Dubya
and Conservatism
by
David Dieteman
The
presidential election of 2000, at least where this classical liberal
is concerned, was a choice between the lesser of two evils. The
winner, George W. Bush, was the lesser of two evils.
(As
an aside, notice that Al Gore's celebrated beard makes him look
much more like his ideological role model, V.I. Lenin. Compare the
photo of Gore below at left with the photo of Lenin below at right).
(Picture
Lenin with some hair on top of his head, or picture Gore with a
little Lenin-style cap, and the resemblance is quite strong, da?).
Some
Americans, happy not to be under the ecologically-sensitive jackboots
of Lenin, er, Al Gore and his environmentalist minions, are giving
President Bush a free pass where the growth of federal power is
concerned.
In
an effort to keep Bush's polling numbers high (and, of course, to
prepare for the Congressional elections), the Republican party has
been attempting to cast President Bush as the second coming of Ronald
Reagan if not of Thomas Jefferson. As Howard
Fineman writes in comparing Bush to LBJ (another Texan who swelled
federal power), The
pictures, so far, have been picture-perfect: George W. Bush
in jeans and boots, smiling beneath the Big Sky of Texas; in
outdoor gear, clearing brush in the Colorado mountains; in shirt
and tie at the Rockies game; in a suit in Albuquerque, N.M.,
reading to second-graders.
There's
only one thing wrong with these pictures and this message: It
has little to do with the way in which the Bush Administration
is behaving. In fact, this ostentatiously anti-Washington presidency
may see the most far-reaching expansion of federal power since
the heyday of the last Texan who loved his ranch: Lyndon B.
Johnson.
As
always, the Devil is in the details. Photo ops and sound bites are
not supported by reality. As Fineman continues, Consider:
Bush's energy plan calls for giving the feds new eminent domain
powers, so power companies can string new lines over the objections
of local and state governments. The "patients bill of rights"
Bush now supports creates a federal tort claim that would supercede
state common law a novel and unprecedented idea. His "faith-based"
social-welfare initiative would funnel billions into the charity
programs of religious entities and where federal bucks go,
federal rules inevitably follow. Bush's education plan, of course,
is the biggest potential federal power grab of all: it would
essentially federalize the supervision of testing in every public
school nationwide.
Although
Fineman is correct remember, folks, you heard it here first (see
"Oh
Shrubbery, My Shrubbery").
Aside
from the points Fineman raises about Bush, his article is worth
considering for two other points he makes, namely, his portrayal
of Thomas Jefferson and American conservatism. First, Fineman argues
that Bush
is hardly the first president to talk local and act national.
He follows a tradition as old as the Republic, or at least the
first Jefferson Administration. The Sage of Monticello was the
original anti-Federalist, localist foe of the autocratic John
Adams. But Jefferson didn't hesitate (and didn't care about
bureaucratic niceties) when he doubled the country's size in
the Lousiana Purchase. Sending Lewis & Clark into the West
was an act of aggrandizement, literally. In all, Jefferson was
as aggressive as Adams, maybe more, in using federal power to
knit the nation together.
As
a matter of sheer nit-picking, Jefferson was of course not the first
"anti-Federalist," if that term is taken to describe those "democratic
republicans" who strove to preserve the English traditions of the
rule of law and limited government in the American colonies.
Jefferson,
however, is perhaps the most prominent classical liberal in American
political history. And yet, as when considering other presidents
(such as Lincoln), one must be careful not to idealize Jefferson.
Fineman is right to observe that even the great Jefferson had his
faults, most notably with respect to geographic expansionism and
his treatment of the American Indians. Citizenship is not hero worship.
(In that regard, the new volume published by the Ludwig von Mises
Institute, Reassessing
the Presidency, goes a long way towards removing the rose-colored
lenses through which Americans are accustomed to viewing the inhabitants
of the Executive Mansion, better known as the White House).
Second,
Fineman contends that President Bush reflects
the age-old American ambivalence toward federal power. We prefer
barn raisings (and barn burnings) to decision-making in a distant
capital. Yet we accept sensible roles for the feds, from highway-building
to money-printing to Social Security to Medicare. And in rare
circumstances in times of war or depression we glory in
our commonality, if not, quite, in the idea of government.
This
point gets to the heart of the dispute between classical liberals
(libertarians) on the one hand, and conservatives on the other hand.
Despite the fact that both classical liberals and conservatives
are concerned with individual liberty and the preservation of free
institutions, their concerns have a different emphasis.
As
Friedrich Hayek points out in the postscript to The
Constitution of Liberty, tellingly entitled "Why I am Not
a Conservative," classical liberals have a principled attachment
to individual liberty and free institutions. Classical liberals
believe in the rational superiority of liberty and its institutions
because they believe that liberty is necessary to the flourishing
of human existence. Liberty is not chosen merely because it is expedient,
useful, or the status quo.
On
the other hand, Hayek notes that conservatism is only as good as
what it conserves. Where the rules of just conduct (i.e., the law)
and their attendant institutions are animated by a concern for individual
liberty, conservatism will be a good thing. Where the law and social
institutions are hostile to liberty, however, conservatism stands
athwart liberty yelling stop.
Thus,
when Fineman opines that Americans "accept sensible roles for the
feds," such as "highway-building to money-printing to Social Security
to Medicare," he points directly to the fault line between classical
liberals and conservatives.
There
is no "need" for government fiat money, backed by nothing but the
promise of taxation, in contrast to privately provided real money
(gold). There is no "need" for compulsory Ponzi schemes such as
Social Security, which taxes young workers to pay old retirees,
with no guarantee that the young will ever have their money returned
to them. There is similarly no "need" for government to "fix" the
provision of medical services in America. Most of the problems (if
not all) with American health care can be traced directly to government
economic interventions in the first place. And yet many conservatives for example, Jonah Goldberg of National Review positively
ridicule the very idea that economic goods such as transportation
(in particular, roads) could ever be better-provided by a private
marketplace than by the compulsory state.
Worse,
Fineman adds that "in rare circumstances in times of war or depression we glory in our commonality, if not, quite, in the idea of government."
It
is one thing to share fellow-feeling and sympathy with suffering
neighbors in times of economic gloom, and to rally to the defense
of home and family when attacked. Too many conservatives, however,
do not go beyond the notion of rallying to the flag to examine the
underlying reasons for the "rare circumstances" of war and depression.
When
was the last time a foreign nation attempted to invade the United
States? When was the last time American men went to die in a war?
Notice the great disconnect between the two events. Conservatives especially of the neo-conservative, Bill Kristol and Jonah Goldberg
variety no longer seem so concerned that war be restricted to
self-defense on a national scale, hence Kristol's enthusiasm for
American military intervention in China.
Where
economic contractions are concerned, how many Bush voters understand
the economic reasons for such contractions, as advanced, for example,
in Friedrich Hayek's theory of the business cycle?
The
government to which conservatives run for bailouts has been historically
responsible not only for causing economic downturns, but for making
them worse.
The
paradoxical reign of George Bush, then, is paradoxical precisely
because his supporters have not resolved certain paradoxes in their
minds. American voters may know that they are not Communists, and
they may fear the machinations of the Democrats sufficiently to
continue electing Republicans. America will not be significantly
better-off, however, until more American voters choose their politicians
based upon a principled adherence to a coherent and workable view
of society, namely, classical liberalism.
If
Americans wish to have more freedom over their lives, and less government
regulation, they must give up the idea that their own pet causes
merit government interference. They must also approach with a critical
mind the sound bites and glossy photographs with which politicians
seek to cloak the expansion of the government.
As
the situation stands today, George Bush, like his predecessors in
office, has expanded the powers of the federal government. The reason
for this is simple. Individual freedom is inherently at odds with
government regulation. Not enough American voters understand this
fact.
Those
who voted for George Bush because he was not Al Gore got what they
bargained for. Those who voted for George Bush because they thought
he would reduce the size of the federal government should take a
closer look.
August
16,
2001
Mr.
Dieteman [send him mail]
is an attorney in Erie, Pennsylvania, and a PhD candidate in philosophy
at The Catholic University of America.
©
2001 David Dieteman
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