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Conservatives, moderates, and liberal victims have nothing to lose but their shame. They have a world to win.
Before Ronald Reagan ever ran for any political office he called the American people to something higher in “The Speech.”
You and I have a rendezvous with destiny.
We’ll preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or we’ll sentence them to take the last step into a thousand years of darkness.
That was in 1964. Twenty-four years later, in his farewell address to the nation from the Oval Office, an avuncular President Reagan talked to Americans about the “shining city upon a hill:”
And how stands the city on this winter night? More prosperous, more secure, and happier than it was 8 years ago. But more than that: After 200 years, two centuries, she still stands strong and true on the granite ridge, and her glow has held steady no matter what storm. And she’s still a beacon, still a magnet for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims from all the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness, toward home.
In his avuncular rhetoric Ronald Reagan seems to make his presidency into a universal celebration in which all can share. It elides the brutal fact that his political career was always experienced by liberals and Democrats as an insult; they told us that when they talked of him as an “amiable dunce” and a “B-movie actor.” It is true that Reagan did not say that he hated the Democrats and everything they stood for, as Democrat Howard Dean from Vermont once said of Republicans. He didn’t need to; his actions spoke well enough. Politics is division, and Ronald Reagan sought to divide America in a different way than Democrats or Rockefeller Republicans wanted. Politics is civil war by other means, and Ronald Reagan understood that he had to raise a political army and train it to defeat in electoral battle the army of the Democrats and the liberal ruling class. A political movement needs an enemy, like any army, and President Reagan’s enemy was liberals. He gave them such a bad name that they had to re-brand their liberal ideology as “progressivism.” But he raised up an army of happy warriors; that’s why liberals hated him so much.
What is our rendezvous with destiny, our shining city upon a hill? What is it that animates us as we fight to save America from the squalid identity politics of identity-politics liberalism?
The First Conservative, Edmund Burke, defined the conservative vision for us 220 years ago. It is a trust, “an entailed inheritance derived to us from our forefathers, and to be transmitted to our posterity”. We conservatives believe in society as a web of trust, a web that begins with those we love and extends to all those we serve, and beyond them to those “hurtling through the darkness” without even a hope of home.
This trust is not something that can be written out onto a tabula rasa by sophisters, economists, and calculators. It is not a government program or a 3,000 page bill; it is something bigger than technical expertise or a government program. It is a social virtue; it describes the necessary culture of free men and women living in liberty.
Why do we fight? We fight for a culture of trust, in which ordinary people are connected by their actions and their characters into a vast social network of reciprocal and friendly relations. In this society of trust ordinary people can live a companionable life of moral obligation and exchange, a life that seldom hits the wall of legal obligation and government compulsion. In Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity, Francis Fukuyama calls this “spontaneous sociability.” Whatever you call it, it comes down to trust, service, love, exchange. These are the qualities of the conservative society that is to come.
Here is a report on how this culture of trust can actually work here in America. It is from Michael Novak in The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism. He is writing about a memoir written by his wife’s ancestor, a preacher who journeyed westward from upstate New York in 1842 and became the first Baptist missionary in Iowa Territory:
One of the most stunning features of his memoir is that nearly all the daily activities he reports were cooperative and fraternal. Families helped each other putting up homes and barns. Together they built churches, schools, and common civic buildings. They collaborated to build roads and bridges. They took pride in being free persons, independent, and self-reliant; but the texture of their lives was cooperative and fraternal.
What made this cooperative and fraternal society possible? Obviously, it had to be many things. But the unique characteristic of America is its Anglo-Saxon Protestant culture. That culture asserts that everyone stands before God as the sole judge of his or her life.
This idea of a direct relationship with God is a reckless notion that, anyone would think, had to be a recipe for atomism and anarchy. Instead, in America, it spawned a miracle. In liberating ourselves from the shackles of conformity and subjection to moral and political elites we freed ourselves into something else, a free society of voluntary association and rapidly expanding trust. In the old country, you only trusted people as far as the limits of blood kin or village. But in the American civilization we extend trust to the community of all those that can be trusted.
Here’s another testimony to trust, from the aftermath of a financial meltdown, the Crash of 1907. Banker J.P. Morgan is being interrogated on Capitol Hill about the “money trust” and staff counsel Samuel Untermyer is asking about credit and collateral. Credit is about character, Morgan insisted, not about collateral. Never mind if a borrower had tons of collateral in government bonds when he came to borrow money:
Mr. MORGAN. Because a man I do not trust could not get money from me on all the bonds in Christendom.
Mr. UNTERMYER. That is the rule all over, the world?
Mr. MORGAN. I think that is the fundamental basis of business.
For some people this culture of trust is a sham, a conjuror’s trick. They know that spontaneous sociability is a delusion, that underneath all the cooperation of small-town America and imperial bankers is a fever swamp of injustice and marginalization that only a strong centralizing force directed by an educated elite can control and mitigate. You know who these people are. We call them liberals.
Our liberal friends are against moral freedom, for they wish to judge America. They are against spontaneous sociability, for they wish to rule America. They wage war on trust, for they wish to compel America. Why do they do this?
Let us give our liberal friends the benefit of the doubt. Back in the old days an educated youth could have argued plausibly that the new democratic capitalism was a danger to society. Young Karl Marx, age 30, and Friedrich Engels, 28, in 1848:
The bourgeoisie... has put an end to all feudal, patriarchal, idyllic relations... In one word, for exploitation, veiled by religious and political illusions, it has substituted naked, shameless, direct, brutal exploitation.
The young Fabian, Sidney Webb, age 30, had a similar take in 1889:
The result of the industrial revolution... was to leave all the new elements of society in a state of unrestrained license... Women working half naked in the coal mines; young children dragging trucks all day... these and other nameless iniquities will be found recorded as the results of freedom of contract and complete laisser faire in the impartial pages of successive [government] blue-book reports.
These young activists were telling us that you can’t trust capitalists. The “invisible hand” of Adam Smith was a myth.
The issue is clear. If you believe that people can be trusted then you think that most problems can be solved through peaceful resolution; you will vote for limited government. If you think that the untrustworthy people are going to take over then you will want to have them restrained by government force.
The conservative culture of trust unites conservatives into a single big tent. Social conservatives believe that we should increase the bonds of trust between the sexes, in marriages and families. Economic conservatives believe we should increase trust in the economic sector and structure the economy to reward trustworthy people. National-security conservatives believe we should trust Americans more than thug dictators. Second Amendment conservatives believe we should trust Americans with guns. Conservatives are united by our faith in trust.
The argument of the left, ever since Marx and Engels and Webb, is that you cannot trust society. You can only trust the state. You can’t trust the mediating institutions between the individual and government. You can’t trust families, for they are patriarchal. You can’t trust businesses because they are exploiters. You can’t trust churches because they are bigoted. But you can trust government led by educated youth, men like Joseph Stalin, seminarian, Fidel Castro, lawyer, Pol Pot, technical student.
The experiment of the last two centuries is now over and the results are in. If you expand the zone of trust with economic freedom and limited government you get prosperity and happiness.
But we also know what happens when you contract the zone of social trust by trusting in big government run by educated youth. Whenever peoples have lived for a considerable time under a strong centralizing government the web of trust between people frayed and broken. For centralizing government always declares war on spontaneous sociability and the mediating structures of trust and voluntary association. Just ask the Chinese and the Russians, ruled for centuries by centralizing bureaucracies.
The best recipe for a free and sociable society is a mixture of Protestant moral liberation and its high-trust social culture practiced in the 18th century by Britain and in the 19th century by the United States.
In the United States we now suffer under a strong centralizing government, and we have seen the old web of trust fray and disintegrate. Our centralizing rulers are, fortunately, not a clique of bureaucratic Mandarins or totalitarian Maoists. They are just liberals. They wanted to give the poor a helping hand. They wanted to help everyone with education, to give us access to health care, to provide old people with pensions, to relieve poverty in the sprawling cities. They just didn’t believe that Americans could be trusted to do it on their own. So they built and directed a vast edifice of big government and enticed millions of people away from the American birthright of sociability into the dead end of dependency. Now, of course, they want to extend their edifice from mere economic assistance to cultural hegemony with their identity politics of race and gender. This is why we fight.
Fifty years ago, President Eisenhower warned us against the danger of centralization in a military-industrial complex, and our liberal friends have never forgotten his warning. Or did they? Today in the United States, according to usgovernmentspending.com, we have a health-industrial complex costing $1.1 trillion a year, a pension-industrial complex costing $1.0 trillion a year, an education-industrial complex costing $1.0 trillion a year, and a welfare-industrial complex costing $0.8 trillion a year. It’s a pity that the pension-industrial complex has cheated a generation out of honest saving, that the health-industrial complex has made health care unaffordable, that the graduates of the education-industrial complex need remedial instruction at college, that the welfare-industrial complex has destroyed the low-income family. Other than that, the government-industrial complex works pretty well. The old military-industrial complex? It now costs $0.9 trillion a year.
Government is force, so the government-industrial complex necessarily socializes people into a culture of mistrust and compulsion, for you only need compulsion for people you do not trust. The private sector, on the other hand, socializes people into a culture of service. An entrepreneur proposes, the customer disposes. Businesses compete to earn the trust of the consumer.
Between the conservative nexus of sociable trust and the liberal culture of compulsion there is a great gulf. In the conservative narrative society builds a culture of trust from the ground up, slowly persuading people of the benefits of a high-trust society, and sanctioning the abusers of trust. In the liberal narrative the only people to trust are the progressive educated elites, the ruling class directing a strong, centralized administrative state.
Today in America the centralized administrative state wants to centralize and administer America’s health care. Do liberals really understand what they are telling us with ObamaCare? They are saying that Americans cannot be trusted to obtain health care for themselves or produce it for others without minute supervision from liberal experts and activists. They are saying that Americans, known as the most charitable people in the world, cannot be trusted to share, out of their own earnings, a decent provision for those that cannot provide, or foolishly choose not to provide, for their own health care. They are saying that there is no alternative: Americans must be forced to do the right thing, because Americans cannot be trusted. This is why we fight.
We fight against the dead hand of liberal political centralism, and we fight for the practical American culture of spontaneous sociability. Our faith is a new faith in a people freed from subjection to the liberal ruling class. It is still, as it ever was, a faith in freedom and an ennobling instinct for free and voluntary association. And that is why we fight.
But we must lift our eyes from practical reforms to the horizon and we search for a new way to institutionalize our vision for America. The tools are at hand: the separation of powers doctrine as enshrined in our constitution and extended in the Bill of Rights. Only now it is time to extend the principle from government to society as a whole.
In The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism Michael Novak describes the United States as a society differentiated from the compact pre-industrial world into three equal and free sectors: political, economic, and moral/cultural. Each sector contributes to the whole, but none should rule over the others.
In the Bill of Rights, the founding fathers extended the separation of power principle from a mere separation of powers between the three branches of government. They declared a distance between the political sector and the moral-cultural sector: the separation of church and state. Now it is time to take another step in the separation of powers, and create a distance between the political sector and the economic sector. The economy is the realm of wealth; government is the realm of power. Mix wealth and power and they corrupt each other. It is time to demand the separation of economy and state.
We must create a Greater Separation of Powers to rule the relations between the great institutional sectors of society. The political sector is the realm of force, the moral/cultural sector the realm of persuasion, and the economic sector the realm of service. Collapse them into a totalitarian unity and the result is misery. Free them, separate them, and limit their powers, and the result is happiness. With the powers of the great institutional sectors limited, the personal sector of face-to-face relations, the sector of trust, can flourish and expand. Here is an America for conservatives to love.
This American proposition, writes Francis Fukuyama, is “subversive,” for it gives any single person, or a whole Tea Party, the authority to decide for herself that she lives under intolerable injustice, and can do something about it. To proud elites down the ages this has seemed a recipe for anarchy. But that is not how it has played out in the United States of America and that is not how it will work out in the new America. When we liberate Americans from their moral subjection to liberal shibboleth, we will free the nation into the fraternal arms of spontaneous sociability. And that is why we fight, to renew our rendezvous with destiny, to show to each other that a free people deserves to show its goodness; it deserves the freedom to demonstrate the miracle of turning the water of moral independence into the wine of universal free community and trust.
But what of our liberal friends? For a century they have held themselves proudly above and apart from the rest of us, determined to update institutions ill-adapted to the modern age, embarrassed and ashamed of the great unwashed flyover country, the ordinary America of spontaneous sociability. Anticipating their humiliation in future elections, we conservatives could even now be planning to convert the liberal diversity training industry into a new school for spontaneous sociability, to teach those wayward liberal souls the error of their ways. But we cannot do that, we must not do that.
What we must do is welcome, with open arms, each and every liberal that experiences the epiphany that The American Thinker’s own recovering liberal, Robin of Berkeley, experienced in the fall of 2008 when the election of Barack Obama changed her life. She told us how liberalism had kept her in a kind of limbo, forever condemned to a life of guilt. It all began when her mother threatened her as a five-year-old: "If you keep doing things like that, I won’t love you anymore." Robin’s solution to this threat was to become a perfectionist, forever terrified of making a mistake. But then came the day when “Truth came knocking on my door.” Forgiveness for mistakes and bad behavior would be between her and God, for “in the end, it is only His judgment that matters.” That is the Anglo-Saxon Protestant proposition: a direct relationship between you and God. No priests, no gatekeepers, no angry mothers, and especially no liberals in between.
Let us show our liberal friends true conservative magnanimity as they hurtle through the darkness towards home. Let us show them how to trust. Because the shining city on the hill belongs to liberals too, and that is why we fight.
Christopher Chantrill blogs at www.christopherchantrill.com.
Government and the Technology of Force
If you scratch a reformer, you will likely discover a plan for more government
Business, Slavery and Trust
Business is all about trust and relationship.
Humanity’s Big Problem: Freeloaders
The modern welfare state encourages freeloaders.
The Bonds of Faith
No society known to anthropology or history has lacked religion.
A Critique of Human Mechanics
When governments tried to govern on mechanical principles.
The Paradox of Individualism
People that believe in individualism experience individualism as an advanced form of socialization.
From Multitude to Civil Society
Softening the hard edge of instrumental reason.
The Answer is Civil Society
Civil Society: the joint development of the market, civil society, and nationalism.
The Greater Separation of Powers
If you want to limit power you must limit power.
Conservatism Three by Three
Balancing tradition with adapting to changing times.
Imagining a Culture of Involvement
You must suggest an alternative.
The Poor Without the Welfare State
What would happen to the poor without a welfare state?
The Middle Class Without the Welfare State
Can the middle class thrive without the supervision of the welfare state?
Liberals and the Welfare State
Liberals ought to be equal to the task of living lives of creative endeavor without political power.
From Freeloaders to Free Givers
But are we too wedded to freeloading?
The Real Meaning of Society
Broadening the horizon of cooperation in the “last best hope of man on earth.”
Why We Fight
We must fight for our “shining city on a hill”
A Commoner Manifesto
Commoners of America Unite!
Families helped each other putting up homes and barns. Together, they built churches, schools, and common civic buildings. They collaborated to build roads and bridges. They took pride in being free persons, independent, and self-reliant; but the texture of their lives was cooperative and fraternal.
Michael Novak, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism
For [the left] there is only the state and the individual, nothing in between. No family to rely on, no friend to depend on, no community to call on. No neighbourhood to grow in, no faith to share in, no charities to work in. No-one but the Minister, nowhere but Whitehall, no such thing as society - just them, and their laws, and their rules, and their arrogance.
David Cameron, Conference Speech 2008
Imagining that all order is the result of design, socialists
conclude that order must be improvable by better design of some superior mind.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[Every] sacrifice is an act of impurity that pays for a prior act of greater impurity... without its participants having to suffer the full consequences incurred by its predecessor. The punishment is commuted in a process that strangely combines and finesses the deep contradiction between justice and mercy.
Frederick Turner, Beauty: The Value of Values
Seeckt: "to make of each individual member of the army a soldier who, in character, capability, and knowledge, is self-reliant, self-confident, dedicated, and joyful in taking responsibility [verantwortungsfreudig] as a man and a soldier."
MacGregor Knox et. al., The dynamics of military revolution, 1300-2050
But the only religions that have survived are those which support property and the family.
Thus the outlook for communism, which is both anti-property and anti-family, (and also anti-religion), is not promising.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[T]he way to achieve a system of determining admission to the public schools on a nonracial basis,
Brown II, 349 U. S., at 300301, is to stop assigning students on a racial basis. The way to stop
discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.
Roberts, C.J., Parents Involved in Community Schools vs. Seattle School District
A writer who says that there are no truths, or that all truth is merely relative, is asking you not to believe him. So dont.
Roger Scruton, Modern Philosophy
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