Mallory Factor
In the spring of 2012, I had the privilege of exploring the American conservative intellectual tradition in depth in a seminar with top cadets at The Citadel, the Military College of South Carolina. I came to this examination as a person who wrestles with these issues every day and who discovered his conservative principles in his youth by reading Milton Friedman and then by studying the conservative canon.
The cadets came to this seminar for many reasons. Some of my cadets were “cradle conservatives”; others were trying to understand a different point of view. Many had already seen combat in the service of their country. Others would be deployed after graduating that spring. As brave young Americans, the cadets provide important contributions to our examination of the conservative tradition. Together, we spent the semester probing exactly what the conservative intellectual tradition is, how it arose, where it is going, and what it means for our nation’s future.
Our seminar was made especially meaningful by the incredible conservative leaders who came to The Citadel to address our class. Each of these leaders took the time to visit the campus, eat with our students in the mess hall (a unique Citadel experience), and meet many cadets, in addition to addressing our seminar. Our cadets not only met with these leaders but also had the opportunity to ask them questions on camera during our Q and A sessions, which their parents and friends were then able to watch on C-SPAN and online.
I was deeply honored both to give this opportunity to these cadets to host these leaders and to listen and learn from the ensuing discussion. Our guest lecturers told us their personal stories about building and strengthening the conservative movement. I was amazed by how profound and interesting their insights were. Their lectures were so original and meaningful that we have assembled them for you in this book.
You will see almost immediately the wide breadth of experience and viewpoints of our contributors. Yet, as we will discover, the conservative movement’s adherents share certain core beliefs. What the core beliefs of the conservative movement are will be at the center of our exploration in this book.
WHAT IS CONSERVATISM?
The political Left attempts to link conservatism with racial intolerance, classism, bigotry toward women, sexual prudery, anti-intellectualism, religious parochialism, and general cultural backwardness. But this is not what the movement is about. The conservative movement is not about people who have refused to embrace progress and have been left behind. The movement is actually about people who hold tight to core principles and hold essential truths that are needed to save our nation from tyranny.
Conservatism as a political and social philosophy is ancient. The personal human impulse to defend and fight for one’s most cherished convictions is natural and timeless. Conservatism as a guiding philosophy for social life, education, cultural institutions, and government is equally natural and ancient.
The label conservative comes from the Latin prefix con, meaning “with,” which, when combined with servare, “to guard, keep, or save,” conveys the idea of attentively guarding something for purposes of safekeeping. Perhaps because of this association with guarding, many people confuse conservatism with blindly upholding tradition.
But traditionalism fails to capture our movement adequately. Conservatives recognize that tradition may be wrong or without meaning. Conservatives have often opposed the status quo and advocated a return to first principles. When the tradition is lacking truth or morality, conservatives are often moved to become revolutionaries, as we will see in these essays. Tradition may be missing essential truths and the moral substance toward which conservatives strive, and may need correction. Conservatives have reverence and respect for tradition but are not inseparable from it.
Conservatives have numerous reasons that they fight, and within this book you will find many of these reasons. Conservatives want a government that is ordered and functions according to the rights given to us by our Constitution. Conservatives want our government to defend the nation and provide “essential” services, but not to encroach on functions that should be reserved for families, religious institutions, and private enterprise. Conservatives want government to protect freedoms, property, and livelihood, but not to choose winners and losers, redistribute property, or impede commerce. And conservatives want government to leave them alone to use the fruits of their liberty and to worship as they see fit.
Conservative principles of personal freedom and limited government stand in stark contrast to the Democrat Party’s slogan at its 2012 convention: “Government is the only thing we all belong to.” If the American people start believing government is the only answer, it will be a wretched ending indeed for the American experiment.
CONSERVATISM: THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY
Conservatism isn’t merely another American philosophy. It is the American philosophy. Our Founders came out of the British tradition, and conservative principles were in their tradition, their experience, and their DNA. The American Founders were trained in the tradition of ordered liberty, many from reading Cicero and Cato in Latin in their youth and from studying the English common law. Even today, many of us respond to conservative principles because we live in a society that has been ordered by these principles for centuries. Up until recent times, immigrants to America and their children internalized these principles as well by living in our nation, where the rule of law is respected and individual freedoms are cherished and defended.
Conservative principles are the heritage and tradition of the West, but they are not common to all nations. Other peoples who do not share our experience of ordered liberty may have a harder time understanding and applying its principles. As a result, successfully adopting a republic or parliamentary system as their form of government may not be intuitive and natural for other peoples, who have not inherited the West’s governmental and philosophical history.
The ideas that hold conservatism together are rooted in man’s most important values and the values upon which our nation was founded: truth, liberty, and freedom. These are American principles. While the French Revolution rejected monarchy in favor of democracy, it also rejected individual liberty in favor of collective rights. Much like modern leftism, the French Revolution had at its root the belief that the great ills of life were due to inequality of station and wealth. Our Founders instead suggested the great ills of life were caused by arbitrary justice and the lack of consistent application of the rule of law. And our American Revolution was a revolution about the preservation of individual freedoms through limitations on government.
To find conservative principles in our nation’s founding, all we need to do is look to the Declaration of Independence. That brief, 1,337-word document explains what it means to be American—and why America is a nation bound together not by geographic boundaries, which have changed over time, or by common ethnic heritage, but by common ideals. The Declaration of Independence tells us that people are entitled to a “separate and equal Station” by “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.” This comports with the conservative principle that our rights as men spring from our creator.
Our nation’s foundational document created our government as the guarantor of our rights, not as the grantor of rights. The Declaration reads: “That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed.” When government fails to protect man’s inalienable rights, believed the Founders, government must be abolished.
Even as the Founders declared their independence from Great Britain, they recognized that overthrowing great and historic institutions must be undertaken only with extreme care and justification. “Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient Causes; and accordingly all Experience hath shewn, that Mankind are more disposed to suffer, while Evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the Forms to which they are accustomed,” the Founders wrote. Only great violation of rights granted by God and nature could justify such change.
In the Constitution, the Founders sought to enshrine conservative principles in a governmental system that delegated as much power as possible to the individual and local forms of government. Only the issues of great national import—war and peace, debt and trade—were delegated to the federal government. These remain conservative principles today, just as the Constitution still provides the framework for our system of government. But to bring us back to the principles of limited, principled government set forth in our Constitution, our political leaders and the electorate will have to fundamentally change their expectations of the role of government in our lives, which expanded dramatically over the last century.
THERE IS NO MIDDLE ROAD FOR TRUTH
Society and government must have a moral foundation. Thus, the failure to recognize or value a moral foundation is a threat to the virtue, good, and beauty in our nation. These ideas have been explained by many thinkers over time. They have been captured by William F. Buckley’s landmark God and Man at Yale, Whittaker Chambers’s seminal Witness, and Russell Kirk’s magisterial The Conservative Mind. And they are identified, as well, by many of the contributors to this book.
Conservatives understand that the truth cannot be denied. Henry Regnery, in his introduction to Russell Kirk’s The Conservative Mind, wrote that a colleague once explained to him that “a conservative knows that two plus two always, invariably, equals four, a fact of life that a liberal, on the other hand, is not quite willing to accept.” And in his greatly influential work Witness, Whittaker Chambers explained that when you find truth, you must stand up to defend it: “A witness, in the sense that I am using the word, is a man whose life and faith are so completely one that when the challenge comes to step out and testify for his faith, he does so, disregarding all risks, accepting all consequences.”
That there are objective truths that must be defended, sides that must be taken, and enemies that must be defeated is a fundamental conservative principle.
The man who refuses to judge, who neither agrees nor disagrees, who declares that there are no absolutes and believes that he escapes responsibility, is the man responsible for all the blood that is now spilled in the world. . . . There are two sides to every issue: one side is right and the other is wrong, but the middle is always evil. The man who is wrong still retains some respect for truth, if only by accepting the responsibility of choice. But the man in the middle is the knave who blanks out the truth in order to pretend that no choice or values exist, who is willing to sit out the course of any battle, willing to cash in on the blood of the innocent or to crawl on his belly to the guilty, who dispenses justice by condemning both the robber and the robbed to jail, who solves conflicts by ordering the thinker and the fool to meet each other halfway. . . . In any compromise between good and evil, it is only evil that can profit.
These words could have been expressed by English parliamentarian Edmund Burke. They were in fact written by Ayn Rand, whom many in the conservative movement consider a fringe thinker outside our tradition, but whom others consider to have given voice to certain of our core principles most clearly and articulately.
Media pundits and even Republican consultants may advocate compromise on principles from time to time—to achieve a meeting in the middle, to work across the aisle, or to achieve greater victories down the road. But many conservatives realize that there is a greater peril in taking a middle-of-the-road approach than in standing fast for truth. Margaret Thatcher expressed her reluctance to take a middle road from a practical perspective: “Standing in the middle of the road is very dangerous; you get knocked down by the traffic from both sides.” Conservatives understand that the truth cannot coexist peacefully with evil, engender no conflict, and improve our election prospects while still remaining true.
WHAT ARE THESE ABSOLUTE TRUTHS?
Conservatives have always attempted to warn the world that truth is by its nature absolute. As just one example, consider the conservative message on excessive U.S. government debt. Conservatives and the Left battle constantly these days over the need to address our national debt and stop deficit spending. The press, academia, Hollywood, and other leftist circles regularly vilify conservatives as reactionary and intransigent in their focus on reducing our national debt. But the truth is this: spending that greatly exceeds income and resources, if continued, will eventually result in the default and bankruptcy of any entity. This is true for an individual, a family, a company, a nonprofit, or a government. This fact is an iron truth and would be an iron truth even if there were no conservatives and leftists to argue about it. This view is not a conservative position. It is a true position. Insistence that our nation can continue to spend beyond our means without incurring harm, by contrast, is not a leftist position. It is a false position that, if continued, will eventually destroy the full faith and credit of the U.S. government. How can such manifest falsehood about our budget persist at all, much less be adopted as a widespread view by the Left? If you look closely, there are many falsehoods thrust upon the American people by the Left, press, and Hollywood working together to advance a common agenda.
But if essential truths exist, are they somehow too oppressive for modern life? Conservatives argue that the truth is not only real but liberating. A society built on true principles allows liberty, individuality, and freedom to flourish. After all, the fundamental equality of all men and women before God and nature, even amid their differences in wealth, talent, social status, language, professional success, intelligence, education, skin color, ethnic heritage, or political power, is an essentially conservative notion. The Left’s unrelenting focus on equality of outcome is merely the Left’s twist and corruption of the true principle of equality of opportunity that is held by conservatives. So it is with many policies of the Left that lead us, by turns, down the road to a collectivist and godless society.
WHAT CONSERVATISM ISN’T: THE LEFT’S FALSE PICTURE
Critics on the left often attack conservatism as overly concerned with keeping taxes low on the rich and preserving wealth. Defending economic freedoms is depicted by the Left as cheating the poor or supporting crony capitalism—using government to enrich yourself with government favors and backroom deals. By appealing to envy instead of aspiration, the Left suggests that conservatives are trying to hold on to their wealth and aren’t paying their fair share to support government and the less fortunate.
But conservatives are really protecting economic freedom, one of conservatism’s core tenets. Conservatives understand that people should be allowed to keep the fruits of their own labor and use them as they wish to the greatest extent possible; that is the only way for prosperity to grow. And conservatives don’t defend crony capitalism, which goes against conservative ideals and is itself a form of government intervention in the marketplace. Crony capitalism is really just another form of corruption, enabled by an overly large and lavishly funded government.
Critics often confuse the conservative movement with the Republican Party, but party politics is separate from the pillars and principles of the conservative tradition. Admittedly, Republican politicians can be found who have voted against foundational conservative principles. These politicians and their votes do not demonstrate the impracticality of conservative principles, as the Left argues; rather, they illustrate that politicians are fallible, maybe even more so than the rest of us. Some conservatives are willing to keep politicians in office who vote with Republicans on most important legislation, even if they cast occasional votes that go against conservative principles. Others would rather see politicians like these replaced with people who are true to the conservative tradition.
The Republican Party contains many conservatives, but the party doesn’t represent faithfully all tenets of the conservative philosophy. As Governor Haley Barbour explains in his conclusion to this work, though, the conservative movement needs the Republican Party to elect conservatives who put these principles into practice. This is certainly true for the time being at least. The first and foremost goal of each party is to win elections for its team, and the Republican Party does win elections for conservatives (and for some non-conservatives as well). We will explore this tension between the politics of the grassroots base and the politics of the party establishment throughout this book.
HERETICS AND INFIDELS
Conservatism is a vibrant ideology, but a word of caution is required about the movement in practice. Many conservatives would rather burn heretics from the different wings of the movement than unite and fight the enemies who are actively attempting to tear down the country.
In our movement, conservatives of one stripe put in place litmus tests on certain issues important to them to keep out other conservatives who don’t agree with them. The result is that the conservative movement often seems fractured and divided in the popular media and imagination. There are paleocons and neocons, evangelicals and atheists, traditionalists and libertarians, foreign policy “hawks” and isolationists, academics and activists, supply-siders and gold standardists, the Tea Party and the Republican Party, media pundits and Fox News watchers. And it is certainly true that some of these groups really dislike one another.
Must conservatism put aside its internal conflict to win the future? Many today claim that our movement should be a big tent and the tent’s flaps must be thrown wide open. They hark back to Republican strategist Lee Atwater’s 1989 line regarding conflict within the Republican Party: “Our party is a big tent. We can house many views on many issues.”
While Atwater was speaking of party, the conservative movement also can be seen as a big tent. Conservatism is advocated by people with a wide range of views on defense spending, national security, foreign policy, legalization of drugs, abortion, marriage, immigration, and many other issues. We debate all these issues among ourselves, clashing fiercely with those who disagree with us, and sometimes failing to come back together to advance our movement’s core principles.
This vibrant and lively internal debate stands in stark contrast to the orthodoxy of the Left, which seems to adopt the position of “no enemies to the left.” On the left, special interest groups join a grand coalition. Each group gets legislation that benefits it in return for its support of other coalition members’ interests. This approach assures that all groups on the left get their piece of the government pie, whatever the cost to the nation as a whole. The conservative movement has never worked this way.
Having strong core principles is important for our movement, but the ultimate goal has to be winning the power to govern. Conservatives must govern to bring the liberty and freedoms that we speak about to the American people, and to do this, we must stand united.
THE PILLARS
The conservative movement’s focus on a moral foundation and absolute truths may sound outdated, extreme, and downright bigoted to contemporary non-conservatives. Who are these people that still claim to know absolute truths and stand resolutely as witnesses to them? In the following chapters, you will find out. Here are assembled contributions from some of the most prominent conservative voices of our generation, urging a nation to return to its original moral and spiritual heritage. In their own individual ways, the contributors here bear witness to their vision: each has invested a large portion of his or her life and resources articulating and promoting that vision, and each in one way or another has sacrificed in its service.
As the contributors to this work explain, there have to be some pillars we all agree on or the whole tent falls down. We want our government to be based on a foundation of essential truths. We want to preserve liberty and freedom in our nation. We want our federal government limited in its powers to those granted under the Constitution and for government to get smaller and less intrusive in our lives. And when leaders in our movement fall away from these core principles, we step back, reexamine our course, and select new leaders. Our tent, too, has its bounds.
For someone new to conservatism, we hope this book will help you understand this important movement. The contributors’ lives serve as worthy models for those wishing to learn about the tradition that created the United States as the world’s last, best political hope.
To non-conservatives, the contributors may appear as a uniform and monolithic group. But consider for a moment just what a big tent our movement is and what a wide range of viewpoints our contributors represent. To be sure, righteously celebrating diversity is fashionable today, but we are talking here about real diversity of opinion, not of group identity. Indeed, it is hard to imagine all contributors to this book standing in the same room with one another, nodding in agreement on many issues. Yet they share common truths. All believe in preserving and upholding American freedoms and ideals for future generations.
Some in the conservative movement may bristle at one or more of the people whom we have assembled to address the conservative intellectual tradition. These conservatives would argue that we have been too inclusive. A number of conservatives, friends among them, have even told us that they can’t be involved in this project, because of the presence of one or more of the other participants. People hold differing views, though, on exactly which participants and subgroups must be cast out to accurately reflect the conservative movement today.
To all who think we have been too inclusive and drew the line to include too many, we ask that you read the essays of those whom you consider beyond the pale and look for fundamental principles on which you agree. The “vast right wing conspiracy” has its breaches, but we have learned an immense amount about our tradition from this group of thinkers.
Other conservatives will claim that we have excluded some essential strand of the movement or overlooked the contributions of key figures. And to those who think we have been too selective, we say you are right. Many more voices should be heard and listened to about conservative principles. And we hope that you will continue the exploration of our common tradition.
Our journey in this book traces the conservative intellectual tradition from its ancient roots through the American experience and on into the future. If you have begun to perceive the wasteland produced by the vague, lawless leftism now pervading American and global culture; if you are growing weary of knaves in the middle who blank out the truth and pretend no choice or values exist; if the fading portraits of our Founders intrigue you but often seem like little more than relics of an earlier time; if you sometimes worry that, without a course correction, America, too, may be left on the ash heap of history, read on. We will show you something different from the shadows and illusions of leftism. We will show you a mighty, eternal river of truth.