What Is Conservatism?

Tyler Cowen provides his answer in list form. Number eight:

Fiscal conservatism is part and parcel of conservatism per se.  A state wrecked by debt is a state due to perish or fall into decay.  This is a lesson from history.  States must "save up their powder" for true crises and it is a kind of narcissistic arrogation to think that the personal failures of particular individuals — often those with weak values — meet this standard.

There is one glimmer of hope in the current insanity on the right. And it is that with Bush's spending and borrowing binge finally over, and the recession pushing the debt into the danger zone, some on the right are finally saying today what Bruce Bartlett and I were saying six years ago: that the first job of conservative government is to restore fiscal balance by cutting spending. This is enormously difficult right now because of the recession, but it is, in my view, the first priority of actual conservative governance in the future. Which is why when you hear Michael Steele prattling on about a Medicare bill of rights it's so depressing. If the GOP party chairman is pledging to throw away any fiscal restraint and become a Democrat of the cynical scare-the-seniors variety, then the reformation has a ways to go.

Dissent Of The Day

A reader writes:

I myself feel the same way Josh does, mainly because of how it would affect me personally.  I make too much to ever qualify for subsidies, so would in effect be forced to buy insurance under the scenario he envisions.  I was recently quoted a yearly premium of $17,000 for me and my wife.  We are both in our mid-30's, and have never had any health issues. Disaster coverage/high deductible plans, where I would be forced to pay the first $5,000-$10,000 worth of costs each year, still carries an annual premium of $8,000.

Can you honestly say that forcing a few million upper middle class Americans, in all probability moderate, independent voters, to spend and extra $10,000-$20,000 per year won't adversely effect the party? Sure, it would help the poor and lower-middle class Americans currently without insurance, but many of them are already in the Democratic camp.

Typepad

I was just about to note that Typepad's latest upgrade actually has improvements. It's now possible, for example, to code a blockquote with a button for blockquotes! Imagine that. And just as I was going to write a post saying how glad I am they have finally decided not to make their clients crazy with non-functional blogging software, the entire thing has gone belly-up and we cannot post photos, videos, or links. All the text-editing tools have disappeared suddenly. Ah, Typepad, just when you want to give them a break, they fuck it up all over again.

Conservatism And Afghanistan

KORENGALJohnMoore:Getty

You may recall a time when conservatives believed in a strong defense, but also opposed using the military for open-ended nation-building efforts against amorphous enemies in failed states. The argument was that you cannot impose order and civilization on alien societies with foreign forces, that the occupying troops will become part of the problem after a while, that culture matters and not every country is ready for democracy or even a functioning central government. Intervention should be brief, and only undertaken under duress. This is George Will's classical conservative take on the utopian beliefs of the neocons in Afghanistan. As a general principle, it is solid. But in this case, the argument is almost comically persuasive. I mean: if you were to come up with a country least likely to be amenable to imperial improvement and edification, it would be hard to come up (outside much of Africa) with any place less propitious than Afghanistan, a tribal alien place with almost no record of central governance whatsoever. We also have historical precedent for imperial and neo-imperial failure: the British failed in Afghanistan over many decades; the Russian empire was defeated in Afghanistan in one. Does anyone believe that Russia would be stronger today by remaining in Afghanistan? Yes, the Taliban hosted al Qaeda, and we were right to evict them. But al Qaeda can move to many failed states, and we cannot occupy or civilize all of them. Moreover, the war is showing signs of becoming a self-licking ice-cream: the insurgency is now only united by opposition to foreign troops, we have pushed it into Pakistan thereby actually increasing the odds of an Islamist state that already has nukes getting even more unstable. And yet the calls for repeating what cannot work – because the war is too big to fail – remain.

I guess neoconservatism is nothing if not anti-empirical. I remember Bill Kristol's and Lawrence Kaplan's assurances that ethnic and religious sectarianism no longer existed in Iraq before the invasion. (I also note no connection made whatever on the neocon right between the legacy of the massive Bush-Cheney debt and the scope of a super-power's ambitions.) We will soon be approaching almost a decade of occupation of Afghanistan, but a decade is not enough for some. Here is the neo-imperialist Max Boot making the case yet again for more empire for many more decades:

The impact on Pakistan—"a nation that actually matters," in Mr. Will's words—is particularly sobering. To the extent that we have been able to stage successful attacks on al Qaeda strongholds in Pakistan, it is because we have secure bases in Afghanistan. To the extent that we have not been more successful in getting the government of Pakistan to eliminate the militants on its own, it is because we have not convinced all of the relevant decision-makers (particularly in the military and intelligence services) that we will be in the region for the long-term. Many Pakistanis still regard the U.S. as a fickle superpower—here today, gone tomorrow. That impression took hold after we left Afghanistan and Pakistan in the lurch in the 1990s after having made a substantial commitment to fight Soviet invaders in the 1980s.

The failure of the US, in other words, has been in not stating firmly that the empire is for the indefinite future and that we will be there for ever or until what Richard Cohen calls "absolute security" is achieved. The logical conclusion of this argument is that for total security to occur, the US will have to occupy half the Muslim world. And, of course, any withdrawal, in the zero-sum macho calculations of the neocons, will embolden the enemy. There is no sense here of the tragedy of history, the fact that invasions can drift into permanent occupations, that they can act as engines for Jihadism, that they can radicalize neighboring states, like Pakistan. Less-is-more is not a nuance neoconservatism ever countenanced. For them the entire world is a potential West Bank.

If this is the strategy Obama wants to continue, then he will be governing as a neoconservative after being elected to undo neoconservatism. A president needs to be able to tell the truth: there is no way to ensure that Jihadist terror will never reach America again. It will – because we are a free society and only police states can banish such violence. And leaving an impossible project is not a function of weakness and fear, but of strength and strategy. Americans have been treated like babies for too long. And the politics of fear is not what Obama represented last year. It was what he ran against.

Leave as soon as possible. Or be Bush III.

(Photo: John Moore/Getty.)

An Elite Problem?

Conor Friedersdorf defends the grassroots on the right:

Unlike some in the media, I don’t regard the grassroots on the right as uniquely insane. I’ve done enough reporting at that level to know that most Americans on the right and left are reasonable people acting in good faith. The right’s fringe problem at this moment in time is one that elites have created as much as any crazy fringe righty. Outfits like Fox News, people like Glenn Beck, talk radio hosts like Rush Limbaugh — these outfits deliberately play on the worst impulses of the conservative base, stoking their paranoia and misleading them about reality, all for the sake of bigger audiences and greater revenues. That ought to outrage anyone who actually respects the grassroots, and has their best interests at heart.

Always The Worrier

Josh Marshall asks:

Am I the only one who thinks that if the Dems pass a bill with mandates and subsidies for poor and moderate income people to purchase it but no public option or competition with the insurers, that it will be pretty much a catastrophe for the Democrats in political terms?

Well I don't buy this at all. It seems to me that a healthcare plan that expands access, removes obvious cruelties and inefficiencies, allows more people into the system and can be plausibly described as universal coverage would be the biggest Democratic policy victory in decades. And I think rejecting this because it doesn't have an immediate public option would be the only truly disastrous move – you get called a socialist and a failure. I think Obama should do what Bush did: pass the popular stuff but, unlike Bush, pay for it in the budget. Then he should turn around and ask the party of alleged fiscal conservatism to come up with the spending cuts their base is now demanding to get us back to balanced budgets within his first term. Ask the GOP to present a balanced budget for Medicare, Medicaid and defense. Call their bluff.

Or maybe I've been off-grid for too long and am being too complacent. Wednesday night will be interesting.

Lock And Load, Mr Beck

Sit down. Take a deep breath. This is what the commie/fascist Muslim alien who became president via a forged birth certificate is telling your kids:

No matter what you want to do with your life – I guarantee that you’ll need an education to do it. You want to be a doctor, or a teacher, or a police officer? You want to be a nurse or an architect, a lawyer or a member of our military? You’re going to need a good education for every single one of those careers. You can’t drop out of school and just drop into a good job. You’ve got to work for it and train for it and learn for it.

And this isn’t just important for your own life and your own future. What you make of your education will decide nothing less than the future of this country. What you’re learning in school today will determine whether we as a nation can meet our greatest challenges in the future.

Be afraid.

Our Foreskins Ourselves

Reason joins the circumcision debate:

[G]overnment has zero business running campaigns—and these things inevitably turn into scaremongering efforts—that try to influence our choices regarding our children and our bodies. Especially when the procedure has so little to do with society's collective health. Circumcision is a personal choice. Well, a personal choice for everyone except that poor little sucker lying on the chopping block.

Elsewhere, Freddie compares the MGM debate to the abortion debate. I guess I was an early obsessive on this. As readers know, my position is simply that no parent has a right to permanently mutilate a child for no good reason. Scar tissue should be a personal choice. Would we approve of parents' tattooing infants? The entire thing is an outrage and should be banned outright with a religious exception for Muslims and Jews.

Evolution And Faith

I've long known Jim Manzi as one of the hopes for an intelligent future conservatism, but I never knew he was as incisive and sane on religion and science as he is on environmental policy. I found Bob Wright's Evolution of God a thoroughly stimulating, careful and riveting book – a provocation of sorts but one that I found extremely helpful in my own current religious wilderness. I read the Jerry Coyne review and share Jim's aversion to it. It seemed to me to wilfully misrepresent the book it was reviewing in some serious respects (Leon Wieseltier's crusade against Bob is almost as sustained and vicious as his jihad against yours truly). Anyway, I really recommend the careful, relentlessly calm and reasoned response of Manzi in defense of Bob's arguments. I also found Jim's post on "liberty-as-means" libertarianism about as good a current description of what I call the conservatism of doubt as I can imagine. And he deepened my belief that federalism is a critical tool of this conservatism, especially on cultural and religiously sensitive questions like abortion and homosexuality.

To have people as intelligent as Jim and Jonah Lehrer and Bob Wright and Hanna Rosin and Conor Clarke and Conor Friedersdorf and Peter Suderman and Julian Sanchez pinch-hit for me was, I repeat, an honor. I'm so grateful.

Goodbye To All That, Update

Publius thinks that the Obama administration should have stood firm on end-of-life counseling and on the language of his address to schoolchildren:

[H]ere's the thing — when you surrender to such obviously absurd outrages, you hurt yourself in the long run. You not only validate those complaints, you come off looking weak and defensive — as if you did something wrong. The conservative outrages on both issues should be counter-attacked, not retreated from.

I disagree on the politics, although I think Publius is obviously right on the issues. If we cannot counsel Medicare recipients on how to make end-of-life decisions for themselves, then, given the huge expense of treating people in the last days of their lives, we are not being serious about healthcare costs. Equally, the hysteria over the presidential address was, well, hysteria. Even Newt Gingrich broke with the crazies on that one. But Obama's mojo has always been to hang back, let his opponents reveal their irrationality and win in the end. There were many moments in the campaign when I feared this would simply mean being Dukakised. But I was wrong. And I suspect the only way to unwind the ferocious cultural blowback from the election of a non-Southern non-white president is to let it blow itself out.

The fear, of course, is that it will blow itself out by assassinating him. I just hope the secret service knows what is being whipped up out there. And I hope that when the GOP leaders acquiesce to this insanity, they understand what Obama following Lincoln would do to this country – and the world.