America’s conservative party, the Grand Ole Republican Party, is so fractured
down ideological lines that it has not been able to advance a real conservative
candidate in a quarter century, since Reagan won re-election twenty four years
ago in 1984.
In the 2008 primaries, conservative voters were so divided between numerous
candidates that they were unable to coalesce around a single conservative. By
Super Tuesday, before most conservatives had any say in their party nomination,
the most liberal Republican candidate had emerged as the party nominee, even
though more than 65 percent of Republicans voted against him. The 65 percent
agreed only on opposing John McCain, but not on whom else to run in his
place.
After years of reader mail and surfing dozens of high traffic conservative
blogs reading thousands of "conservative" comments concerning who or what is or
isn’t "conservative," it is clear that Republicans no longer agree on what the
word "conservative" means.
Unless conservatives can agree on what it is to be "conservative," the
conservative movement in America will remain fractured and powerless.
Liberals, be they Democrat or Republican, seldom fail to unite in their
efforts to advance their agenda. They are all about group think, group movement
and communal responsibility. Liberal socialists may be a minority in America,
but united, they trump a divided conservative majority election after
election.
Conservative by What
Definition?
Academic intellectuals have been defining and re-defining words since the
beginning of time and the words "conservative" and "liberal" are no exception.
When involving politics, the effort degrades into a form of propaganda aimed at
pigeon holing people of certain belief systems, recently, in the case of
conservatives, in a negative light.
Today, the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary defines the word
"liberal" as one "not bound by authoritarianism, orthodoxy, or
traditional forms" – and synonyms like "broad-minded" – "generous" – "bountiful"
and "open-handed" are utilized to create a favorable mental image. On this
basis, who wouldn’t want to be a "liberal?" But is it true or accurate?
The same dictionary defines the word "conservative" this
way, "tending or disposed to maintain existing views, conditions, or
institutions" – in other words, a stick in the mud, a useless bump on a log.
Words like "moderation" – "caution" and "advocating support of established
institutions" are used to conjure up a mental image of someone fearful of
progress or change. On this basis, who would want to call themselves
"conservative?" But is it true or accurate?
Neither Definition is True or Accurate
Today
Thomas Jefferson is often quoted as the nations founding "liberal." But circa
1776, "liberal" simply meant "preservative of individual liberty." Are today’s
liberals "preservative of individual liberty?"
They are supportive of a woman’s individual liberty to kill her young. But
they oppose an American child’s individual liberty to even Life itself, a
fundamental unalienable right of every innocent American, according to our
nation’s founders, unequivocally established in our founding documents, but
ignored by today’s liberals, including many liberal Republicans.
If you believe what modern liberal politicians say, then you
know that they believe in a good greater than the individual, - the greater good
of the commune. They believe not in the individual liberty to define and pursue
(earn) happiness, but rather the collective right of the central government, on
behalf of the greater good of the commune, to define and re-distribute happiness
from on high in Washington DC. This is far from any American concept.
Today’s liberals are in no way Jefferson liberals. They are Karl Marx
liberals, believing in the Marx concept of "From each according to his
ability; to each according to his need." In short, they believe in being
generous with other people’s earnings in order to secure political power for
themselves. Jefferson would be fully opposed, as all founding fathers would
be.
Likewise, the generally accepted definition of "conservative" is equally
untrue and inaccurate.
Throughout history, conservatives have been the most
progressive, productive, prosperous and as a result, generous people in society.
Those who lack the ability to help themselves also lack the ability to help
anyone else. It is that ten percent of truly progressive (prosperous) Americans
who currently pick up over seventy percent of the nation’s tax bill, which
imagined, invented, worked and created the most abundant nation in earth’s
history. How does this reality align with the intellectual definition of
"conservative?" Not at all, right?
The Reality of American
Conservatism
After years of study and careful consideration, I am convinced that there
really is only one realistic definition for the term "conservative."
One can be "conservative" about many different things. But at the foundation,
no matter the issue or subject at hand, to be conservative is to seek to
"conserve," which according to Merriam-Webster, is "to keep in a safe or
sound state - to avoid wasteful or destructive use of - to preserve - to
maintain - to prevent injury, decay, waste, or loss of." Simple enough,
right?
This is indeed what it is to be "conservative," - to "conserve." But since
one can be conservative about many things, what does it mean to be an American
Conservative?
The American Conservative
It’s easy to establish that to be conservative is to seek "to keep in a
safe or sound state - to avoid wasteful or destructive use of - to preserve - to
maintain - to prevent injury, decay, waste, or loss of." But as pertains to
being an American conservative, this is to keep safe, preserve, maintain and
prevent from injury, decay or waste, what exactly?
Though there are more definitions of "American" than there are definitions of
"conservative" today, there is but one true fundamental definition of "American"
and that is the definition provided by the men who designed and founded America
and thereby defined what it is to be an American. All other definitions conjured
up over the years for reasons of political agenda, are but attempts to subvert
by degree the fundamental definition provided by the founders of
Americanism.
The Fundamental American
Again I look to Merriam-Webster and find that it limits the definition of
"American" to simply "a citizen of the United States." But as America
is much more than just a parcel of land surrounded by sea, much more than mere
human units gathered in one place on earth, isn’t there much more to it than
that?
Isn’t America an idea, a concept of social order, based on certain specific
principles and values? Is it the geographical longitude and latitude or the many
sizes, shapes, colors and ideologies of its 300 million people that define what
America is? Or is it a specific set of foundational ideas, principles and values
that defines what America is, has been and should always be?
America is founded on a very simple set of concepts recorded for all
posterity with the opening words, "We hold these truths to be
self-evident." Beyond this opening line is a brief but very specific list
of those basic "truths"…
That our individual rights as Americans were endowed by a Creator, not
granted by man.
That these individual rights are unalienable by all men (or women), no matter
the impact on the greater communal good.
That the right of individual liberty can not be trampled on by the communal
body, even for a greater common purpose.
That all men are Created equal and free, regardless of race, creed or color.
That every individual has the right to define and pursue (earn) his/her own
happiness.
That the very first American unalienable right is to Life itself, without
which there can be no individual liberty, happiness, social decency or humane
justice.
That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men.
That these men/women and their governments derive their just powers from the
consent of the governed.
And that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends
(these concepts), it is the Right (and obligation) of the People to alter or to
abolish it.
That the power in America rests in the individual, not in the special
interest organization or self-serving politician.
A Conservative American
If one believes that these are in fact the founding fundamental ideas,
principles and values that make America what it is, then this is also the
definition of what it means to be an American, to hold these truths as
self-evident and unalienable, worthy of conservation.
And if these are the ideas, principles and values that an individual seeks
"to keep in a safe or sound state - to avoid wasteful or destructive use of
- to preserve - to maintain - to prevent injury, decay, waste, or loss of,"
then that individual, seeking to conserve these things, is indeed an
"American conservative," - nothing more and nothing
less.
Degrees of Conservative
As with all belief systems known to man, there are varying individual degrees
of conservative adherence to the fundamental foundations of that belief system
and it is this reality which causes the confusion and division within the
conservative movement, and in fact the country today.
I chose to outline the Founders’ definition of America and American –in ten
simple bullet points above. If one seeks to conserve only one of the ten and
opposes or ignores all others, are they an American conservative? Must an
individual seek to conserve all ten to be an American conservative? Or would six
of the ten be enough to qualify as conservative? How much is enough?
This is the discussion currently raging within the conservative movement and
dividing the Republican Party at present and until we can reach an acceptable
consensus on this question, the debate and the division it causes will
remain.
I am but one man -
with nothing more than one opinion
to offer on the subject, albeit defined by our nation’s Founders.
I choose to believe that all ten of the founding beliefs recorded by the
founding fathers exist for a reason. That they are interconnected and
interdependent and that without all of them, America as we have known her for
more than 230 years would not exist.
I therefore choose to look at all ten as equally valid and vital to the
continuation (conservation) of America as a free prosperous self-governed
nation. I seek to conserve, uphold, preserve, protect and defend all ten and on
this basis, I call myself an American Conservative. Sadly however, this alone
causes many fellow countrymen, even some Republicans, to call me a
"right-wing extremist" today. Are they right?
Every individual has the right and the responsibility to make their
individual choice in this regard. But does one have the right to call themselves
an American Conservative if they fail or refuse to answer the Founders call to
uphold, protect and defend this thing we call America, the concepts and ideas,
principles and values that make her unique in the world?
Again, individual freedom and liberty dictate that I allow my neighbors to
call themselves whatever they like. But I have a deep sense of obligation to
call things what they actually are, and to avoid the natural pitfalls inherent
with allowing things to be called something they are not.
Each individual is free to negotiate their individual degree of adherence to
founding American ideals. But I choose to attempt no such negotiation. I choose
to uphold, protect and defend all of the founding principles and values
in order to preserve all of them for future generations, just as those
who came before me gave life, limb and fortune to provide them for me.
In America, you are indeed free to choose your own way. But may I suggest
that you do so with eyes wide open and with great care… looking not only towards
your immediate self-interests, but towards the long-term interest of our
children, grandchildren and great grandchildren. If we do so, we too may be
recorded as a great generation in history. If we fail to do so, we will instead
be written into history as the generation who let it all slip away…
I close with this thought from Thomas Jefferson;
"God who gave us life gave us liberty. And can the liberties
of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a
conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are of the Gift of
God? That they are not to be violated but with His wrath? Indeed, I tremble for
my country when I reflect that God is just, that His justice cannot sleep
forever." - Thomas Jefferson (the liberal?)