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by
Gus
diZerega, Ph.D
There
is lots of variety among Conservatives, but if the word
has any meaning at all, it emphasizes a distrust of
radical change. Conservatives prefer building on traditions
that have stood the test of time over social policies
based on the speculations of individual minds, no matter
how brilliant. In the absence of overwhelming need,
big changes are too risky to try. Prudence is a conservative
virtue because the future is unknown, but can be relied
upon to bring new challenges and unexpected risks.
The
Bush administration has repudiated every one of these
conservative values. The Radical Right, which provides
the majority of his key supporters and officials is
worse.
Appointed
President with over 500,000 fewer votes than Al Gore,
a conservative president would have governed moderately.
He would have taken small steps moving the country as
a whole in the direction he deemed wise. Not George
Bush. As a result, we have a country more deeply
split than at any time since the civil war - which is
not a good precedent.
Bush
has given us enormous deficits, with no end in sight.
The reasons for his economic policies continually change,
but their content remains the same - reduce taxes on
those best able to pay, regardless of its impact on
the rest of the country. Government has grown enormously
under his administration, putting the lie to his claims
to favor smaller government. Its bills will fall due
in the future, when Bush is out of office. But he is
making our children pay so the rich of today do not.
Bush
uses all this extra spending to reward private corporations
that then contribute to him. He calls this "down
sizing" and "contracting out" but in
reality it means tax money turns into corporate profits.
Some of that tax money comes back as political contributions,
to keep their benefactor in office at taxpayer expense.
For example, Bush, will have no opponents for the Republican
nomination, yet is expected to raise between $170-million
and $200-million for his campaign -- more than all the
money raised by Republican leaders Ronald Reagan, George
Bush Sr., Bush's father, and Bob Dole combined. Contributions
like that buy a lot of access, and it isn't access for
average Americans. This is called machine politics.
See:
www.globetechnology.com
There
is all the difference in the world between reducing
the size of government spending so more money is spent
in the private sector, and increasing the size of government
spending, but contracting out the work to private businesses,
so that corporations receive the tax money rather than
public employees. The chief difference is that corporations
will then give millions to the incumbents who send them
those lucrative contracts. Public bureaucracies were
barred from doing this to prevent a national machines
such as Bush is building. Bush's strategy depends on
heavy government spending benefiting corporations that
then donate to him. He has no incentive to cut back
or spend wisely. And he doesn't.
See:
http://www.taxfoundation.org/taxingspending.html
Between
1999 and 2002, the number of contractor employees expanded
by 727,000 positions, even as the civil service got
smaller, according to a report by the Brookings Institution:
as
of the end of 2002, federal contracts were generating
5.17 million jobs, while grants supported another
2.86 million jobs, the highest figures since the end
of the Cold War in 1990. At the same time, the number
of civil servants continued to shrink-in 2002, federal
agencies had 1.76 million civil servants on the payroll,
418,000 fewer than they did in 1990.
See:
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0903/090403p1.htm
Now
that it is dominated by the Radical Right, the Republican
Party actually is a bigger spender at the state
level as well. Again, the practice of contracting out
is helping them build a machine based on anything but
conservative values. And they call Democrats tax-and-spend!
See:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2003-05-18-spend-usat_x.htm
Whether
their policies are wise or foolish, liberals believe
government can benefit the country as a whole. They
tend to distribute spending in ways that reflect these
values, while still rewarding their electoral base.
Today's Radical Right Republicans, and the President,
have no such conception of a public good. They use their
power to tax to exploit states that do not support them
for the benefit of those that do. When Democrats last
controlled the House and wrote the 1995 budget, the
average Democratic district got $35 million more
than the average GOP district. By 2001, average federal
spending in Republican districts was $612 million
more than in Democratic districts. Kleptocracy in the
name of "conservatism.
See:
montanaforum.org
Bush
also repudiated almost 60 years of successful foreign
policy alliances and 200 years of tradition to lay claim
to the unilateral right to invade anyone he thinks may
sometime in the future be a threat. Less than a year
after we invaded Iraq the lack of wisdom in these claims
is apparent to all who pay attention and don't have
Alzheimer's. Our government is asking the UN and European
powers we insulted and denigrated only a year ago to
help save us from the consequences of incompetent leadership
applying radical ideas in defiance of our traditions
and experience.
Despite
a total absence of public support, Bush has sought to
eliminate environmental protections wholesale. For example,
no other administration has happily adopted interpretations
of environmental law that they admit will increase
air pollution. Cities and states lose, corporate contributors
gain. $200 million well spent. Bush did this over the
objections of states adversely affected, which brings
us to the conservative value of federalism.
The
Bush administration has assaulted federalism wholesale,
from increasing federal control (but not funding) of
education, historically a local and state affair, to
supporting taking away the states' authority to protect
consumer privacy and regulate corporate misbehavior,
explicitly them to Washington. Corporate profits again.
Attorney
General Ashcroft
has gone out of his way to require federal prosecutors
to ask for death penalties in states where it is not
applied. His attacks on states that have voted for medical
marijuana are well known and vindictive. He is trying
to use the federal government to take away licenses
from Oregon physicians involved in physician-assisted
suicide by suffering terminally ill people, a law supported
in two statewide referendums. Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist
wants a constitutional amendment defining marriage as
he this it should be. This is in response to moves in
many states to define it differently.
Insofar
as conservatives are sincere in their praise of morality,
Bush's incessant lies ensure that their support of him
amounts to enormous hypocrisy, or selective blindness.
Whichever is the case, conservatives who claim Bush
supports their values are betraying many of the principles
they claim to honor.
But
the Radical Right which underwrites Bush's policies
is even worse.
Their
control of the Republican Party and single minded pursuit
of power has led them to undermine a major tradition
that makes representative government work: that congressional
seats are redistricted after every census, as the constitution
requires, rather than at the pleasure of the party in
power. With Bush's support, they have sought to make
major changes in our judiciary with "stealth"
nominees, after making it all but impossible for Democrats
to appoint judges under the Clinton presidency. They
have repudiated the basic constitutional principle of
separation of church and state so the most sectarian,
bigoted, and ignorant portion of our country can exercise
power over the rest of us. And we pay taxes for that
privilege.
Genuine
conservatives have been shut out by the intolerant fanatics
of the Radical Right, and the opportunistic liar who
they have made their leader. They are busy trying to
create a structure of rule and domination that would
impress a Caesar.
Some genuine conservatives are beginning to grasp this.
Bizarrely, they then argue the Bush administration is
"too liberal." But those who seek power over
all else are neither liberal nor conservative. They
are simply morally and politically corrupt.
For
their part, many Liberals are just beginning to wake
up to the fact that Bush and the Radical Right constitute
a new and dangerous threat to our country. Political
debates between liberals and genuine conservatives will
always be with us, because the world is complicated
enough that, in my view, no ideology is adequate to
grasp all we need to pay attention to. Conservatism
by itself will prevent changes that are needed. For
example, conservatives opposed civil rights legislation
that most of them nowadays admit was needed. Liberals,
left to themselves, can be too eager to change things.
Leading to unwise laws and overly ambitious projects.
Many of the urban renewal projects developed under Lyndon
Johnson are now admitted to have done more damage than
good, by disrupting neighborhoods and worsening the
circumstances of the people they were supposed to help.
I
pick these older examples because now fair-minded people
on both sides agree that civil rights legislation was
largely beneficial and urban renewal did lots of damage.
So I can make my point without getting bogged down in
policy debates. We need debate and political opposition.
It is the lifeblood of a democracy.
While
subverting conservatism, the Radical Right denies the
very legitimacy of liberal views. The Radical Right's
assault on liberal values particularly targets civil
liberties, openness in government, and public values.
The first two are foundations to free societies, and
to the American principle that the people, and not the
government, are sovereign. The third is fundamental
to what makes us a people, and not a collection of isolated
individuals.
The
Bush administration's rapid expansion of governmental
secrecy and equally rapid expansion of the government's
power to obtain knowledge in detail about any citizen
is completely outside the constitutional traditions
of this country. This radical legislation was first
passed with a sunset clause, automatically ending it
after a few years. Now
Ashcroft and Bush
want to repeal the sunset provision, making it permanent.
The
Bush administration has launched an extraordinary attack
on the most basic American principle: the nature of
our citizenship. We are citizens, regardless of our
views. Government is our tool for self-governance.
Never before has an American government claimed the
power to hold citizens indefinitely in secrecy, without
notification of the courts. Never before has an American
government claimed it should have the right to deprive
Americans of their citizenship, simply because the President
says so. These claims better fit an emperor or dictator
than a democratic leader.
Bush,
Ashcroft, and others defend these abuses in the most
un-American of political terms: "trust us."
I doubt that it is possible for a more un-American statement
to be uttered by a politician.
Both conservatives and liberals have emphasized
that we should not trust those with great power. This
is why we have a constitution. Thomas Jefferson
wrote in 1789, "In questions of power, then, let
no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him
down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution."
He was hardly alone. For example, Benjamin Franklin
observed in 1759, "They that can give up essential
liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve
neither liberty nor safety." Politicians as conservative
as Dick Armey and Bob Barr have joined the ACLU due
to their concern about where Bush and the Radical Right
are taking us.
Liberals
believe there are over arching community values that
only governmental action can provide. These values cannot
be reduced to dollars and cents. They are basic to a
good life and responsible citizenship. This includes
education and adequate health care for all, and protection
for the poor, especially their children. Some liberals
include more, some much more, but all include these.
The Radical Right denies this as well. Government should
be strengthened insofar as its power to prosecute, incarcerate,
and wage war is concerned. It should serve the interpretation
of religion of those in power, and oppose everyone else's
errors. It should also serve the interests of well connected
corporations, such as Halliburton. But it has no particular
responsibility to the citizens who make up this country
- and whom supposedly it serves.
Clean
air is less important than corporate profits. Citizen
privacy is less important than corporate profits. Citizen
access to public land is less important than corporate
profits. Inexpensive public services are less important
than corporate profits. Citizens' rights as consumers
are less important than corporate profits. The list
could go on because, other than their own power, nothing
is more important than corporate profits, plenty of
which then returns to them as political contributions.
Liberals'
expansive view of public values opens them to the error
of having too much trust in bureaucracies and too, little
trust in average citizens. But theirs is the mirror
image of the conservative mistake of having too much
trust in business and the status quo. That is why we
need both liberals and genuine conservatives.
Each helps provide a reality check on the other. Each
represents a valid part of our traditions, a legitimate
way to be a good American. The Radical Right attacks
both, to the great danger for our country. It uses any
tool or argument or label it can in its pursuit of power
- the only value it really worships. Power over our
pocketbooks, power over our souls, and power over the
other peoples of our world.
Civility
can return to American politics once conservatives and
liberals realize they have more in common with one another
than either do with the Radical Right. Liberals and
conservatives will always disagree, and it is good that
they do. But they disagree within a common worldview
of constitutional government, respect for civil liberties,
and the democratic process. Their feuds are family feuds.
Family feuds can be pretty strong, but the family unites
when outsiders enter in. This is why Armey and Barr
joined the ACLU. It is time for the Radical Right, and
its attack on American traditions and values in the
name of "patriotism" to be seen for what it
is.
Liberals
have begun to grasp the nature of the radical right
threat because they have been its chief targets so far.
Conservatives have been slower to wake up because they
were drawn in by the Radical Right's cynical use of
their terminology, and initially thought its failure
to follow through was simply because of the need for
political compromise. But they will never follow through
because they are not conservatives. Our country's future
will be more secure when all Americans are aware of
what is at stake: the end of politics as we have played
that game for two centuries, replaced by a state financing
its re-election by control over jobs and manipulation
of media and electoral rules. It's not a pretty prospect.
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