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R.R. Reno

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The Future of Conservatism

Obama’s victory in November reflects an important trend. Our political culture is now being shaped by liberals. That’s not because their ideas are sound. They’re often not. But conservatives largely don’t have ideas, or at least not ones that can animate national campaigns.


This is evident in foreign policy. We face the relative decline of American hegemony. Our limits became visible in the Iraq war. Meanwhile, China is ascendant and will continue to assert itself. Rapid economic development will give other nations new geo-political weight. Liberals have a plan. They want to construct international institutions in accord with human rights and democracy. We’ll prosper within this international system, and our elites will take a prominent role in running global institutions. Or so they promise.


R.R. RenoI don’t like this plan, not the least because it’s self-serving for the liberal nomenklatura that is in many cases already transferring its loyalty to NGOs and global institutions. But it’s a way of thinking about the future that, if tempered by realism, may not be ideal but will be workable. What’s the conservative view? “American greatness.” That’s a sentiment (one I’m sympathetic to), not a policy.


I’m not saying that there aren’t smart conservative foreign policy experts. There are, and they have some good ideas. What I’m saying is that the Republican party does not have a functional public rhetoric that deals with the relative decline of American hegemony. The Romney campaign had no visible stance on foreign policy other than to attack Obama’s supposed lack of commitment to American greatness.


A second point. Globalization provides tremendous economic opportunities to certain segments of society, but not to others. Obama-era liberalism is willing to face up to the economic realities of globalization, relying on a straightforward progressive response: redistribution. The winners in a competitive global economy will subsidize middle-class life. That’s the basic model of New York City, where a great deal of subsidies get funneled through government employment.


There’s lots to criticize in this approach. But it’s a policy or set of policies. Conservatives? Romney ran on economic freedom: More entrepreneurs lead to more jobs. True, perhaps, but that’s a theory about economic growth in the long run, not tomorrow. Ramesh Ponnuru, Ross Douthat, and others have been pushing for a robust set of tax subsidies and programs to support middle-class families, but they go unheeded. That’s because these ideas violate the anti-government commitments that are so powerful on the right today.


A third point. The sexual revolution has social costs. Middle-class America is sliding toward under-class social mores and dysfunctions. These dysfunctions exacerbate—severely—the economic decline of the middle class. What to do? Liberals have policies to intervene and remediate. In some cases they want more government programs: childcare for single mothers and so forth. They also want to alter social attitudes to make us more “accepting” of sexual freedom and “family diversity.” They promise that political correctness will reinvigorate social solidarity in new ways.


Again, much to criticize. Progressives always seem to dissolve culture without being able to rebuild it. They spend social capital; they don’t create it. But conservatives today? We denounce these changes—or we ignore them if we’re trying to cozy up to free-market libertarians for purposes of political advantage. The Romney campaign had no visible stance on marriage and family.


I don’t think the Romney campaign was out of character. Today, what remains of the Reagan coalition has difficulty speaking broadly and with confidence. That’s not surprising. It’s been thirty years since Reagan, and it’s the nature of political coalitions to age poorly.


Perhaps the clearest sign of the superannuation of the Reagan coalition has been the confusion of means with ends. Altar-and-throne conservatism held on to a view of an integral society in which divine and human authority are coordinated and all-defining. By contrast, modern conservatism affirms modernity. We are citizens, not subjects. Political authority is secular, not sacred. However, to this basic affirmation has been added profound concerns about dangers of political life unhinged from the sacred, which is why the essence of modern conservatism has been a commitment to limited government.


The diminishment of modern American conservatism has come about as the Reagan coalition focused on limiting the size of government: taxing and spending. This is indeed a means for limiting government, but it is not the end itself. For example, the regulatory function of government is very inexpensive to fund, requiring little in the way of direct taxation, and yet it can, and in many ways has, become a Leviathan.


Rousseau once said, “Every country gets the government it deserves.” Only a healthy political culture can succeed in limiting government. Such a culture needs social forms that are more primitive than government—marriage, for example—that limit government from below, as it were. Conservatives are thus kidding themselves as they currently flirt with accepting gay marriage. They can of course do so to win elections, but gay marriage foreshadows government redefinition and control of reproduction and family life. As the personal becomes political, the political expands.


Patriotism is another pre-political power that limits government by holding accountable those who hold power. That’s even more true when it comes to religious faith. A national culture that has strong religious currents pinions the Leviathan of the modern state from above. As Henry VIII discovered with St. Thomas More, religious conviction is perhaps the most powerful limitation on government: You may command my body, but you will not have my will.


American conservatives need to return to first principles. Tax rates are not irrelevant. Restraining government spending may be good policy (and a fiscal necessity). But our goal is limited government, not limited taxation. The sign of success is a free people capable of self-government, not government spending as a certain percentage of GDP. We’re not going to have anything compelling and engaging and effective to say about the challenges we face until we restore clarity about what we want to achieve.


R.R. Reno is Editor of First Things. He is the general editor of the Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible and author of the volume on Genesis. His previous “On the Square” articles can be found here.


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Comments:

3.11.2013 | 3:01am
Don Roberto says:
It's libertines that are the problem, and they control the commanding heights of the "culture." (Libertines tend to be liberals.) They do not like fixed moral rules. They fear to act decisively because they have no reliable theory of right and wrong. They judge not lest they be judged, even when this entails an abandonment of the responsibility of leaders for the weak, as when abortion is "legal" or recreational drugs are tolerated or when pornographers are allowed to sell their wares freely, sneaking them into more and more venues (e.g., daytime TV), whether or not children will be exposed to them. In a society run by liberals, bad behavior goes unchecked and chaos is inevitable. But the public lives in thrall to those who own the golden calves.

Conservatives can try to acquire TV stations and other media outlets, but they will be at a severe disadvantage because Mammon and Hedon are allied, i.e., "sex sells." Things will get worse before they get better.
3.11.2013 | 3:06am
mike_b says:
As a conservative, I can't make out much of this piece. So, since the author mentions Reagan, who was a true conservative, who miraculously became president after decades of statist dominance, which then immediately reasserted itself after his departure, I'll fall back on what I know to be a truth about conservatism and how it has worked to advance our nation.

Reagan's miraculously successful foreign policy was correctly summarized as simply "peace through strength." That is a conservative principle based on fallen human nature that is as hard and inviolate as Newton's three laws of mechanics, becase it is based on God's law. For if it is God who strengthens you, who can stand against you. No strength, no peace. Period. On that example alone, I argue there is no such thing as "modern" conservatism. There is, however, such a thing as "modern" Republicanism, Romneyism, Rockafellerism, Bushism, etc. which sadly bears no resemblance whatsoever to conservatism. If it did, it would be as effective as Reagan's conservatism was.

American conservatives need badly to return to true conservatism or moral restraint. Moral restraint was the basis for the design of our limited government. If they do that, and that's the tallest order possible, God will take care of the rest. If I may paraphrase, God's peace through moral strength.
3.11.2013 | 6:07am
Michael PS says:
In his « Primauté du spirituel, Pourquoi Rome a parlé » [translated into English as “The Things that are not Caesar’s”] Jacques Martain insists that “Integral political science . . . is superior in kind to philosophy; to be truly complete it must have a reference to the domain of theology, and it is precisely as a theologian that St. Thomas wrote De regimine principum . . . the knowledge of human actions and of the good conduct of the human State in particular can exist as an integral science, as a complete body of doctrine, only if related to the ultimate end of the human being. . . the rule of conduct governing individual and social life cannot therefore leave the supernatural order out of account.”

Maurice Blondel, too, reminds us “that one cannot think or act anywhere as if we do not all have a supernatural destiny. Because, since it concerns the human being such as he is, in concreto, in his living and total reality, not in a simple state of hypothetical nature, nothing is truly complete (boucle), even in the sheerly natural order”

To hold otherwise is to acquiesce in the liberal privatisation of religion, as something irrelevant to public policy.
3.11.2013 | 9:14am
JERD says:
This reminds me of C.S. Lewis' "Abolition of Man."

As the "Tao" - those truths formed by tradition - are lost, and the institutions that preserve them recede, the powerful few in government fill the void. The type of government doesn't matter - Fascist, Communist, Democratic - the result is the same: Our humanity is lost to the arbitrary dictates of the powerful few who, in the absence of the Tao have taken control.

Thus, a limited government will return to our nation only when we restore a society of persons founded on the eternal virtues taught in, and enforced by the institutions of family and church.
3.11.2013 | 11:27am
Scat says:
The Republicans look spent -- because they are generally not led by the spirit of authentic Conservatism, and the disposition to save/preserve what is best in our culture and institutions. They have no ideas because they are trying to do the same kinds of things the so-called progressive are, albeit with a bit of a Conservative facade duct taped to the agenda. People will prefer the authentic to the fake, so they'll choose real progressive ideas to faux conservo-progressive ones. But the most important aspect of this is that even if the Republicans (and/or real Conservatives), had some good seed to spread, the ground is not prepared for it. Our nation needs a spiritual revival, and that's not the job of the politicos -- they are not equipped for the job (unless there is an Edmund Burke among them), nor is it their domain. Until the churches understand their role in building and preserving culture, the progressives will lead us back to chaos and old night.
3.11.2013 | 1:11pm
Ken Zaretzke says:
Contemporary conservatism is blind to the single biggest problem in our society--long-term (post-1970s) income inequality. The ostrich approach, the one favored by conservatives so far, clearly isn't working.
3.11.2013 | 1:43pm
harry says:
We began as a government of the people, not a people of the government. It was humanity who could bestow or withdraw the state's right to exist, not the reverse: "... whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it ... it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.”

Just what are “these ends"? Humanity, according to the Founders, has been endowed by its Creator with certain “unalienable Rights,” among which are “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness,” and the end for which humanity creates the state is for it to secure humanity's unalienable rights. If a godless, radically secularized government becomes hostile to theism, falsely claiming to have the authority to sanction the killing of innocent human beings, then it no longer sees itself as the protector of humanity's God-given, unalienable rights. It then becomes "destructive of these ends," and does things like abruptly withdrawing the protection of law from the innocent child in the womb.

It is odd that so many “astute” pundits don't seem to have noticed that we are now 180 degrees from where we started, the state now pretending to have the authority to bestow and withdraw humanity's right to exist, the exact opposite of where we began.

There can be no long-term healing of our social and political ills as long as one political party avoids realistically addressing the fact that there is now a rampaging elephant in the living room, and the other wants it there.

State sanctioned killing of innocent human beings is a fundamental assault on the very premise of American government, founded as it was on theism and natural law.
3.12.2013 | 4:21pm
kirk wynn says:
The beauty of our current debt recession is that it disables the non-stop credit creation of the last 15-20 years. Government at all levels will shrink (already 500,000 jobs lost in the last couple of years) without any political party involvement. Government, Police, Fire, Teacher, Postal Unions must curtail their bloated pensions not because of political ideology but simply because there is no money to pay for them. My hope is that hard times and frugality will knock some of the silliness out of our silly American "culture" and we will return to some sensible, more serious, sober, thoughtful form of group-think. It's possible I'm way off base.
3.12.2013 | 4:32pm
"...but gay marriage foreshadows government redefinition and control of reproduction and family life"

Government is not redefining reproduction and family life. Government may be reflecting the changes that have happened in the second half of the 20th century. There have always been lifelong 'couples' made up of two homosexuals. The difference now is that they are visible, not hidden and secret. Reproduction has changed entirely from one seed, one egg, intercourse = offspring to many technological advances which are independent of government. Keep in mind that many reproductive changes have been necessitated by decreasing fertility due to unregulated poisons in our environment and food. And government does not control family life. People, of all classes, make good and bad decisions about family life. In cultures all over the world there have been many successful forms of family life. A man and a woman and children is just one form of family life.
3.12.2013 | 8:45pm
Gil says:
"Reproduction has changed entirely from one seed, one egg, intercourse = offspring to many technological advances which are independent of government.”

or

Reproduction has changed entirely from one seed, one egg, intercourse = offspring to many technological advances which are independent of God.

Nothing defines the horrors of the technological age (there are many good things) than Man attempting through technology to expropriate and reinvent God’s Creation, including turning men into women and women into men. Mary Shelly as an artist sensed something grotesquely larger than (and antagonistic towards) life in man’s willing on his own terms.
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