The Truth About the Conservative Mind: Why Reactionaries from Edmund Burke to Sarah Palin Have Fought Real Liberty
By Corey Robin, The Chronicle of Higher Education
Posted on January 29, 2012, Printed on February 2, 2012
It's been a rotten few months for the nation's wealthiest 1 percent.
From the senatorial candidacy of Elizabeth Warren to Occupy Wall Street,
economic elites have faced a concerted attack on their riches and
power, their arrogant and unaccountable ways. And you can hear it in
their voices, or at least the voices of their spokesmen. House Majority
Leader Eric Cantor declared, "I, for one, am increasingly concerned
about the growing mobs occupying Wall Street and the other cities across
the country." Mitt Romney told an audience in Florida that "I think
it's dangerous—this class warfare." So rattled is George Will that he's
been forced to pull out a playbook from an older time. All but calling
Warren a Communist, he accused the Oklahoma-born scholarship kid of
believing that the government "is entitled to socialize—i.e.,
conscript—whatever portion" of an individual's property "it considers
its share."
After decades of "compassionate conservatism," "a thousand points of
light," and "Morning in America," dark talk of class warfare on the
right can seem like a strange throwback. So accustomed are we to the
sunny Reagan and the populist Tea Party that we've forgotten a basic
truth about conservatism: It is a reaction to democratic movements from
below, movements like Occupy Wall Street that threaten to reorder
society from the bottom up, redistributing power and resources from
those who have much to those who have not so much. With the roar against
the ruling classes growing ever louder, the right seems to be reverting
to type. It thus behooves us to take a second look at the conservative
tradition, not just its current incarnation but also across time, for
that tradition provides us with an understanding of why the conservative
responds to Occupy Wall Street as he does.
Thursday, February 2, 2012
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