Conservatives Follow the Leader
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
The relationship
between the Bush administration and the conservative movement was
hardly unexpected. Conservatives were disappointed when George W.
Bush was nominated, since he is not a card-carrier. But when The
Democrat arrived on the scene, pushing the usual panoply of bad
ideas, conservatives changed their tune and backed the GOP. They
always do. Indeed, they assembled in full force to elect Bush.
Of course,
he moved left after the election. Many months went by before Bush
did what every Republican president does: invite movement
leaders to the White House for a special briefing. Craven
doesnt quite describe it. Conservatives will sell their firstborn
to get a meeting at the White House. The leaders emerged to tell
their followers and the press that they had inside information that
the Bush administration was on the right track, so there was nothing
to worry about. We can easily imagine Bushs staff guffawing
at these fools after they left the room.
After their
meeting, the new conservative love for the GOP president lasted
for a couple of years, and then it was time for another election
and the whole charade started over again. Conservatives issued a
warning that the president had better shape up or he wouldnt
earn their support. So they got another meeting and a photo op and
again promised fealty to the Republican Leviathan. In the end, of
course, they have nowhere else to turn. No matter how dreadful the
president is, conservatives fear the alternative more. So they end
up as willing propagandists for the regime.
But this reliable
support by conservatives for the Republican president confronts
what psychologists call cognitive dissonance, which
is to say that people will not forever live with a massive contradiction
between what they do and what they believe. Eventually, the beliefs
come around. So it has been for the conservatives who, in the 1990s,
blasted Clintons big budgets and nation-building and then
ended up celebrating far larger budgets and a vaster military empire
around the world. The result has been an amazing intellectual bankruptcy
on the Right.
The culminating
event was the financial bailout of the Wall Street plutocrats, which
contradicts everything that conservatives allegedly stand for. It
was socialistic in every way. It rewarded market failures. It ripped
off average families for the sake of billionaires. It was the worst
form of Keynesian planning. It was an open conflict of interest,
as the ex-CEO of Goldman Sachs funneled vast sums to Goldman Sachs.
It had exactly zero chance of helping the economy. In fact, by draining
productive private resources necessary for economic recovery, it
makes a bad situation worse.
Read
the rest of the article
November
12, 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 The American Conservative
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