Maybe you haven't met the right people. The overwhelming majority of conservatives I know do not fully support the Republican party and have a very basic, simple philosophy and they've stuck to.
Some are, yes. Are most? No.
Those who write for the mainstream conservative magazines, such as The National Review and The Weekly Standard are for the most part, not. I read an incredible editorial by Jonah Goldberg (online editor of National Review), in which he approvingly quoted Reagan's infamous "If it takes a bloodbath…" line, while later in the editorial describing himself as a libertarian! Surely he knows the context of the line, because he acknowledged that Reagan said it in response to student protests. Across the country in Ohio, Governor Jim Rhodes was saying in a press conference that the Kent State protesters were worse than the Nazis (only he used the term brownshirts), Communists and Klansmen (nightriders). A few days later, the National Guard was sent to the campus in direct violation of the Posse Comitatus Act. Guardsmen shot at the students for 13 straight seconds, killing four and wounding several others. The FBI investigated the shooting, and found that the protesters had been neither violent nor threatening to the National Guard.
Goldberg certainly knows all this, yet he still claims to be a libertarian? It is to laugh. This guy is like Lewis Carroll’s Red Queen, believing, if not
six impossible things, at least two.
But I realize Goldberg is not the only conservative out there. William F. Buckley surprised many people when he came out against the War on Drugs a few years ago. Andrew Sullivan, who is certainly a "mainstream" conservative, has publicy spoken
against sodomy laws and
for gay marriage. Most conservatives nowadays are against censorship, although it was a Repulican majority which passed the Communications Decency Act (many Democrats voted for it as well, to their shame). Bob Barr is one of the only Republicans in Congress to come out against the new Anti-Terrorism laws and the secret military tribunals advocated by the current administration. He joins many on the Left (as well as the Right) in recognizing that the government needs to be held accountable, and shouldn’t be given a blank check to do whatever it pleases.
But I've read so many more ridiculous Goldberg-esque (and worse) columns that these shining examples do little to convince me that
most conservatives believe in small, non-interventionist government.
Since there are no statistics available to back up either of our positions, I guess we’ll just have to agree to disagree on this point (since I
know you'll disagree).
Doublespeak? I think not. A strong military does not necessarily mean a large government...just a larger government than you'd have with a weak military.
Um. In just about any case besides full-blown war, it does. Standing armies during peacetime are explicitly forbidden in the Constitution. And even if not… oh, to hell with it. Why am I even arguing such a trivial point? Just read this revealing quote from Bruce Weinrod as the Berlin Wall was coming down:
"The first thing [Bush] ought to do is call Margaret Thatcher and try to talk some sense into her. She was recently quoted as saying the Cold War is over. That really is a problem if you have somebody who is tough-minded saying that. She may not understand that, at least with the American public, you have to create a sense of urgency about what we are doing;
otherwise, the course of least resistance is followed and funding shifts to social programs. [Emphasis added]"
Sounds like
somebody is afraid military funding will be cut. Oh no! We can't have that! The Cold War is over but we're sure to have an enemy
somewhere on the planet, and if not, we'll just have to invent one! To quote
The Onion: "Nobody wins when there's peace."
Of course, I don't pretend that this guy speaks for all conservatives, but a lot of them whined when Clinton cut the military by 2/3 (or something like that). Clinton's joke of a war on Serbia (which I also opposed, BTW) was proof that we obviously didn't
need such a huge military to begin with.
I'm getting the strong impression that you are defining conservative beliefs through the Republican party alone.
I'm getting the strong impression that you didn't read my post. I reiterate:
Do most conservatives believe in a "small govermnet that only interferes when it is absolutely necessary"? None that I know of. But I guess that depends on how you define "conservative." If you mean the Republican Party, then NO. If you mean the "neoconservatives" (e.g. William Kristol, Norman Podhoretz, Midge Decter, et al.), then NO. If you mean the traditional "movement" conservatives (e.g. Bill Buckley, Robert Bork, et al.), then NO. If you mean the conservatives from the Coulter/Horowitz/O'Rourke school (60's generation and later), then NO. If you mean the Old Right, then yes, but they never defined themselves as "conservative" and never even wanted anything to do with the movement. And it wouldn't have mattered if they wanted in anyway, because Pope Buckley "excommunicated" them (along with Birchers, Objectivists, isolationists, etc.) from the "respectable" conservative movement.
My only regret is saying "none…" rather than "most…" I also regret leaving out the Religious Right in my assessment. Otherwise, I stand by my statement.
I don't know a thing about Elliot Abrams, so I can hardly speak as to his viability in that position. I would wonder, however, as to whether or not such a questionable person is pretty much always present on the White House staff, regardless of the President in office.
"Other Presidents did it too," is a poor excuse. I don't know if you're trying to defend your earlier position that you and most conservatives have high standards for those in power. You don't seem to overtly disagree that this is, for the most part, false.
I'm not saying that
I have extremely high standards for those in power, because who does? We're talking about
politicians, for God's sake. Nothing would get done in Washington because so many people would be investigated, asked to resign, etc. I can see how an idealist might claim to actually have extremely high standards here, but in practice it would probably result in gridlock.
I do not recall the exact wording, but haven't various extremists made the claim that they have a "duty" to kill Americans?
And no, it's not a thought crime. If a newspaper says the President "deserves a bullet," that newspaper is acting in poor taste. If someone with a history of terrorism or very possible ties to it is calling for our collective deaths, that's another matter entirely.
Okay, then, what about
these people?
"The current events . . . have caused me to activate my unit. Please be advised that the time for Aryans to attack is now, not later." – Paul R. Mullet, Aryan Nations chief in Minnesota
"May the WAR be started. DEATH to His (God's) enemies, may the World Trade Center BURN TO THE GROUND! ... We can blame no others than ourselves for our problems due to the fact that we allow ... Satan's children, called jews today, to have dominion over our lives." – August Kreis, webmaster of the Posse Comitatus website
"The enemy of our enemy is, for now at least, our friends. We may not want them marrying our daughter, just as they would not want us marrying theirs. We may not want them in our societies, just as they would not want us in theirs. But anyone who is willing to drive a plane into a building to kill jews is alright by me. I wish our members had half as much testicular fortitude." – Billy Roper, deputy of the National Alliance
According to the
Historical Dictionary of Terrorism (Sean Anderson and Stephen Sloan), all three of these groups are known terrorist groups or have ties to terrorism. And if we take what they've been saying since September 11 seriously, it sounds like they think it's their “duty” to kill Americans, or at least Jewish-Americans.
Did the "War on Terrorism" miss these groups? Don't "May the WAR be started" and "[I've] activate[d] my unit" sound like declarations of war to you? As far as I know, no action has been taken against them. The military is not planning to drop bombs on their bases or homes (with their families being collateral damage, I suppose). And I, personally, do not condone such a course of action. I don't think you do either.
I don't believe we've declared war on Afghanistan.
I apologize. I had forgotten entirely that this was yet another military action completely illegal and unconstitutional. Thank you for reminding me!
And I suppose your solution is to sit idle? When every option looks like sh*t, it doesn't exactly make sense to complain about the shortcomings of the more appealing ones.
No, I support retaliation when we are directly attacked. I'm not a pacifist; hardly anyone is. In this case, we were attacked by a terrorist organization, not a country. I support the arrests and trials of those linked to these crimes.
So, where would that have left us in WWII? If it hadn't been for Pearl Harbor, would you have advocated neutrality towards Hitler?
There are exceptions to any non-interventionist stance. But there has been an alarming trend since WWII to label any two-bit dictator we want to get rid of as the "new Hitler." And we just absolutely
must get rid of them, even if that means invading their country, or imposing unilateral sanctions that harm the citizens far more than the dictator.
But if we decide to make friends with some dictator, or he is on the CIA payroll, or Margaret Thatcher has tea with him and calls him a "great man," we will
not intervene unless the general public finds out he is a drug dealer (and our leaders, in a Casablanca-esque moment, are "shocked, shocked, to find such activity going on"). And we will
not allow Spain to extradite a friendly dictator to put him on trial for killing Spaniards, because hey, he killed less people than Pol Pot, right? (I'd like to see that argument tried in Court sometime: "Your honor, my client may be a serial killer, but
at least he didn't kill as many people as John Wayne Gacy. Have a heart!")
You do realize we're screwed eithe way, right? We intervene, and we're apparently interfering...sticking our nose where it doesn't belong. We sit back, we're indifferent and xenophobic, and unwilling to "do the right thing."
Right.
Not bombing foreign countries is xenophobic.
And I do mean non-intervention in terms of force. Foreign Aid is a form of "intervention" (if you want to call it that), that I support. It's quite different than forceful intervention.
Now, regardless of whether or not a modified foreign policy will prevent such attacks in the future, we still have THIS attack to deal with, and I don't see it as anywhere near plausible to simply take this punch in the gut and return back to our corner with a vow to sit out the next round.
I don't see it as anywhere near plausible either, but I don't agree with bombing Afghanistan and now maybe Iraq (and who knows who else) as an appropriate retaliation.
Gah, I'm sick of typing now. Let's just say we disagree on the appropriate foreign policy to take, which wasn't the main thrust of my original post anyway.