Tag Archive: conservatives


Friday Night Philosophy

In a few weeks the people of the most powerful democracy on Earth will elect the two most powerful people on Earth. Voters will cast their votes for many reasons, including national security, the economy, health care, social views, and other. The “other” will include those who make their choice according to religious belief. And the votes of those people will mostly favour the conservative party, the Republicans, and this  may very well determine the outcome of the election. Those voters will be earnest Christians who profess to follow the teachings of one of the gentlest men ever to walk this Earth, Jesus Christ. Yet most of those people will hold to the view that “the meek shall not inherit the Earth”.

They will also see nothing inconsistent in their demand that all women, irrespective of their beliefs, should adhere to the religious belief that abortion is a sin because it is the taking of a human life; or that during its lifetime they should take no responsibility for her child’s health care, food, shelter, education, and welfare; or that it is not a sin to take his/her life by execution, or send him/her off to kill others, and possibly to his/her death.

So why is it that millions of people subscribe to the hypocrisy of this glaringly inconsistent application of the teachings of Christ? Perhaps for an answer we should look first to the words of the Roman philosopher, Seneca, who observed in the first century AD that:

“Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by the rulers as useful.”

And then to the maxim held by the Jesuits:

“Give me a child for his first seven years and I’ll give you the man”.

For two thousand years rulers have gratefully accepted Seneca’s truth, and have religiously applied it by faithfully following the maxim of the Jesuits.

Thus, we have hundreds of millions of people who are living their lives serving the interests of the rich and powerful in the belief that they are living a life guided by religious dogma, which will ensure that their life will continue after their death. And along the way the priests will have been permitted to share in the spoils by reaching agreement with the rich and powerful that the priests should retain power over men’s souls while the rulers retain power over their bodies. Power over their minds is the province of both, so long as each keeps to their own turf. This has resulted in many turf wars over the years when the priests see scientific truth threatening their authority, such as is the case with stem cell research, evolution, and cosmic discovery. They then attempt to bring the rulers to heel to re-establish their authority, for without it they lose their reason for being.

But the two usually resolve any differences in order to maintain a profitable alliance which works for them….so long as no-one looks too closely at the underlying hypocrisy that supports both systems. And education steadily undermines that support. As ignorance gives way to reason, so too do the foundations of the unholy alliance. That is when one becomes a liberal; liberal in the sense that they are liberated from the confining mental restrictions of religious dogma. They may not support liberal politics, and may still vote conservative for reasons such as national security and/or economics. They may even join the ranks of the rulers in order to serve those ends, thus vindicating Seneca.

A liberal will be aware of the power exercised over men’s minds by the media and the priests, and will look elsewhere for answers to life’s questions. Science will play a more important role in his/her personal philosophy, and he/she will have a more enquiring mind as a consequence. One only has to look around the conservative fundamentalist religious blogs for confirmation of this. There is little of interest, other than their own narrow focus. There is little persuasive reasoning other than ”I believe this, therefore it is true”. They are locked in the safety of their human centric world and dare not venture out. Yet they loudly proclaim their “freedom”, and their right to impose it on others.

Which is fine, so long as they don’t acquire the power to kill you. No, I know they’re not going to come looking for you, but they can still kill you. They are advocates for war, and their paranoia knows no bounds. Their mindless denial of global warming may one day kill us all. So what do we do about that? Well, there’s nothing we can do. Reason has no place in their thinking; emotion rules all. Change will only come about when the media and the priests finally get the message that their survival is at stake, and revise the message to the faithful. But profits will take precedence over all else until the bitter end is apparent even to the most bigoted climate change denier. That it may then be too late is the supreme irony. By clinging to their materialistic beliefs for so long, they will have hastened their appointment with the God they looked to for divine guidance on Earth.

In the series of videos I posted, it is made clear that both the Muslim extremists and the neocons are in agreement on one thing. That is, that religion must be imposed on the masses and, in the case of the neocons, even if the imposers themselves do not believe it. This is why the neocons cultivated the fundamentalist religions to the conservative cause. Prior to this, the fundamentalists did not vote, being content to believe that “The Lord will provide”. It was a simple matter for the neocons to influence the priests to their conservative views, and then the priests, having already prepared the way by capturing the minds of their flocks, to similarly influence them. Given the proclivity of the priests to amass their personal wealth, there may well have been some monetary consideration to smooth the way.

So we are now “blessed” with a conservative movement in the U.S. and elsewhere, whose aim, contrary to true Christian principles, is to roll back the years of liberal progress, and to re-establish control over the minds of the masses through religious and nationalistic fervour. Attention is diverted from economic issues by focusing on the persecution of homosexuals and women who wish to exercise their right to choose abortion; this, while the conservatives loudly proclaim “freedom” as their call to arms. Hitler would nod approvingly. Persecution of minorities, and nationalism, is straight from the manual he might have written, “Fascism for Beginners”.

So, having conquered the minds of U.S. fundamentalists, the neoconservatives then set themselves a greater task. They set out to conquer the world, while the conservatives sought to cement the victory at home by destroying the concept of liberalism completely. Such is the true belief of the conservative in “freedom”.

It was the neocons who used 9/11 as an excuse to motivate an intellectually challenged President to carry out their long hoped for invasion of Iraq. In the process, hundreds of thousands of lives were lost. But no neocon life was lost. They followed the neocon creed that it isn’t necessary to believe the myths that they impose on the masses in order to influence them to do their bidding; so much better to bravely volunteer others to risk their lives. Such breathtaking duplicity should not go unpunished, but it does. They still pull the strings controlling willing puppet Bush, and will seek to continue on their murderous ways under a McCain/Palin administration. Palin is already one of their conquests, while McCain marches to the beat of the drums of that other manipulator of public opinion, big business.

The influence of the neocons was apparent when we were lied to about the reason for going into Iraq, because that is their modus operandi; scare the masses into implementing their hidden agenda by lying to them, and exaggerating the threat of attack. In the climate of fear prevailing after 9/11 it was not difficult to persuade the masses to war, even though the country to be invaded had nothing to do with 9/11. While a cynical world correctly pointed to oil as the real reason for the invasion, it is my belief that the neocons also had a more sinister agenda, and that agenda is Zionism. Connect the dots. Twenty-five of the top fifty neocons are Jewish, as was their mentor, Richard Strauss. And no, I’m not anti-Semitic, just one who seeks to explain why Jews should be so overrepresented in that group of neocons as compared to their proportion of the population of the U.S. as a whole. And how ironic is it that those Jews seek to emulate the methods of the man who tried to exterminate them in the holocaust.

The prescient words of Sir Norman Angell, who was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 1933 come to mind:

“The vested interests – if we explain the situation by their influence – can only get the public to act as they wish by manipulating public opinion, by playing either upon the public’s indifference, confusions, prejudices, pugnacities or fears. And the only way in which the power of the interests can be undermined and their manoeuvres defeated is by bringing home to the public the danger of its indifference, the absurdity of its prejudices, or the hollowness of its fears; by showing that it is indifferent to danger where real danger exists; frightened by dangers which are nonexistent.” Sir Norman Angell 1872 – 1967

The coming election in the U.S. is not about who puts lipstick on pigs as the conservatives would so trivialise it to be. It is about whether we permit them to continue to wreak their havoc on the world, while shadowy men lurk in the background manipulating public opinion to suit their own ends. We in other countries can only await the outcome, and trust that the good people of the U.S. get it right.

‘Til next week.

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What conservatives really think of Palin

http://www.swamppolitics.com/news/politics/blog/2008/09/palin_means_its_over_peggy_noo.html

Peggy Noonan and Mike Murphy, two Republican insiders who have shaped the images and messages of presidents and presidential wannabes, really don't like Sen. John McCain's selection of Gov. Sarah Palin to be his running mate.

And Noonan evidently believes the choice of Palin means the presidential race is "over" and presumably not in a way that would favor McCain.

We know this because Noonan and Murphy were on MSNBC today and pulled a "Jesse Jackson," which means expressing one's true feelings when you believe the microphone is off.

Murphy, who's consulted McCain in the past, referred to the Palin pick as "cynical" and that it clashed with McCain's reputation as a non-cynical politician. He also said he didn't think the McCain campaign's strategy was going to work.

Noonan, who wrote important and memorable speeches for Presidents Reagan and Bush the first, used an earthy word to describe the Republican strategy.

Here's a transcript I've produced of what the participants thought was an off-air exchange.

Murphy: You know, I come out of a blue, swing-state governor world. Engler, Whitman, Tommy Thompson, Mitt Romney, Jeb Bush, I mean, and these guys, this is all like how you win a Texas race, you run it up. it's not going to work.

Noonan: It's over.

Murphy: Still McCain can give a version of the Lieberman speech to do himself some good.

Todd: Don't you think the Palin pick was insulting to to Kay Bailey Hutchison?

Noonan: I saw Kay this morning.

Murphy or Todd: She's never been comfortable about that.. I mean

(Someone says something unintelligible.)

Todd: Is she really the most qualified woman?

Noonan: The most qualified no. I think they went for this excuse me political bullshit about narratives..

Todd: Yeah, they went to narratives.

Noonan: Every time Republicans do that, because that's not where they live and it's not what they're good at, they blow it.

Murphy: You know what's really the worst thing about it? The greatness of McCain is no cynicism

Todd: and this is cynical. And as you called it gimmicky.

Murphy: Yeah.

Tood: Thanks guys.

Murphy: See you later.


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And the masses slumber on…

http://www.alternet.org/democracy/95372/the_plot_against_liberal_america/?page=entire

The Plot Against Liberal America

By Thomas Frank, The New Statesman. Posted August 18, 2008.

Conservatives don't want to debate, they want to destroy their opposition.

The most cherished dream of conservative Washington is that liberalism can somehow be defeated, finally and irreversibly, in the way that armies are beaten and pests are exterminated. Electoral victories by Republicans are just part of the story. The larger vision is of a future in which liberalism is physically barred from the control room — of an "end of history" in which taxes and onerous regulation will never be allowed to threaten the fortunes private individuals make for themselves. This is the longing behind the former White House aide Karl Rove's talk of "permanent majority" and, 20 years previously, disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff's declaration to the Republican convention that it's "the job of all revolutions to make permanent their gains."

When I first moved to contemplate this peculiar utopian vision, I was struck by its apparent futility. What I did not understand was that beating liberal ideas was not the goal. The Washington conservatives aim to make liberalism irrelevant not by debating, but by erasing it. Building a majority coalition has always been a part of the program, and conservatives have enjoyed remarkable success at it for more than 30 years. But winning elections was not a bid for permanence by itself. It was only a means.

The end was capturing the state, and using it to destroy liberalism as a practical alternative. The pattern was set by Margaret Thatcher, who used state power of the heaviest-handed sort to implant permanently the anti-state ideology.

"Economics are the method; the object is to change the soul," she said, echoing Stalin. In the 34 years before she became prime minister, Britain rode a see-saw of nationalization, privatization and renationalization; Thatcher set out to end the game for good. Her plan for privatising council housing was designed not only to enthrone the market, but to encourage an ownership mentality and "change the soul" of an entire class of voters. When she sold off nationally owned industries, she took steps to ensure that workers received shares at below-market rates, leading hopefully to the same soul transformation. Her brutal suppression of the miners' strike in 1984 showed what now awaited those who resisted the new order. As a Business Week reporter summarized it in 1987: "She sees her mission as nothing less than eradicating Labour Party socialism as a political alternative."

In their own pursuit of the free-market utopia, America's right-wingers did not have as far to travel as their British cousins, and they have never needed to use their state power so ruthlessly. But the pattern is the same: scatter the left's constituencies, hack open the liberal state and reward friendly businesses with the loot.

Grover Norquist, one of the most influential conservatives in Washington and the "field marshal of the Bush plan," according to the Nation magazine, has been most blunt about using the power of the state "to crush the structures of the left." He has outlined the plan countless times in countless venues: the liberal movement is supported by a number of "pillars," each of which can be toppled by conservatives when in power. Among Norquist's suggestions has been the undermining of defense lawyers — who in the US give millions of dollars to liberal causes — with measures "potentially costing [them] billions of dollars of lost income." Conservatives could also "crush labour unions as a political entity" by forcing unions to get annual written approval from every member before spending union funds on political activities. His coup de grace is that the Democratic Party in its entirety would become "a dead man walking" with the privatization of social security.

Much of this program has already been accomplished, if not on the precise terms Norquist suggested. The shimmering dream of privatizing social security, though, remains the great unreachable right-wing prize, and the right persists in the campaign, regardless of the measure's unpopularity or the number of political careers it costs. President Bush announced privatisation to be his top priority on the day after his re-election in 2004, although he had not emphasized this issue during the campaign. He proceeded to chase it deep into the land of political unpopularity, a region from which he never really returned.

He did this because the potential rewards of privatizing social security justify any political cost. At one stroke, it would both de-fund the operations of government and utterly reconfigure the way Americans interact with the state. It would be irreversible, too; the "transition costs" in any scheme to convert social security are so vast that no country can consider incurring them twice. Once the deal has been done and the trillions of dollars that pass through social security have been diverted from the US Treasury to stocks in private companies, the effects would be locked in for good. First, there would be an immediate flood of money into Wall Street; second, there would be an equivalent flow of money out of government accounts, immediately propelling the federal deficit up into the stratosphere and de-funding a huge part of the federal activity.

Business elites

The overall effect for the nation's politics would be to elevate for ever the rationale of the financial markets over such vague liberalisms as "the common good" and "the public interest." The practical results of such a titanic redirection of the state are easy to predict, given the persistent political demands of Wall Street: low wage growth, even weaker labour organisations, a free hand for management in downsizing, in polluting, and so on.

The longing for permanent victory over liberalism is not unique to the west. In country after country, business elites have come up with ingenious ways to limit the public's political choices. One of the most effective of these has been massive public debt. Naomi Klein has pointed out, in case after case, that the burden of debt has forced democratic countries to accept a laissez-faire system that they find deeply distasteful. Regardless of who borrowed the money, these debts must be repaid — and repaying them, in turn, means that a nation must agree to restructure its economy the way bankers bid: by deregulating, privatizing and cutting spending.

Republicans have ridden to power again and again promising balanced budgets — government debt was "mortgaging our future," Ronald Reagan admonished in his inaugural address — but once in office they proceed, with a combination of tax cuts and spending increases, to inflate the federal deficit to levels far beyond those reached by their supposedly open-handed liberal rivals. The formal justification is one of the all-time great hoaxes. By cutting taxes, it is said, you will unleash such economic growth that federal revenues will actually increase, so all the additional government spending will be paid for.

Even the theory's proponents don't really believe it. David Stockman, the libertarian budget director of the first Reagan administration, did the maths in 1980 and realised it would not rescue the government; it would wreck the government. This is the point where most people would walk away. Instead, Stockman decided it had medicinal value. He realized that with their government brought to the brink of fiscal collapse, the liberals would either have to acquiesce in the reconfiguration of the state or else see the country destroyed. Stockman was candid about this: the left would "have to dismantle [the government's] bloated, wasteful, and unjust spending enterprises — or risk national ruin."

This is government-by-sabotage: deficits were a way to smash a liberal state. The Reagan deficits did precisely this. When Reagan took over in 1981, he inherited an annual deficit of $59bn and a national debt of $914bn; by the time he and his successor George Bush had finished their work, they had quintupled the deficit and pumped the debt up to more than $3trn. Bill Clinton called the deficit "Stockman's Revenge" — and it dominated all other topics within his administration's economic teams. With the chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan himself speaking of "financial catastrophe" unless steps were taken to control Reagan's deficit, Clinton was soon a convert. He got tough with the federal workforce.

So-called virtues

George W Bush proceeded to plunge the budget into deficit again. Indeed, after seeing how the Reagan deficit had forced Clinton's hand, it would have been foolish for a conservative not to spend his way back into the hole as rapidly as possible. "It's perfectly fine for them to waste money," says Robert Reich, a former labour secretary to Bill Clinton, summarizing the conservative viewpoint. "If the public thinks government is wasteful, that's fine. That reduces public faith in government, which is precisely what the Republicans want."

In 1964, the political theorist James Burnham diagnosed liberalism as "the ideology of western suicide." What Burnham meant by this was that liberalism's so-called virtues — its openness and its insistence on equal rights for everyone — made it vulnerable to any party that refuses to play by the rules. The "suicide" that all of this was meant to describe was liberalism's inevitable destruction at the hands of communism, a movement in whose ranks Burnham had once marched himself. But his theory seems more accurately to describe the stratagems of its fans on the American right. And the correct term for the disasters that have disabled the liberal state is not suicide, but vandalism. Loot the Treasury, dynamite the dam, take a crowbar to the monument and throw a wrench into the gears. Slam the locomotive into reverse, toss something heavy on the throttle, and jump for it.

Mainstream American political commentary customarily assumes that the two political parties do whatever they do as mirror images of each other; that if one is guilty of some misstep, the other is equally culpable. But there is no symmetry. Liberalism, as we know it, arose out of a compromise between left-wing social movements and business interests. It depends on the efficient functioning of certain organs of the state; it does not call for all-out war on private industry.

Conservatism, on the other hand, speaks not of compromise, but of removing its adversaries from the field altogether. While no one dreams of sawing off those branches of the state that protect conservatism's constituents — the military, the police, legal privileges granted to corporations — conservatives openly fantasize about doing away with the bits of "big government" that serve liberal ends. While de-funding the left is the north star of the conservative project, there is no comparable campaign to "de-fund the right"; indeed, it would be difficult to imagine one.

"Over the past 30 years, American politics has become more money-centered at exactly the same time that American society has grown more unequal," the political scientists Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson have written. The resources and organizational heft of the well-off and hyper-conservative have exploded. But the organizational resources of middle-income Americans … have atrophied. The resulting inequality has greatly benefited the Republican Party while drawing it closer to its most affluent and extreme supporters."

In this sense, conservative Washington is a botch that keeps on working, constructing an imbalance that will tilt our politics rightward for years, a plutocracy that will stand, regardless of who wins the next few elections. And as American inequality widens, the clout of money will only grow more powerful.

As I write this, the lobbyist-fuelled conservative boom of the past ten years is being supplanted by a distinct conservative bust: like the real-estate speculators who are dumping properties all over the country, conservative senators and representatives are heading for the revolving door in record numbers.

Plutocracy

The Democrats who have taken their place are an improvement, certainly, but for the party's more entrepreneurial leaders electoral success in 2006 was merely an opportunity to accelerate their own courtship of Washington's lobbyists, think-tanks and pressure groups staked out on K Street. Democratic leaders have proved themselves the Republicans' equals in circumvention of campaign finance laws.

Throwing the rascals out is no longer enough. The problem is structural; it is inscribed on the map; it glows from the illuminated logos on the contractors' office buildings; it is built into the systems of governance themselves. A friend of mine summarized this concisely as we were lunching in one of those restaurants where the suits and the soldiers get together. Sweeping his hand so as to take in our fellow diners and all the contractors' offices beyond, he said, "So you think all of this is just going to go away if Obama gets in?" This whole economy, all these profits?

He's right, of course; maybe even righter than he realized. It would be nice if electing Democrats was all that was required to resuscitate the America that the right flattened, but it will take far more than that. A century ago, an epidemic of public theft persisted, despite a long string of reformers in the White House, Republicans and Democrats, each promising to clean the place up. Nothing worked, and for this simple reason: democracy cannot work when wealth is distributed as lopsidedly as theirs was-and as ours is. The inevitable consequence of plutocracy, then and now, is bought government.

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Thomas Frank is the author of "The Wrecking Crew."


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I’m glad I’m a liberal.

http://www.alternet.org/mediaculture/78662/?page=entire

Let's Pay Tribute to the Spectacular Wrongness of William F. Buckley

By David Michael Green, AlterNet. Posted March 5, 2008.

William F. Buckley was a smart man, that's for sure.

He could throw around more ten-dollar words than his beloved Catholic Church has sinners (even excluding the priesthood). He knew all the right places to ski and the proper wines to drink while listening to this concerto or appreciating that symphony. A product of privilege right down to the French boarding schools he attended, Buckley was as sophisticated, erudite and insightful as they come.

Except on the subject of politics, that is — which just happened to be his life's great work.

And aren't we lucky for it?

I mean, what can you say about a guy who wrote "General Franco is an authentic national hero" at the same time he found Dwight Eisenhower too liberal to endorse for president? What are we to make of a lover of democracy who called whites in the American South "the advanced race," entitled to prevail politically even if they were numerically inferior, and who even left the door open to using violence toward that end? Heck, for that matter, what can be said of someone so culturally perceptive that he could write, "The Beatles are not merely awful. They are so unbelievably horrible, so appallingly unmusical, so dogmatically insensitive to the magic of the art, that they qualify as crowned heads of anti-music." (Was it the "We're more popular than Jesus" quote that rattled you Bill, or were you just jealous about all the screaming chicks?)

What can we say about a guy this spectacularly wrong? Probably he got it best himself when he noted, "I profoundly believe it takes a lot of practice to become a moral slob." As it turned out, he got a lot of practice.

Buckley is often credited with being the father of modern conservatism (pardon the oxymoron) in America. It is said that before he founded the National Review in 1955, there was essentially no such movement in the country. It is said (no less than by Reagan himself), that the line is drawn directly from Buckley to Goldwater to Reagan. (For some completely inexplicable reason, conservatives usually leave off Gingrich and Bush the Younger from that genealogy.)

Buckley was an astute observer of the human condition, despite keeping, shall we say, a certain polite distance from most of the poor humans who happen to find themselves stuck in that sometimes challenging condition. He was once asked by NPR's Terry Gross whether being raised in European boarding schools and being a member of Yale's notoriously elitist Skull and Bones Society hadn't left Buckley a trifle, um, out of touch with real people (the hoi polloi, that is, as they're referred to at the Club)? Au contraire!, he skillfully parried. Buckley did a lot of reading and therefore understood people quite well!

So well, indeed, that he came out in support of segregation during the era when the civil rights movement was the most important, the most consuming political question of the day. So who do you think history will judge to have gotten this question right, eh? — Martin Luther King Jr. or Bill Buckley? One could say that Buckley's position was just about the most spectacular example ever recorded of the missing of a historical train. There was Ol' Bill (who actually didn't even have the excuse then of being old), standing on the (whites only) platform, watching the Morality Express go whooshing by.

But then, wasn't missing just such trains precisely the point of conservatism?

Buckley certainly thought so. In the essay with which he launched the National Review, he committed it and the conservative movement to the project of "stand[ing] athwart history, yelling Stop."

Yep, that's actually a bona fide quote from the man himself. If that sounds a bit anachronistic as the grand rallying cry for a modern political movement, you're — ahem — still not getting it, I'm afraid. The thwarting and reversal of progress is precisely the point of conservatism.

After all, progress is scary. Progress is difficult. Progress is messy. And progress means having to share.

So Buckley launched a movement to yell "Stop!" and they all did, and they were grandly successful, as a matter of fact. For three decades, conservatives have ruled America and stopped progressive change in its tracks. Moreover, they've worked assiduously to undo those achievements that so many of us took for granted as the very markers of civilization itself.

Sometimes they have only wanted to unravel a couple of decades worth of history, as when they oppose civil rights, women's rights or environmentalism. Sometimes it is more on the order of a century, as when they seek to dismantle social safety net programs like Social Security and Medicare. Sometimes their handiwork goes back several centuries, as when they find First Amendment ideas such as separation of church and state to be troublesome, or when they object to that whole pesky checks-and-balances thing. But sometimes it is the work of an entire millennium they wish to unravel, as they rip up the inconvenient notions of democracy itself, expressed as far back as the Magna Carta.

So, how 'bout it folks? Anybody here excited to return our society to the gleaming days of the 12th century? Watch where you step in the street! I mean, um, the latrine. Well, what's the difference, anyhow? And monarchy is really not so bad after all, you know — once you get used to it. It only has a bad name because it gets treated so unfairly by the liberal press. You know, like George W. Bush.

So let's do it, huh?! Back we go!

All you nice Negroes out there, I'm afraid we're going to need to ask you to use that other drinking fountain from now on. Sorry about that. Careful with your chains, too, if you would please. And ladies, I think you remember your proper position in conservative society, do you not? That's right. Take off your shoes — you won't be needing them anymore. Now assume the position. Careers? Oh, that's a laugh. Political equality? Such a comedian! Family planning? How's your rhythm?

We won't be bothering with environmental stewardship anymore, either. (Or, more accurately, I should say we won't be bothering with pretending to bother with environmental stewardship anymore.) When your grandkids ask why it seems so awfully toasty on Spaceship Earth these days, just tell 'em Bill Buckley sent you. But be sure to be nice to them, since you'll be hitting them up, cap-in-hand, every week, the demons of Social Security and Medicare having finally been vanquished by heroic conservatives. That begging thing you'll be getting good at in your twilight years is what nice right-wingers like to call 'self-reliance'. Bully for you — you're finally off the government dole!

Such changes might have been hard to get through Congress, but that's only if one existed, of course! But — the present farce notwithstanding — having a Congress would mean having democracy, which conservatives never supported at the time it was being born. Just like they never supported American independence from the British Empire, the abolitionist movement against slavery, the social safety net, civil rights, women's rights, gay rights or environmentalism — at least until decades later, when it was safe (and supererogatory, as Buckley might say), if they did all. Anyhow, governing is so much easier now that the unitary executive idea has migrated from slogan to metaphor to rationale to monarchy.

And hasn't it all just turned out dandy? See how thrilled Americans are with their conservative movement! Witness the record-breaking levels of support for King George! See how they rally behind his nice war in god's name! See how all the king's policies and all the king's men command the loyalty of his subjects! See the people in this election season filling the streets and ardently clamoring for "Stasis Now!" — the very words boldly printed upon their placards! Watch them reviling the notion of change at every juncture! See them at campaign rallies, desperately seeking to stand athwart history, heroically trying to shout out "Stop!" and valiantly attempting to build a bridge to yesterday!

Yep, William F. Buckley was a smart man, all right. One can't help but think that he saw the handwriting on the wall, block letters growing every day more boldly vivid and fluorescently bright such that they have now taken over and indeed become the wall.

Conservatism has ruled America for three decades now and never more than in the last seven years. Backward, deceitful, polarizing, warlike, arrogant, racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, destructive, intolerant, ignorant, lethal and incompetent — it's just plain ugly, isn't it? Ergo — as you might have said, Bill — Americans have awakened sufficiently from their Buckley-induced stupor to now join the rest of the world in embracing this ideology about as much as they might welcome a whopping good case of leprosy. And with roughly the same results if they did.

Eighty-two years old, one can't help but think that smart Bill Buckley got out while the getting was good, just months before the election that would seal forever the fate of his destructive little life's project.

Perhaps he had actually come to believe his own words from an earlier time: "Some of my instincts are reprehensible."

They say he died at his desk, about to write another essay. Maybe it was entitled "The Achievements of My Life as a Conservative." And maybe it was sitting there staring at that very, very blank page that killed him.

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David Michael Green is a professor of political science at Hofstra University. He is delighted to receive readers' reactions to his articles (dmg@regressiveantidote.net), but regrets that time constraints do not always allow him to respond. More of his work can be found at www.regressiveantidote.net.

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http://www.newmatilda.com/2008/02/14/ersatz-conservative

An Ersatz Conservative

Ann Coulter said she'd rather vote for Hillary; Rush Limbaugh claimed he'd kill the GOP. It seems Republican frontrunner John McCain is having trouble winning over the Party base, writes Binoy Kampmark

"John McCain has a lot of work to do to get the Republican Party solidly behind him."
Kris Kobach, Kansas GOP Chairman, 9 Feb 2008

As Republican Presidential hopeful Senator John McCain begins to look like the anointed nominee for the Republican Party, his obstacles are not necessarily growing any smaller. An entourage suffering from what has been termed "McCain-Derangement Syndrome" has begun a savage campaign against the Senator from Arizona. And they are not Democrats.

At the start of the campaign, when labels were being shed like light clothing on a summer day, one thing kept coming back to haunt McCain: he was not a "true" conservative. For David Frum of the American Enterprise Institute, who first encouraged George Bush to use the term "axis of evil", McCain is flawed, an ersatz conservative: liberal on immigration, liberal on taxation, questionable on gun rights. He may even be soft on gay rights. John Podhoretz of the conservative magazine Commentary suggests that McCain is disliked because "he is not a team player".

Right-wing darling Ann Coulter spearheads the anti-McCain drive. She prefers scattergun abuse to reflective commentary, and has intimated that she might leave the US – or at the very least vote for Hillary Clinton – if McCain is confirmed as the Republican nominee. But this pundit and self-proclaimed "angry minx", who once called Senator John Edwards a "faggot" and sees Christianity as a "fast-track program" to spiritual perfection, has made McCain-hating an article of faith.

Some of the following stems from her Young America's Foundation address earlier this month. On McCain's age: "[He] is working for the New York Times obituary." On McCain's Prisoner of War record: "I know that [he was a POW] because he mentions it more often than [John] Kerry mentions Vietnam. There were thousands of POWs and we are not going to make all of them President." Voting for Clinton would be the necessary antidote, an unnatural alliance akin to the World War II alliance between the West and Generalissimo Stalin. She would not even compare McCain to Hitter – "Hitler had a coherent tax policy."

Rush Limbaugh, shock-jock heard on no less than 600 stations across the US, is another convert of McCain-hating. To a caller on his radio show, he claimed that voting for either McCain or former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee would kill the GOP. As Super Tuesday was taking place, Limbaugh insisted that McCain had embraced the left "in order to stab the back of his own party". A letter of plea from the 1996 Republican nominee Bob Dole to tone down the vitriol was rebuffed. Limbaugh could only assume that Dole had been "manipulated" by the McCain campaign.

Other radio personalities, like Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham, assume similar positions. McCain, claimed Ingraham on Bill O'Reilly's Fox program, conspired with "liberals" to curtail free speech, sabotage Bush's tax cuts, and offer amnesty to illegal immigrants. The GOP, laments another conservative talk show host Glenn Beck, has lost its "soul", and McCain's success so far is a symptom of it. Like Coulter, a McCain nomination would lead Beck to cross the floor. The Clintons must be amused. The very people who made Hillary-hating a pastime in the 1990s are flocking to her in droves.

Commentators can barely believe it. CNN contributor Roland S Martin could only call such tribal invective "irrational and hysterical", more than a touch "silly" . McCain's enemies do not necessarily reflect rank-and-file opinion within the GOP – a Pew Poll suggests that McCain's approval lies at a healthy 72 percent, with only 19 distinctly unhappy. His voting record, far from being liberal, is solidly conservative.

What are the alternatives? Mitt Romney has suspended his campaign, disabling a crucial anti-McCain front in the process. But his delegates lie in the wings, waiting to be wooed before the Republican Convention. Huckabee could snatch them, which would satisfy those like James Dobson, who openly declared his opposition against McCain on Super Tuesday. Huckabee, who Dobson endorsed, comes across as a paragon of conservatism, unflinchingly devout, with an appealing brand that has done well with evangelicals. Newsweek's recent poll showed McCain leading Huckabee among conservatives by a small margin (49 to 43 percentage points). Yet Huckabee, with the help of such groups as Kansans for Life won 104 out of 105 counties in the Kansas caucus, plus Louisiana.

But Huckabee is not, as Limbaugh and Hannity argue, a suitable conservative either. He does not market himself as an imitative cowboy in the guise of either Bush President, but a squirrel-eating, salt of the earth "hick". His reluctance to employ the death penalty, and his class origins, mark him out as unreliable. Notwithstanding these obstacles he promises to remain a significant threat – some conservative groups aligned against McCain, along with the large number of typing voices in the blogosphere, see Huckabee as the only hope. Prominent Republicans who don't are simply, as Tim Einenkel of Air America Radio put it, keen on taking "southern hick votes" but not the candidacy of "an actual red-dirt, poor, working class guy". The GOP is dividing along class lines.

The position of McCain's noisy opponents on the right is this: far better ensure defeat for the conservatives than elect a leader who will unalterably change them. The change they all fear is historical inevitability: the dissolution of the Reagan coalition, that powerful group that included libertarians, traditionalists and evangelicals. That change will involve moving to the political centre, embracing fiscal restraint and closing Guantánamo's detention facilities. But they can't endorse the alternative: a working class Baptist preacher who will fan class populism and religious fervor, the voice of low-income America that rages against the IRS.

Limbaugh and company are just not interested in the business of governing, preferring a resume of ideological horn blowing. A party that continues to believe in tax cuts in times of war even as the world's largest economy heads into a recession must have overdosed on too many Fox News specials. That much Frum admits. But neither McCain or Huckabee will kill the GOP. That, in a sense, has already happened. And the executor, as Peggy Noonan put it in the Wall Street Journal was the younger Bush, the man who sundered "a great political coalition" by detaching the White House from its core supporters.

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Well, fancy that…

http://www.alternet.org/stories/62436/

Why Liberals Are Smarter than Conservatives

By Erica Schickel, HuffingtonPost.com. Posted September 19, 2007.

The results are in from a new scientific study.

Once again science has confirmed what we already know: liberals and conservatives think differently. Neuroscientists at NYU and UCLA conducted a simple test on college students all along the political spectrum.They were seated in front of computers and given the simple task of pressing a key every time the letter "M" flashed on the screen. Here's the hitch: every once in a while the letter "W" would flash and the subjects were told to not push a key when they saw "W."

Both groups recognized the letter "M" accurately. But when that pesky "W" popped up the conservatives just couldn't help themselves and — DOH! — they pushed the key! They simply could not recognize any letter not being "M." They continued to dogmatically stab away at the keyboard not seeing the letter so plainly in front of them. Everyone, of course, was hooked up to electroencephalograms, and liberals EEG's lit up like pinball machines while apprehending and considering all the subtle differences between "M" and "W." They made fewer mistakes and demonstrated a greater subtlety of mind. Conservatives, ever the partisans, just declared "W" was "M" and called it a day.

But lookout! The researchers threw a curveball by reversing the test, flashing "W's" and asking subjects to ignore the "M's." The results were exactly the same. If told"W" is the order of the day, then well, by heck. That's just what they're gonna do. It's that simple.

History has already shown that conservatives are suckers for "W." The letter has some kind of hypnotic effect on them, causing them to jab their index fingers at things — liberals, mostly. "W" is their kind of letter, all points, aggressive, starting favorite conservative words like "War" and "Wealth" and "Welfare State." If you built a giant "W" out of steel and dropped a liberal on it, he would be impaled through his head, heart and groin. Yee-haw, it's BBQ!

Frank J. Sulloway, a researcher at UC Berkeley's Institute of Personality and Social Research told The Los Angeles Times that the results "provided an elegant demonstration that individual differences on a conservative-liberal dimension are strongly related to brain activity." The Times reports that "liberals were 4.9 times as likely as conservatives to show activity in the brain circuits that deal with conflicts, and 2.2 times as likely to score in the top half of the distribution for accuracy." Thus with one, simple experiment we have solved the mystery of how half our nation fell for the 9/11/Sadaam Hussein boondoggle. W is to M as Sadaam is to Bin Laden. While, they share some qualities (spikey, swarthy, hateful, gun lovin') they were decidedly NOT the same man. But those differences are irrelevant once your mind has been made up for you.

So now its been scientifically proven that liberals are smarter than conservatives. There's no point in gloating: conservatives don't recognize science, either. Just let them continue digging their own spider holes of fuzzy logic and dogmatic umbrage and come November '08 we can use our superior hand-eye coordination and letter-recognition skills to hit all the right letters.

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I’ve been thinking

It's Friday night. It's the time I like to have a few drinks. I like to think about this great adventure we call "Life". I like to reflect on my contact with other humans, and their thoughts about this precarious journey we take. In particular, I have been reflecting on this post. It's the one about the thoughts of a group of conservatives on a cruise. I wonder why they think as they do. No doubt, if they think about it at all, they wonder why I think as I do. I've had it said to me by some conservatives on Vox that it is because I'm stupid. That may well be true, but I don't think it is quite as simple as that. Stupidity is not reserved for liberals, as a glance around us would show.

I think our attitude to our fellow humans has to do with my thoughts in this post. It all depends on your world view. It depends on your belief in how best to survive. If you have a Cosmic Perspective, then I think you'll look to the survival of the planet first; you'll see survival of others as desirable for your survival, and you'll have a reverence for life. Life seems to be rather unique in this universe from what we know. That is why it is so precious. To all of us. So, why then, do those conservatives have the view that only their lives are of value in the great scheme of things? I think it's because their world view never rises above the lower rungs in Maslow's heirarchy of needs. I think their world view resides in the bottom three layers.  In particular, they never aspire to the respect of others item on the fourth layer. How could they, when they don't even respect the rights of others to live?

And I think that's what gets me the most. The casual shrugging off of the loss of hundreds of thousands of lives, as of no consequence. Lives of men, women and children who represented no threat at all, who just wanted to live.  How could anyone be so inhumane, particularly as so many of those conservatives also profess to follow the teachings of Jesus Christ?

I think it is because we have embedded in us a survival gene, a gene that we have inherited from our brutal past where the only rule for survival was to "kill or be killed". A past where a preoccupation with the bottom three rungs of Maslow's Heirachy never allowed time to aspire to the top two. Those conservatives are still stuck on those bottom three rungs.  I think it is true to say that the better education one receives, the more likely one is to be of liberal persuasion. They are more likely to spend most of their time on those top two rungs. That is why intellectuals are so scorned by the conservatives on the boat cruise. They fear the unknown.

And those conservatives who subscribe to the "kill or be killed" world view are just so dangerous, particularly because they live in the most militaristic country there ever was on this earth. I know that they would kill me, without a moment's hesitation if it suited their purposes.  After all, if  the loss of hundreds of thousands of lives is of no consequence, why would one more be of any concern? Unless it was their life, of course.

So, I think I'll spend more time associating with those mamby pamby liberals. I think I'll continue promoting their cause. Why? Well, I know they won't kill me.

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I am indebted to another Vox blogger for this link. To avoid any unintentional embarrassment, I have chosen not to reveal the name in this instance. Unfortunately, the article below reveals the same attitudes encountered by myself of some conservative bloggers. The article is long, so I have only copied the introduction.

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article2766040.ece

Ship of fools: Johann Hari sets sail with America's swashbuckling neocons

The Iraq war has been an amazing success, global warming is just a myth – and as for Guantanamo Bay, it's practically a holiday camp… The annual cruise organised by the 'National Review', mouthpiece of right-wing America, is a parallel universe populated by straight-talking, gun-toting, God-fearing Republicans.

By Johann Hari

Published: 13 July 2007

I am standing waist-deep in the Pacific Ocean, both chilling and burning, indulging in the polite chit-chat beloved by vacationing Americans. A sweet elderly lady from Los Angeles is sitting on the rocks nearby, telling me dreamily about her son. "Is he your only child?" I ask. "Yes," she says. "Do you have a child back in England?" she asks. No, I say. Her face darkens. "You'd better start," she says. "The Muslims are breeding. Soon, they'll have the whole of Europe."

I am getting used to these moments – when gentle holiday geniality bleeds into… what? I lie on the beach with Hillary-Ann, a chatty, scatty 35-year-old Californian designer. As she explains the perils of Republican dating, my mind drifts, watching the gentle tide. When I hear her say, " Of course, we need to execute some of these people," I wake up. Who do we need to execute? She runs her fingers through the sand lazily. "A few of these prominent liberals who are trying to demoralise the country," she says. "Just take a couple of these anti-war people off to the gas chamber for treason to show, if you try to bring down America at a time of war, that's what you'll get." She squints at the sun and smiles. " Then things'll change."

I am travelling on a bright white cruise ship with two restaurants, five bars, a casino – and 500 readers of the National Review. Here, the Iraq war has been "an amazing success". Global warming is not happening. The solitary black person claims, "If the Ku Klux Klan supports equal rights, then God bless them." And I have nowhere to run.

From time to time, National Review – the bible of American conservatism – organises a cruise for its readers. I paid $1,200 to join them. The rules I imposed on myself were simple: If any of the conservative cruisers asked who I was, I answered honestly, telling them I was a journalist. Mostly, I just tried to blend in – and find out what American conservatives say when they think the rest of us aren't listening.

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article2766040.ece

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