The Calamity of Bush's Conservatism
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
This talk
was delivered at the Rally for the Republic in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
on September 2, 2008.
Sometimes people
say that Americans are cynical about politics. Looking at the way
the Bush administration has used and abused its power for the last
eight years, is it really surprising?
You would have
to be sedated not to be cynical.
It should be
clear why the Ron Paul movement took the country by storm. It represents
something different, something hopeful. Some commentators talk about
how the Paulians have a dark view of American society. Actually,
the opposite is true. That people worked so hard to save this country
from the regular politicians speaks very highly of their outlook.
On the other
hand, it is true that Paulians don't have a high regard for existing
political structures.
Consider Bush.
He has not only broken election promises and trampled on American
liberties, he hasn't done a single decent thing for this country.
And what he has done contradicts all of the values he said he would
uphold both times he tricked people into voting for him.
I wish I could
report that this wasn't his intention. And yet even from his first
day in office, he spoke to aides about his priority of going to
war on Iraq – a country hardly mentioned during his first presidential
campaign.
Here's another
example.
Just after
Bush took office, David Frum, then a White House speechwriter, was
part of a policy meeting with the new president. They were discussing
the energy policy of the new administration. Recall that in those
days, gasoline cost less than a dollar a gallon. Frum had the idea
that it would be a political victory to drive down the price. He
suggested the Bush use the phrase "cheap energy" to describe his
goal.
Frum writes
in his memoirs about what happened next. Bush "gave me a sharp,
squinting look, as if he were trying to decide whether I was the
very stupidest person he had heard from all day." He might
have added that profits in the oil business – which is the business
that this government cares most about – were growing thinner.
Cheap energy,
he answered, was how we got into this mess.
What mess?
Bush explained to Frum that regular Americans were buying too many
SUVs and using too much gasoline and not paying enough for it. His
answer was not to make energy cheaper, but to make it more expensive.
Congratulations,
Mr. President. Your wars, your regulations, your disruption of the
international economy, and your failure to open up the industry
to anyone other than your friends has resulted in quadrupling the
price of gasoline!
Of course,
Bush's success comes at our expense. All of his successes have come
at our expense. In fact, that last sentence might as well be the
theme of his entire presidency.
Of course,
he didn't campaign on the promise of making our lives more miserable.
Let's take a look back and see what his slogans were.
Do you remember
the phrase "compassionate conservatism"?
He said in
an early speech that the phrase came from his insight that broken
lives can only be rebuilt by another caring, concerned human being.
From this he developed what he called a "bold new approach." He
would use government to care for us and to love us and to fix our
broken lives. He alone would do this as head of state.
Few knew at
the time that this simple phrase "compassionate conservatism"
masked a dangerous, Messianic ambition. Some wires had gotten crossed
in his brain. He began to see himself as God's instrument on earth.
Here is another
phrase from early in his presidency. Bush was going to create "an
ownership society." Some commentators were stupid enough to believe
that this meant that he would privatize things and give back control
to the people.
To those who
bought this line, I have only this to say: You Got Owned.
Remember the
phrase, "humble foreign policy"? Coming from Bush, that sounds
about as ridiculous as the phrase "peaceful war," except that he
seems to believe in that too.
His delirium
is like an infection. It spreads. After all, Bush supporters are
the people who continue, even to this day, to talk about their amazing
tactical successes in Afghanistan and Iraq. Another former Bush
speechwriter Michael Gerson, in his new book, calls Iraq a "swift
and humane success."
If such claims
do not qualify as Orwellian, I don't know what the word means.
Many people
say that the Bush administration has departed from conservative
principles. There was a time when I might have said that too, if
by conservatism we mean the constitutionalism of Robert Taft and
Ron Paul.
But consider
that Ron is the only Republican in the whole Congress or anywhere
inside the Beltway to stand up to Bush's attempt to create a totalitarian
state. Only he has consistently opposed Bush's wars, regulations,
spying, and shredding of the Constitution. He alone warned against
Bush’s monetary policies, his trade policies, his diplomatic misadventures,
and his crazed, megalomaniacal arrogance.
You might say
that many have opposed this administration privately. You might
say the same thing about the Stalin, Hitler, and Mao administrations.
Those who could speak out against the wickedness, and did not do
so, are morally culpable.
What does this
tell us? It tells us that conservatism as we once knew it is hopelessly
corrupted. You can detect it at cocktail parties, where self-identified
conservatives sneer at the very idea of liberty.
Clearly, in
the age of Bush, conservatism now constitutes as great or even greater
threat to American liberty than the left and left-liberalism. It
is long past time for every right-thinking American to reject the
term conservative as a self-description.
I for one no
longer believe that Bush has betrayed conservatives. In fact, he
has fulfilled conservatism, by completing the redefinition of the
term that began many decades ago with Bill Buckley and National
Review. Think of it realistically. What does conservatism today
stand for? It stands for war. It stands for power. It stands for
spying, jailing without trial, torture, counterfeiting without limit,
and lying from morning to night.
There comes
a time in the life of every believer in freedom when he must declare,
without any hesitation, to have no attachment to the idea of conservatism.
After immigrating
to the U.S., Ludwig von Mises was aghast to find himself described
as a conservative. He denounced that term in 1956. F.A. Hayek in
1960 announced very clearly that he was not a conservative. Murray
Rothbard wrote thousands of words of protest against the term. Frank
Chodorov went further. He said that anyone who called him a conservative
would get a punch in the nose.
Now, the leaders
of the Republican party are telling us that the only real alternative
to the socialism of the Democrats is the fascism of the Republicans.
They don't call it that, of course, but that's the traditional name
for the combination of nationalism, militarism, and right-wing collectivism.
They have a heritage, and it dates from the interwar period when
certain European politicians took power amidst economic crisis.
Having their confreres in power in our time represents the gravest
danger facing our country.
Yet Ron Paul
has been campaigning for liberty and against this danger since he
first read Hayek and Mises in medical school, since he first encountered
an immoral war’s severed limbs and crippled souls as a flight surgeon
in the Air Force, since he first decided, on August 15, 1971, to
dedicate his life as a public intellectual and a public official
to free markets and sound money, against Nixonian economic controls
and the unlimited money creation that has brought us even more booms
and busts, and led us to the current crisis.
Indeed, since
Ron Paul says he was born a libertarian, we can say he has been
fighting for freedom his entire life.
To do all this,
Ron Paul had to buck Republican conservatism. Look at the peerless,
shining example he has set. And look what he has done, look at this
historic event, and dream of what he will do in the future.
To
those who have lingering attachments to conservatism, I will close
with the words that Murray Rothbard had for the Young Americans
for Freedom, spoken in 1960.
"Why
don't you get out… breathe the clean air of freedom, and then
take your stand, proudly and squarely, not with the despotism
of the power elite and the government of the United States, but
with the rising movement in opposition to that government? Then
you will be libertarians indeed, in act as well as in theory.
What hangover, what remnant of devotion to the monster State,
is holding you back? Come join us, come realize that to break
once and for all with statism is to break once and for all with
the [Buckleyite] right-wing. We stand ready to welcome you."
Today, Ron
Paul stands ready to welcome you. Like the many thousands at this
historic event, we say to all who yearn to breathe free: Join us!
Join Ron Paul!
September
3, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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