sup****t networks don't work?

   4.4 What about welfare for the middle cl*****?

   4.5 If conserving is a good thing, why isn't ecology a conservative
   issue?

5 Conservatism in an age of established liberalism

   5.1 Why do conservatives talk as if the sky is about to fall and all
   good things are in the past?

   5.2 Isn't conservatism essentially nostalgia for a past that never
   was and can't be restored?

   5.3 What's all this stuff about community and tradition when the
   groups that matter these days are based on interests and perspectives
   rather than traditions?

   5.4 Why are most people seriously involved in studying and dealing
   with social issues liberals?

   5.5 How can tradition do anything but endorse the way things happen
   to be?

   5.6 Shouldn't conservatives favor things that are as well-established
   as the welfare state and steady expansion of the scope of the civil
   rights laws?

   5.7 I was raised a liberal. Doesn't that mean that to be conservative
   I should stay true to liberalism?

6 The conservative rainbow

   6.1 How do libertarians differ from conservatives?

   6.2 What are mainstream conservatives?

   6.3 What are neoconservatives?

   6.4 What are paleoconservatives?

   6.5 What are paleolibertarians?

   6.6 What are Frankfurt School Neopaleoconservatives?

   6.7 Where do the pro-life movement and Religious Right fit into all
   this?

   6.8 What are the differences between American conservatism and that
   of other countries?

   6.9 What do all these things called "conservatism" have in common?

Answers

1 General Principles

   1.1 What is distinctive about conservatism as a political view?

   Its emphasis on what has been passed down as a source of wisdom that
   goes beyond what can be demonstrated or even explicitly stated.

   1.2 Why is tradition a source of greater wisdom?

   It is a network of commonly accepted attitudes, beliefs and practices
   that has grown up through strengthening of things that have worked
   and rejection of things that have led to conflict and failure. It
   therefore comprises a collection of habits that have proved useful in
   a huge variety of practical affairs, and a comprehensive and
   generally coherent point of view that reflects very extensive
   experience and thought. Through it we know subtle and fundamental
   features of the world that would otherwise escape us, and our
   understanding of those things takes on concrete and usable form.

   The usual alternative to reliance on tradition is reliance on theory.
   Taking theory literally can be costly because it achieves clarity by
   ignoring things that are difficult to articulate. Such things can be
   im****tant; the reason politics and morals are learned mostly by
   experience and imitation is that most of what we need to know about
   them consists in habits, attitudes and implicit presumptions that we
   couldn't begin to put into words. There is no means other than
   tradition to ac***ulate, conserve and hand on such things.

   Other considerations also sup****t the wisdom of relying on tradition,
   if not specifically the wisdom of tradition itself. For example,
   tradition typically exists as the common property of a community
   whose members are raised in it. Accordingly, it normally unites more
   than divides, and is far more likely than theory to facilitate free
   and cooperative life in common.

   1.3 Why isn't it better to reason things out from the beginning?

   Our knowledge of things like politics and morality is partial and
   attained slowly and with difficulty. We can't evaluate political
   ideas without accepting far more beliefs, presumptions and attitudes
   than we could possibly judge critically. The effects of political
   proposals are difficult to predict, and as the proposals become more
   ambitious their effects become incalculable. Accordingly, the most
   reasonable approach to politics is normally to take the existing
   system of society as a given that can't be changed wholesale and try
   to ensure that any changes cohere with the principles and practices
   that make the existing system work as well as it does.

   1.4 What's the difference between following tradition and refusing to
   think?

   Conservatives do not reject thought but are skeptical of its
   autonomy. They believe that tradition guides and corrects thought,
   and so brings it closer to truth, which has no special connection
   with any private view.

   While truth is not altogether out of reach, our access to it is
   incomplete and often indirect. It can not be reduced wholly to our
   possession, so conservatives are willing to accept it in whatever
   form it is available to us. In particular, they recognize the need to
   rely on the unarticulated truth implicit in inherited attitudes and
   practices. Today this aspect of our connection to truth is
   underestimated, and conservatives hope to think better and know more
   truly by re-emphasizing it.

   1.5 Why can't tradition be an ac***ulation of ignorance, error and
   vice as easily as of wisdom?

   Since tradition is a human thing it may reflect human vices as well
   as virtues. The same, of course, is true of relying on autonomous
   reason. In this century, anti-traditional theories sup****ted by
   intelligent men for reasons thought noble have repeatedly led to the
   murder of millions of innocents.

   The issue therefore is not whether tradition is perfect but its
   appropriate place in human life. To the extent our most consistent
   aim is toward what is good, and we err more through ignorance,
   oversight and conflicting impulse than through coherent and settled
   evil, tradition will benefit us by linking our thoughts and actions
   to a steady and comprehensive system in which they can correct each
   other. It will secure and refine our acquisitions while hampering
   antisocial impulses. To the extent we consistently aim at what is
   evil, then tradition can not help us much, but neither can anything
   else short of divine intervention.

   1.6 There are lots of conflicting traditions. How can anyone know his
   own is the right one?

   Comprehensive certainty is hard to come by. Our own tradition (like
   our own reasoning) might lead us astray where another's would not.
   However, such concerns can not justify rejecting our own tradition
   unless we have a method transcending it for determining when that has
   happened, and in most situations we do not. If experience has led us
   astray it will most likely be further experience that sets us right.
   The same is true of tradition, which is social experience.

   Putting issues of truth aside, the various parts of a particular
   tradition are adjusted to each other in a way that makes it difficult
   to abandon one part and substitute something from another tradition.
   A French cook will have trouble if he has to rely on Chinese
   ingredients and utensils. Issues of coherence and practicality
   accordingly make it likely that we will do better developing the
   tradition to which we are accustomed than attempting to adopt large
   parts of a different one.

   1.7 But what about truth?

   Most conservatives are confident comprehensive objective truth
   exists, but not in the form of a set of propositions with a single
   meaning equally demonstrable to all. The world is too big for us to
   grasp as a whole in a clear systematic way. We apprehend truth
   largely through tradition and in a way that cannot be fully
   articulated. Even if some truths can be known with certainty through
   reason or revelation, their social acceptance and their
   interpretation and application depend on tradition.

   1.8 There are conflicting traditions even within a single society.
   Which gets treated as "ours?"

   The question is less serious than it appears, since it cannot be
   discussed without assuming a community of discourse and therefore an
   authoritative tradition.

   Any collectivity that deliberates and acts has a tradition--a set of
   commonly-held habits, attitudes, beliefs and memories that is
   reasonably coherent over time--that enables it to do so. A society
   consists of those who at least in general accept the authority of a
   common tradition. "Our" tradition is therefore the tradition that
   guides and motivates the collective action of the society to which we
   belong and give our loyalty, and within which the relevant discussion
   is going forward.

   It is worth noting that no society is perfectly unified; each has
   elites and subordinate societies with their own traditions and
   spheres of action. A society may also harbor resident aliens and
   dissident or criminal groups. Which groups are treated as subordinate
   societies legitimately belonging to the larger one and which are
   treated as resident aliens, criminals or foreign oppressors is itself
   determined by the traditions that define the society as a whole and
   make it what it is.

2 Tradition and Change

   2.1 Society has always changed, for the better in some ways and for
   the worse in others. Tradition itself is an ac***ulation of changes.
   So why not accept change, especially if everything is so complicated
   and hard to figure out?

   Changes have always involved resistance as well as acceptance. Those
   that have to make their way over opposition will presumably be better
   than those that are accepted without serious questioning. Tradition
   is reliable because it reflects the overall weight of experience and
   reflection. That means that traditions that have long endured, and so
   presumptively reflect extended experience, should change only in
   response to something equally weighty.

   In addition, conservatism is less rejection of change as such than of
   intentional change of a peculiarly sweeping sort demanded by
   Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment philosophies like liberalism and
   Marxism. It is recognition that the world is not our creation, and
   there are permanent things we must simply accept. For example, the
   family as an institution has changed from time to time in conjunction
   with other social changes. However, the current left/liberal demand
   that all definite institutional structure for the family be abolished
   as an infringement of individual autonomy (typically phrased as a
   demand for the elimination of *** roles and hetero***ism and the
   protection of children's rights) is different in kind from anything
   in the past, and conservatives believe it must be fought.

   2.2 Isn't conservatism simply another way of saying that people who
   currently have wealth and power should keep it?

   Every political view promotes the particular advantage of some
   people. If political views are to be treated as rationalizations of
   the interests of existing or would-be elites, then that treatment
   should apply equally to conservatism and all other views. On the
   other hand, if arguments that particular political views advance the
   public good are to be taken seriously, then the arguments for
   conservatism should be considered on their merits.

   It's worth noting that liberalism istself furthers the interests of
   powerful social cl***** that sup****t it, and that movements aiming at
   social justice typically become radically elitist because the more
   comprehensive and abstract a political principle, the smaller the
   group that can be relied on to understand and apply it correctly.

   2.3 Wouldn't we still have slavery if conservatives had always been
   running the show?

   Experience suggests otherwise. Slavery disappeared in Western and
   Central Europe long ago without need for self-conscious attempts at
   social reconstruction. It lasted much longer in the new and less
   conservative societies Europeans founded in America.

   While conservatism as such doesn't guarantee there will be no
   oppression, neither do attempts at autonomous rational thought. It
   has been under radical and not conservative regimes that brutal
   forced labor and other gross forms of oppression have made a comeback
   in recent times. That is no paradox. Radicalism is far more
   compatible than conservatism with tyrannical institutions because by
   emphasizing theory and downplaying stable consensus it destroys
   reciprocity and mutual accommodation between rulers and ruled.

   Conservatism arose not from a desire to freeze everything exactly as
   it is, but from recognition of the necessity of continuity, the
   difficulty of forcing society into a preconceived pattern, and the
   im****tance of things, such as mutual personal obligation and
   standards of right and wrong not reducible to power and desire, for
   which ideologies of the Left have trouble finding a place. Those
   recognitions make conservatives more reliable opponents of tyranny
   than progressives.

   Conservatism recognizes that moral habits evolve with experience and
   changing cir***stances, and social arrangements that come to be too
   much at odds with the moral feelings of a people change or disappear.
   It's not self-contained; recognition of existing practice as a
   standard does not mean denial that there is any other standard. It
   recognizes that there can be improvements as well as corruptions, and
   that there are rational and transcendent standards as well as those
   that exist as part of the institutions of particular peoples.

3 Social and Cultural Issues

   3.1 What are family values and what is so great about them?

   They are habits and attitudes that maintain a society in which
   people's most basic loyalties, and the relation****ps upon which they
   rely most fundamentally, are relation****ps to particular persons
   rather than to the state.

   Family values are basic to moral life because it is primarily in
   relation****ps with particular persons that are taken with the utmost
   seriousness that we find the degree of concrete knowledge and mutual
   responsibility that is necessary for our obligations to others to
   become realities for us. In addition, the knowledge and habits
   necessary for the good life mostly have to do with the day-to-day
   activities of ordinary men. Such things lose coherence if everyday
   personal relations are unstable and unreliable, as they will be if
   law, habits and attitudes do not sup****t stable and functional family
   life.

   Family values are rejected to the extent the necessity of practical
   reliance on particular persons is viewed as something oppressive and
   unequal that the state should remedy. Conservatives oppose that
   rejection. They view tyranny as the likely outcome of weakening
   family values, since reducing personal and local responsibilities is
   likely to make state power unbalanced and overly predominant.

   3.2 Why can't conservatives just accept that people's personal values
   differ?

   Liberals, conservatives and others all recognize limits on the degree
   to which differing personal values can be accommodated. One reason
   such limits arise is that personal values can be realized only by
   establi****ng particular sorts of relations with other people, and no
   society can favor all relation****ps equally. No society, for example,
   can favor equally a woman who primarily wants to have a career and
   one who primarily wants to be a mother and homemaker. If public
   attitudes presume that it is the man who is primarily responsible for
   family sup****t they favor the latter at the expense of the former; if
   not, they do the reverse.

   3.3 Why are conservatives such theocrats?

   They aren't, in any sense that doesn't turn most pre-60s Western
   states into theocracies. "Theocracy" normally means a state (an
   Islamic republic would be an example) in which civil law and
   authorities are formally subject to religious law and authorities.
   There have been very few such states in the West, and conservatives
   aren't interested in breaking new ground on the matter. They do tend
   to recognize that government is based in the end on accepted
   understandings of what man and the world are, and that strict
   secularism, which insists that all social and moral order must be
   based on human desire and choice, lacks the resources to sustain free
   government or even rationality. They therefore find it quite in order
   for government to follow accepted religious understandings in
   appropriate cases.

   3.4 Why do conservatives always want to force their values on
   everybody else?

   Conservatives aren't different from other people in that regard.
   Anyone with a notion of how society should work will believe that
   other people should follow the program he favors. For example, if
   Liberal Jack thinks the government should be responsible for the
   well-being of children and wants to sup****t the arrangement through a
   system of supervision, record-keeping and taxation that sends people
   to jail who don't comply, and Conservative Jill thinks there should
   be family responsibility sup****ted by a system of *** roles enforced
   by informal social sanctions, each will want what the public schools
   teach to be consistent with his program.

   Both will object to a school textbook entitled "Heather Has Two
   Mommies Who Get Away with Paying No Taxes Because They Accept Payment
   Only in Cash." Liberal Jack will object to the book "Heather's Mommy
   Stays Home and Her Daddy Goes to the Office," while Conservative Jill
   will object to other well-known texts. Even Libertarian Jerry might
   have some problems with "Heather and Her Whole Family Organize to
   Fight for Daycare and against Welfare Reductions." There is no
   obvious reason to consider any of the three more tolerant than the
   others.

   At present, the issue of social tolerance comes up most often in
   connection with ***ual morality. For a discussion from a conservative
   perspective, see the ***ual Morality FAQ,
   http://turnabout.ath.cx:8000/node/6.

   3.5 What role do conservatives think government should play in
   enforcing moral values?

   Since conservatives believe moral values should be determined more by
   the traditions and feelings of the people and by informal traditional
   authorities than by theory and formal decisions of an administrative
   elite, they typically prefer to rely on informal social sanctions
   rather than enforcement by government. Nonetheless, they believe that
   government should recognize the moral institutions on which society
   relies and should be run on the assumption that they are good things
   that should not be undercut. Thus, conservatives oppose public school
   curricula that depict traditional moral values as optional and
   programs that fund their rejection, for example by subsidizing unwed
   parents or artists who intend their works to outrage accepted
   morality. They believe the state should sup****t fundamental moral
   institutions like the family, and oppose legislation that forbids
   discrimination on moral grounds. How much more the government can or
   should do to promote morality is a matter of experience and
   cir***stance. In this connection, as in others, conservatives
   typically do not have very high expectations for what government can
   achieve although they do view government as im****tant.

   3.6 Aren't conservatives racist ***ist homophobes?

   That depends on what those words mean. They are often used very
   broadly.

   "Racist"--Conservatives consider community loyalty im****tant. The
   communities people grow up in generally have some connection to
   ethnicity. That's no accident, because ethnicity is what develops
   when people live together with a common way of life for a long time.
   Accordingly, conservatives think some degree of ethnic loyalty and
   separateness is OK. Ethnicity is not the same thing as "race" as a
   biological category; on the other hand, the two are difficult to
   disentangle because both arise out of shared history and common
   descent.

   "***ist"--All known societies have engaged in ***-role stereotyping,
   with men undertaking more responsibility for public affairs and women
   for home, family, and childcare. There are obvious benefits to such
   stereotypes, since they make it far more likely that individual men
   and women will complement each other and form stable and functional
   unions for the rearing of children. Also, some degree of
   differentiation seems to fit the presocial tendencies of men and
   women better than uni*** would. Conservatives see no reason to give
   up those benefits, especially in view of the evident bad consequences
   of the weakening of stereotypical obligations between the ***es in
   recent decades.

   "Homophobes"--Finally, ***-role stereotyping implies a tendency to
   reject patterns of impulse, attitude and conduct that don't fit the
   stereotypes, such as homo***uality.

   For extended discussion from a conservative perspective of issues
   relating to the liberal demand for "inclusiveness", see the
   Anti-Inclusiveness FAQ, http://turnabout.ath.cx:8000/node/5,
and the
   Anti-Feminist Page, http://turnabout.ath.cx:8000/node/2.

   3.7 What happens to feminists, homo***uals, racial minorities and
   others marginalized in a conservative society?

   The same as happens in a society based on the liberal conception of
   inclusiveness to religious and social conservatives and to ethnics
   who consider their ethnicity im****tant. They find themselves in a
   social order they may not like dominated by people who may look down
   on them in which it is made difficult to live as they prefer.

   In both kinds of society, people on the outs may be able to persuade
   others to their way of thinking, practice the way of life they prefer
   among themselves, or break off from the larger society and establish
   their own communities. Such possibilities are in general more
   realistic in a conservative society that emphasizes local control,
   federalism, and minimal bureaucracy than in a society that demands
   egalitarian social justice and therefore tries to establish a
   universal homogeneous social order. For example, ethnic minorities in
   a conservative society may be able to thrive through some combination
   of adaptation and niche-finding, while in an "inclusive" society they
   will find themselves on the receiving end of policies designed to
   eliminate the public im****tance of their (and every other) ethnic
   culture.

   One im****tant question is whether alienation from the social order
   will be more common in a conservative or a liberal society. It seems
   that it will be more common in a social order based on universal
   implementation of a bureaucracy's conception of social justice than
   in one that accepts the moral feelings and loyalties that arise over
   time within particular communities. So it seems likely that a liberal
   society will have more citizens than a conservative society who feel
   that their deepest values and loyalties are at odds with the values
   of the institutions that dominate their lives, and so feel
   marginalized.

   3.8 What about freedom?

   Conservatives are strong sup****ters of social institutions that
   realize and protect freedom, but recognize that such institutions
   attain their full value as part of a larger whole. Freedom is fully
   realized only when we are held responsible for the choices we make,
   and it is most valuable in a setting in which things can readily be
   chosen that add up to a good life. Accordingly, conservatives reject
   perspectives that view freedom as an absolute, and recognize that the
   institutions through which freedom is realized must include
   principles of responsibility and must respect other goods without
   which freedom would not be worth having.

   In addition, conservatives believe there is a close connection
   between freedom and participation in public affairs. Since how we
   live affects others, freedom includes taking part in making society
   what it is. Accordingly, the conservative principles of federalism,
   local rule, and private property help realize freedom by devolving
   power into many hands and making widespread participation in running
   society a reality. Respect for tradition, the "democracy of the
   dead," has the same effect.

   3.9 And justice?

   Justice between man and man is respect for concrete obligations and
   individual responsibility. Conservatives take both very seriously.

   Social justice involves the ordering of social life toward the good
   for man. Social injustice involves systematic destruction of the
   conditions for that good. Because the good for man cannot be fully
   known, because it includes respect for each of us as a moral agent,
   and because human affairs are infinitely complex, social justice can
   never be fully achieved, nor achieved at all through imposition of a
   preconceived overall design on society. Attempts to do the latter
   have led to degradation of social and moral order and, in several
   modern instances, horrendous crimes such as the murder of millions of
   innocents. Social justice must therefore evolve rather than be
   constructed, and its furtherance therefore requires acceptance of the
   authority of tradition. The two cannot be separated.

   Social justice is sometimes thought to mean promotion of equality
   through comprehensive government action. That view cannot be correct
   since men differ and what is just for them must also differ. In
   addition, the goods which that view is concerned to divide
   equally--wealth, power and the like--are not the ultimate human goods
   and therefore can not be considered the ultimate concerns of justice.
   Finally, a system guided by such a conception must defeat its own
   purpose because it puts enormous and uncontrollable power in the
   hands of those who control the government. Possession of such power,
   of course, makes them radically unequal to those they rule.

4 Economic Issues

   4.1 Why do conservatives say they favor virtue and community but in
   fact favor laissez-faire capitalism? Doesn't laissez- faire
   capitalism promote the opposite?

   Conservatives typically are not fans of pure laissez-faire, although
   they view economic liberty as one of the traditional liberties of the
   American people that has served that people well. Many are skeptical
   of free trade and most favor restraints on immigration for the sake
   of permitting the existence and development of a reasonably coherent
   national community. Nor do they oppose in principle the regulation or
   suppression of businesses that affect the moral order of society,
   such as prostitution, ****ography, and the sale of certain drugs.

   Conservatives do favor free markets when the alternative is to expand
   bureaucracy to implement liberal goals, a process that clearly has
   the effect of damaging virtue and community. Also, they tend to
   prefer self-organization to central control because they believe that
   overall administration of social life is impossible. They recognize
   that like tradition the market reflects men's infinitely various and
   often unconscious and inarticulate goals and perceptions far better
   than any bureaucratic process could.

   In any event, it's not clear that laissez-faire capitalism need
   undermine moral community. "Laissez-faire capitalism" has to do with
   limitations on what the government does and only indirectly with the
   nature of society as a whole. While social statistics are a crude
   measure of the state of community and morality, it is noteworthy that
   in England crime and illegitimacy rates fell by about half from the
   middle to the end of the 19th century, the heyday of untrammelled
   capitalism, and that the rejection of laissez-faire has in fact been
   accompanied by increasing social atomization.

   4.2 Why don't conservatives care about what happens to the poor,
   weak, discouraged, and outcast?

   Conservatives do care about what happens to such people. That's why
   they oppose government programs that multiply the poor, weak,
   discouraged, and outcast by undermining and disrupting the network of
   habits and social relations that enable people to carry on their
   lives without depending on government bureaucracy.

   Moral community declines when people rely on government to solve
   their problems rather than on themselves and those to whom they have
   some particular connection. It is the weak who suffer most from the
   resulting moral chaos. Those who think that interventionist
   liberalism means that the weak face fewer problems should consider
   the effects on women, children, and blacks of trends of the past 40
   years. That period has featured large increases in social welfare
   expenditures, as well as increased crime, reduced educational
   achievement, family instability, and slower progress reducing
   poverty.

   4.3 What about people for whom the usual sup****t networks don't work?
   Shouldn't the government do something for them?

   The fundamental question is whether government should have ultimate
   responsibility for individual material well-being. Conservatives
   believe that it should not; giving it that responsibility means
   despotism, since material well-being is a result of a complex of
   things that in the end extends to the whole of life, and
   responsibility for each individual case requires detailed control of
   the whole complex.

   Government responsibility for specific cases also means that what
   happens to people, and therefore what they do, is the business of no
   one in particular. If there's a serious problem, the government will
   take care of it. Such an outlook destroys social ties and promotes
   antisocial behavior. If an understanding of the role of government
   weakens self-reliance and the moral bonds that give rise to
   community, and cannot be made to work without an elaborate system of
   compulsion, in the long run it will increase suffering and
   degradation and so is the wrong understanding.

   Conservatives are therefore suspicious of social welfare programs,
   and especially demands that the government make sure there's an
   answer for every case. Suspicion has rational limits. Some government
   social welfare measures (free clinics for mothers and children or
   local systems of sup****t for deserving people) may well increase
   social welfare even in the long term. However, because of the
   obscurity of the issue, the difficulty in a mass democracy of
   limiting the expansion of government benefit programs, and the value
   of widespread participation in public life, the best resolution is
   likely to be keeping central government involvement strictly limited,
   and letting individuals, associations and localities sup****t
   voluntarily the institutions and programs they think socially
   beneficial.

   4.4 What about welfare for the middle cl*****, like social security,
   medicare, the home mortgage interest deduction, and so on?

   The most consistent conservatives want to get rid of them. Social
   security and medicare, they say, are financially unsound, and are
   socially harmful because they lead people capable of saving for their
   own retirement and sup****ting their own parents to rely on the
   government instead. They could better be replaced by private savings,
   prefunded medical insurance, greater emphasis on intergenerational
   obligations within families, and other arrangements that would evolve
   if the government presence were reduced or eliminated.

   Other conservatives distinguish these middle-class benefits from
   welfare by the element of reciprocity. People get social security and
   medicare only if they have already given a great deal to society, and
   the mortgage interest deduction encourages people to become
   homeowners, and so aquire a definite concrete stake in the local
   society, and in any event the benefit consists only in the right to
   keep more of one's earnings. Still others try to split the difference
   somehow. As a practical matter, the reluctance of many conservatives
   to disturb these arrangements is likely motivated in part by the
   electoral power of their sup****ters.

   4.5 If conserving is a good thing, why isn't ecology a conservative
   cause?

   Conservatism is concerned more with relations among men than those
   between man and nature, so ecology is not one of its defining issues.
   There is, however, nothing in conservatism intrinsically at odds with
   ecological concerns. Some conservatives and conservative schools of
   thought take such issues very seriously; others less so. There are,
   of course, conservative grounds for criticizing or rejecting
   particular aspects of the existing environmental movement, such as
   overemphasis on central controls.

5 Conservatism in an Age of Established Liberalism

   5.1 Why do conservatives talk as if the sky is about to fall and all
   good things are in the past? People have been bemoaning the present
   for a long time but things don't seem so bad today.

   Conservatives don't predict more disasters than liberals, just
   different disasters. Like other people they see both hopeful and
   hazardous trends in the current situation. Post-communist societies
   display the disastrous social consequences of energetic attempts to
   implement post-Enlightenment radicalism. Less energetic attempts,
   such as modern American liberalism, do not lead to similar effects as
   quickly. Nonetheless, social trends toward breakdown of affiliations
   among individuals, centralization of political power in irresponsible
   elites, irreconcilable social conflicts, and increasing stupidity,
   brutality and triviality in daily life suggest that those
   consequences are coming just the same. Liberalism seems to make up in
   thoroughness what it lacks in brutality. Why not worry about it?

   5.2 Isn't conservatism essentially nostalgia for a past that never
   was and can't be restored?

   In substance, the objection is that the goals of conservatism are
   neither serious nor achievable. That objection fails if in the end
   conservatives are likely to get what they want.

   Conservatism involves recognition that moral community is required
   for the coherence of individual and social life, and that a
   reasonably coherent way of life is a practical necessity. Current
   trends toward radical individualism, egalitarianism and hedonism
   destroy the possibility of moral community. Conservatives are
   therefore confident that in some fa****on existing trends will be
   reversed and in im****tant respects the moral and social future will
   resemble the past more than the present. In particular, the future
   will see less emphasis on individual autonomy and more on moral
   tradition and essentialist ties.

   The timing and form of the necessary reversal is of course uncertain.
   It plainly can't be achieved through administrative techniques, the
   method most readily accepted as serious and realistic today, so
   conservatives' main political proposal is that aspects of the modern
   state that oppose the reversal be trimmed or abandoned. Those who
   consider modern trends beneficial and irreversible therefore accuse
   conservatives of simple obstructionism. In contrast, those who see
   that current trends lead to catastrophe and that a reversal must take
   place expect that if conservatives aren't successful now their goals
   will be achieved eventually, but very likely with more conflict and
   destruction along the way and quite possibly with a less satisfactory
   end result.

   5.3 What's all this stuff about community and tradition? The groups
   that matter these days are groups like yuppies, gays, and senior
   citizens that people join as individuals based on interests and
   perspectives rather than tradition.

   Can this be true in the long run? When times are good people imagine
   that they can define themselves as they choose, but a society will
   not long exist if the only thing its members have in common is a
   commitment to self-definition. The necessity for something beyond
   that becomes clearest when the times require sacrifice. Member****p in
   a group with an identity developed and inculcated through tradition
   becomes far more relevant then than career path, life-style option,
   or stage of life. One of Bill Clinton's problems as president was
   that people saw him as a yuppie who wouldn't die for anything; at
   some point that kind of problem becomes decisive.

   5.4 If conservatism is so great, why are most people seriously
   involved in studying and dealing with social issues liberals?

   Conservatives believe it is impossible to define and control the
   considerations relevant to social life accurately enough to make a
   technological approach to society possible. They reject efforts to
   divide human affairs into compartments to be dealt with by experts as
   part of a comprehensive plan for promoting goals like equality and
   prosperity. Academic and other policy experts are defined as such by
   their participation in such efforts. It would be surprising if they
   did not prefer perspectives that give those efforts free rein, such
   as welfare-state liberalism, over perspectives that are suspicious of
   them.

   5.5 How can tradition do anything but endorse the way things happen
   to be--which at present means established liberalism?

   If traditionalism were a formal rule to be applied literally it could
   tell us nothing: the current state of a tradition is simply the
   current practices, attitudes, beliefs and so on of the community
   whose tradition it is. The point of tradition, however, is that
   formal rules are inadequate. Tradition is not self-contained, and not
   all parts of it are equally authoritative. It is a way of grasping
   things that are neither merely traditional nor knowable apart from
   tradition. One who accepts a religious tradition, for example, owes
   his ultimate allegiance not to the tradition but to God, who is known
   through the tradition. It is that allegiance to something that
   exceeds and motivates the tradition that makes it possible to
   distinguish what is authentic and living in the tradition from
   nonessentials and corruptions.

   5.6 Shouldn't modern conservatives at least favor things that are as
   well-established as the welfare state and steady expansion of the
   scope of the civil rights laws?

   Yes, to the extent they are consistent with the older and more
   fundamental parts of our social arrangements, such as family,
   community, and traditional moral standards, and contribute to the
   over-all functioning of the whole. Unfortunately, the things
   mentioned fail on both counts. Existing welfare and civil rights
   measures make sense only as part of a comprehensive centrally managed
   system that is adverse to the connections that make community
   possible, and is designed perpetually to reorder society as a whole
   through bureaucratic decree. It is impossible for conservatives to
   accept anything like such a system.

   5.7 I was raised a liberal. Doesn't that mean that to be conservative
   I should stay true to liberalism?

   How can you be bound to a viewpoint that does not value loyalty and
   can therefore survive only if it is not accepted by most people? For
   someone raised a liberal, the conservative approach would be to look
   for guidance to the things on which the people with whom he grew up
   actually relied for coherence and stability, including the traditions
   of the larger community upon which their way of life depended. Those
   things will always include illiberal elements that enabled the
   community to function as such.

6 The Conservative Rainbow

   6.1 How do libertarians differ from conservatives?

   In general, libertarians emphasize limited government more than
   conservatives and believe the sole legitimate purpose of government
   is the protection of property rights against force and fraud. Thus,
   they usually consider legal restrictions on such things as
   immigration, drug use, and prostitution to be illegitimate violations
   of personal liberty. Many but not all libertarians hold a position
   that might be described as economically Right (anti-socialist) and
   culturally Left (opposed to what are called cultural repressiveness,
   racism, ***ism, homophobia, and so on), and tend to attribute to
   state intervention the survival of things the cultural Left dislikes.

   Speaking more abstractly, the libertarian perspective assigns to the
   market the position conservatives assign to tradition as the great
   ac***ulator and integrator of the implicit knowledge of society. Some
   writers, such as F.A. Hayek, attempt to bridge the two perspectives
   on that issue. In addition, libertarians tend to believe in strict
   methodological individualism and absolute and universally valid human
   rights, while conservatives are less likely to have the former
   commitment and tend to understand rights by reference to the forms
   they take in particular societies.

   6.2 What are mainstream conservatives?

   People who mix the traditionalist conservatism outlined in this FAQ
   with varying pro****tions of libertarianism and liberalism. Any
   conservative who gets elected or otherwise hits the mass market
   (e.g., Rush Limbaugh) is likely to be a mainstream conservative.

   Mainstream conservatives often speak the language of liberalism,
   especially classical liberalism. Their appeal is nonetheless
   conservative, at least in the sense that they reject more highly
   developed forms of liberalism in favor of earlier forms that retain
   more traces of non-liberal traditions.

   6.3 What are neoconservatives?

   A group of intellectual conservatives most of whom were liberals
   until left-wing radicalism went mass-market in the sixties, and whose
   main concern on the whole is to preserve and extend what they see as
   the accomplishments of older forms of liberalism. Their positions
   continue to evolve; some still have positions consistent with New
   Deal liberalism, others treat an idealized "America" as a sort of
   world-wide evangelistic cause, and still others have moved on to a
   more complex and principled conservatism. Many of them have been
   associated with the magazines "Commentary" and "The Public Interest,"
   and a neopapalist contingent (now at odds with many other
   neoconservatives over the relation between religion and politics) is
   associated with the magazine "First Things." Their influence has been
   out of pro****tion to their numbers, in part because they include a
   number of well-known Northeastern and West Coast journalists and
   academics and in part because having once been liberals or leftists
   they still can speak the language and retain a certain credibility in
   Establishment circles.

   6.4 What are paleoconservatives?

   Another group of conservatives most of whom were never liberals and
   live someplace other than the Northeastern megalopolis or California.
   The most prominent paleo publications are "Chronicles" and "Modern
Age."
   They first arose as a self-conscious group in opposition to
   neoconservatives after the success of the neos in establi****ng
   themselves within the Reagan administration, and especially after the
   neos helped defeat the nomination of paleo Mel Bradford as head of
   the National Endowment for the Humanities in favor of one of their
   own, Bill Bennett. The views set forth in this FAQ are broadly
   consistent with those of most paleoconservatives.

   6.5 What are paleolibertarians?

   A group of libertarians, notably Llewellyn Rockwell and the late
   Murray Rothbard, who reject mainstream libertarianism as culturally
   libertine and often squishy-soft on big government, and on most
   issues share common ground with paleoconservatives. Their center on
   the web is Mises.org, and a sampling of their views expressed in
   popular form can be found at LewRockwell.com

   6.6 What are Frankfurt School Neopaleoconservatives?

   A group (so named for the first time in this FAQ) that has come by
   way of Frankfurt School cultural criticism to a position reminiscent
   of paleoconservatism emphasizing federalism, rejection of the
   therapeutic managerial state, and (most recently) liturgy. Their
   publication is "Telos," which now includes paleocon Paul Gottfried on
   its editorial board and publishes Chronicles editor Thomas Fleming as
   well as writers such as Alain de Benoist associated with the European
   New Right (and for that matter the author of this FAQ.)

   6.7 Where do the pro-life movement and religious right fit into all
   this?

   Like conservatism, both movements reject hedonism and radical
   individual autonomy and emphasize the authority of
   traditionally-based institutions like the family and religion in
   opposition to that of the modern managerial state. Their general
   goals can usually be sup****ted on conservative principles, but they
   tend to base their claims on principles of natural law or revelation
   that are sometimes handled in an antitraditional way. As popular
   movements in an antitraditional public order they often adopt
   non-conservative styles of reasoning and rhetoric. Thus, these
   movements have strong conservative elements but are not purely
   conservative. It should be noted, however, that pure conservatism is
   rare or nonexistent and may not even be coherent; the point of
   conservatism is always some good other than maintenance of tradition
   as such.

   6.8 What are the differences between American conservatism and that
   of other countries?

   They correspond to the differences in political tradition. In
   general, conservatism in America has a much stronger
   capitalist/libertarian and populist streak than in other countries.
   European conservatism once emphasized sup****t for throne, altar and
   sword as hierarchical bearers of authoritative traditions. When those
   things collapsed European conservatism mostly disappeared, while in
   America those hierarchies never existed so their collapse had less
   effect. The national differences seem to be declining as other
   countries become more like America and many American conservatives
   become more alienated from their country's actual way of life and
   system of government. Especially in recent years conservatism on both
   sides of the Atlantic has emphasized opposition to new
   antitraditional hierarchies of formal expertise and bureaucratic
   position. However, American conservatism continues to have a stronger
   religious streak than present-day European conservatism and also has
   much broader and deeper sup****t.

   6.9 What do all these things called "conservatism" have in common?

   Each rejects, through an appeal to something traditionally valued,
   the liberal tendency to treat individual impulse and desire as the
   final authorities. Differences in the preferred point of reference
   give rise to different forms of conservatism. Those who appeal to the
   independent and responsible individual become libertarian
   conservatives, while those who appeal to a traditional culture or to
   God become traditionalist or religious conservatives. Depending on
   cir***stances, the alliance among different forms of conservatism may
   be closer or more tenuous. In America today libertarian,
   traditionalist and religious conservatives find common ground in
   favoring federalism and constitutional limited government and
   opposing the managerial welfare state.

-- 
Jim Kalb
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Conservatism Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Jim Kalb <skarpheddin@  2008-06-02 21:26:07 

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tan12V112 Tue Oct 14 3:27:20 CDT 2008.