No Hubris, Please, We’re Conservative
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
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I like George
Will. I really do. For more than thee decades now, I have been reading
his columns and his books and listening to him on television. Agree
with him or not, his political analysis is almost always interesting,
insightful and often expressed with a delightful sense of irony.
And when he writes about baseball, which is often, he is one of
the best baseball writers in the country.
It is from
Will that I learned of former Cubs player Frankie Baumholtz, a man
of modest skills by big league standards, who at least never sunk
to the level of hawking coffee makers on television like Joe DiMaggio.
("There are some depths to which you can only plunge from an
Olympian height," Will shrewdly observed.) Without Will, I
might never have known that on the day Karolyn Rose filed for divorce,
her husband, Pete, went five for five. I believe that’s called "compartmentalizing,"
as we learned in the Clinton era.
But sometimes
Will tries this poor reader’s patience with his vacillations and
verbal sleight of hand, and I don’t mean only about important things
like the designated hitter rule. (Check his collection of columns
in the book, "Bunts," and you’ll see he has been alternately
for and against the DH a number of times for a number of reasons.)
No, I mean his wavering on issues of seemingly lesser importance,
like war and peace.
You might never
guess it from reading his recent columns, but Will was among the
many conservative pundits supporting the great Bush War II in Iraq,
dubbed "Operation Iraqi Freedom," the successor to "Operation
Enduring Freedom" in Afghanistan. (The "operations,"
to be sure, are enduring. Freedom has not yet arrived, despite all
the purple-thumbed elections.) But at least Will was candid enough
to call the Iraq adventure a "war of choice," in contrast
to the phony "last resort" rhetoric of the Bush administration.
War is an expensive "resort," where conservatives seem
eager to lavishly spend lives, limbs and money.
But Will has
recently published a column full of airy abstractions about liberalism,
conservatism and "reality." Reality, if you haven’t guessed,
is entirely on the side of the conservatives. (Libertarianism gets
nary a mention.) In truth, separating the conservative wheat from
the liberal tares is not nearly as easy as Will would make it appear.
For example,
Will states: "Liberalism increasingly seeks to deliver equality
in the form of equal dependence of more and more people for more
and more things from the government." Really? You mean, like
the Bush administration’s prescription drug add-on to Medicare that
has been called – by Will, among others – the largest expansion
of the welfare state since LBJ’s Great Society?
"Steadily
enlarging dependence on government," Will tells us, "accords
with liberalism’s ethic of common provision, and with the liberal
party’s (I think he means the Democrats’) interest in pleasing its
most powerful faction – public employees and their unions."
Okay. That must be why so much of the federal education largesse
is tied to compliance with the bi-partisan No Child Left Behind
Act, Bush’s landmark domestic achievement. And it must be why conservatives
love to vote for federal funding for local law enforcement. (In
Manchester, NH, our police have even had a federal grant to help
battle the crime of jaywalking.) Perhaps that’s also why the "conservative"
party was the moving force in creating a massive bureaucracy called
the Department of Homeland Security, with the politically rewarding
task of dispersing federal funds for security measures, broadly
defined, to police and fire departments in congressional districts
all over this Heaven-blessed land. Thus does the "conservative"
party engage in "enlarging the dependence on (federal) government."
I could go
on and on. But the sentence that nearly slayed me was this mind
boggler: "Regarding foreign policy, conservatism begins, and
very nearly ends, by eschewing abroad the conceit that has been
liberalism’s undoing domestically – hubris about controlling what
cannot, and should not, be controlled." Whoa!
Say, George,
did you miss the elections last November? I don’t think it was liberalism
that underwent a near "undoing" by an electorate fed up
with the results of "hubris." Nor was it primarily liberals
who took us to war for "regime change" in the Middle East
in an attempt to control something we cannot, and should not, control,
namely the lives and future of other people in distant lands.
No, that has
been the course followed by this administration, headed by an allegedly
"conservative" president who came to office advocating
a more "humble" role for America in the world. No doubt
George W. Bush still thinks his foreign policy is a paragon of humility.
Bush probably thinks "hubris" was Lyndon Johnson’s vice
president.
June
9, 2007
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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