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- Archive-name: conservatism/faq
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
-
- Conservatism FAQ
- May 1, 2004 Version
-
- This FAQ, posted monthly, attempts to deal with common 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.
-
- A current version of this FAQ can also be obtained by sending the
- message "send usenet/news.answers/conservatism/faq" by email to
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu. A hypertext version is available at
- http://jkalb.freeshell.org/web/consfaq.html. For further discussion and
- relevant links, see the Traditionalist Conservatism Page at
- http://jkalb.freeshell.org/web/trad.html.
-
- 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 What's the difference between following tradition and refusing to
- think?
-
- 1.4 Why isn't it better to reason things out from the beginning?
-
- 1.5 Why can't tradition be an accumulation 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 do conservatives always want to force their values on everybody
- else?
-
- 3.4 What role do conservatives think government should play in enforcing
- moral values?
-
- 3.5 Aren't conservatives racist sexist homophobes?
-
- 3.6 What happens to feminists, homosexuals, racial minorities and others
- marginalized in a conservative society?
-
- 3.7 What about freedom?
-
- 3.8 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
- support networks don't work?
-
- 4.4 What about welfare for the middle classes?
-
- 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 tradition 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 evolves through strengthening of things that work
- and rejection of things that lead 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 important; 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 accumulate, conserve and hand on such
- things.
-
- Other considerations also support 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 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.
-
- Truth is not altogether out of reach, but our access to it is
- incomplete and often indirect. Since it can not be reduced wholly
- to our possession, 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.
-
- 1.4 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.
-
- 1.5 Why can't tradition be an accumulation 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 supported 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
- has guided and motivated 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. 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.
-
- In addition, conservatism is not rejection of all change as such,
- but of intentional change of a peculiarly sweeping sort
- characteristic of the period beginning with the French Revolution
- and guided by Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment philosophies
- such as liberalism and Marxism. It is recognition that the world is
- not our creation, and that there are permanent things that 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 sex roles and heterosexism 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 contemporary liberalism furthers the
- interests of the powerful social classes that support it, and that
- movements aiming at social justice typically become intensely
- 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 overemphasizing the role of theory in politics it
- destroys reciprocity and mutual accommodation between rulers and
- ruled.
-
- In addition, conservatism is not self-contained; its recognition of
- existing practice as a standard does not mean denial that there is
- any other standard. It recognizes that moral habits evolve with
- experience and changing circumstances, that social arrangements
- that come to be too much at odds with the moral feelings of a
- people change or disappear, and that there are transcendent
- standards as well as those that exist as part of the institutions
- of a particular people. It recognizes that there can be
- improvements as well as corruptions.
-
- 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
- importance 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.
-
- 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 relationships upon which
- they rely most fundamentally, are relationships to particular
- persons rather than to the state.
-
- Family values are basic to moral life because it is primarily in
- relationships 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 support stable and
- functional family life.
-
- To the extent the necessity of practical reliance on particular
- persons is viewed as something oppressive and unequal that the
- state should remedy, family values are rejected. Conservatives
- oppose that rejection.
-
- 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. Such
- limits often arise because personal values can be realized only by
- establishing particular sorts of relations with other people, and
- no society can favor all relationships 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 support they favor the latter at the expense
- of the former; if not, they do the reverse.
-
- 3.3 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 support the arrangement through
- a tax system that sends people to jail who don't comply, and
- Conservative Jill thinks there should be family responsibility
- supported by a system of sex 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 sexual morality. For a discussion from a
- conservative perspective, see the Sexual Morality FAQ,
- http://jkalb.freeshell.org/web/sex.html.
-
- 3.4 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 than by theory and
- formal decisions, they typically prefer to rely on informal social
- sanctions rather than enforcement by government. Nonetheless, they
- believe that government should recognize the moral values 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 such 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 support 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
- circumstance. In this connection, as in others, conservatives
- typically do not have high expectations for what government can
- achieve.
-
- 3.5 Aren't conservatives racist sexist homophobes?
-
- That depends on what those words mean. They are often used very
- broadly.
-
- "Racist"--Conservatives consider community loyalty important. 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.
-
- "Sexist"--All known societies have engaged in sex-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 unisex 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 sexes in recent decades.
-
- "Homophobes"--Finally, sex-role stereotyping implies a tendency to
- reject patterns of impulse, attitude and conduct that don't fit the
- stereotypes, such as homosexuality.
-
- For a more extended discussion from a conservative perspective of
- issues relating to the liberal demand for "inclusiveness", see the
- Anti-Inclusiveness FAQ, http://jkalb.freeshell.org/web/inclus.html.
-
- 3.6 What happens to feminists, homosexuals, 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 important. They find themselves in a
- social order they may not like dominated by people who may look
- down on them in which it may be 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, to practice the way of
- life they prefer among themselves, or to 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 well be able to
- thrive or at least maintain themselves 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 importance of their (and every other) ethnic
- culture.
-
- One important 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 peripheral to the concerns of the institutions that
- dominate their lives, and so feel marginalized.
-
- 3.7 What about freedom?
-
- Conservatives are strong supporters of social institutions that
- realize and protect freedom, but believe 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
- 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.
-
- 3.8 And justice?
-
- Justice between man and man is respect for concrete obligations and
- individual responsibility. Conservatives take both very seriously.
-
- Social justice is the ordering of social life toward the good for
- man. Social injustice is systematic destruction of the conditions
- for existence of that good. Because the good for man can not 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 horrendous crimes including, in several
- modern instances, the murder of millions of innocents. Since social
- justice must evolve rather than be constructed its furtherance
- 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 can not be
- correct since men differ and what is just for them must therefore
- also differ. In addition, the goods which that view is concerned to
- divide equally--wealth, power and the like--do not appear to be
- the ultimate human goods and therefore can not appropriately 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, pornography, and the sale of certain drugs.
-
- Conservatives strongly 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
- only 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 they live with.
- 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 an end to progress in reducing poverty.
-
- 4.3 What about people for whom the usual support 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.
-
- 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 government does things that weaken
- self-reliance and the moral bonds that give rise to community, and
- that can not be made to work without an elaborate system of
- compulsion, in the long run it will increase suffering and
- degradation.
-
- Conservatives are therefore suspicious of social welfare programs,
- especially attempts at categorical solutions. Suspicion has
- rational limits. Some government social welfare measures (free
- clinics for mothers and children or local systems of support 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 support
- voluntarily the institutions and programs they think socially
- beneficial.
-
- 4.4 What about welfare for the middle classes, like social security,
- medicare, the home mortgage interest deduction, and so on?
-
- The most consistent conservatives want to get rid of all 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 supporting 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 in the case of the mortgage interest deduction 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 supporters.
-
- 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. Why not
- worry about them?
-
- 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 fashion existing trends will be
- reversed and in important 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.
-
- 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. Membership 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. Accordingly, they
- reject efforts to divide human affairs into compartments to be
- dealt with by experts as part of an overall plan for promoting
- comprehensive 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 free rein to them, 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 it could of course tell us
- very little; 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 knowable apart from it nor merely
- traditional. 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 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 points. Existing welfare and civil rights
- measures make sense only as part of a comprehensive centrally
- managed system that is adverse to the connections among men that
- make community possible, and is designed to reorder society as a
- whole through bureaucratic decree. It is very difficult 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 feel bound to a viewpoint that does not value loyalty
- and can therefore survive only if it is fundamentally 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
- fundamental 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. Some 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, sexism, 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 accumulator 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 proportions 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; typically, 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 conservatives most of whom were liberals until left-wing
- radicalism went mass-market in the sixties. Their positions
- continue to evolve; some still have positions consistent with New
- Deal liberalism, while others have moved on to a more full-blown
- 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 proportion
- 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 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 arose as a self-conscious group in
- opposition to neoconservatives after the success of the neos in
- establishing 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 consistent with those of most paleoconservatives as
- well as many neoconservatives.
-
- 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.
-
- 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. (It has also published 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 in opposition to that of the modern managerial
- state. Their general goals can usually be supported on conservative
- principles, but they tend to base their claims ultimately 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 support for throne, altar and
- sword as hierarchical bearers of authoritative traditions. In
- America those hierarchies never existed, and especially in recent
- years conservatism has emphasized opposition to new antitraditional
- hierarchies of formal expertise and bureaucratic position. These
- differences seem to be declining as other countries become more
- like America and as many American conservatives become more
- alienated from their country's actual way of life and system of
- government.
-
- 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 circumstances, 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 (http://jkalb.org)
-