The conservative choice

March 26th, 2008 4:53 pm · 3 comments

Andrew Bacevich tells us why it’s Barack Obama:

For conservatives to hope the election of yet another Republican will set things right is surely in vain. To believe that President John McCain will reduce the scope and intrusiveness of federal authority, cut the imperial presidency down to size, and put the government on a pay-as-you-go basis is to succumb to a great delusion. The Republican establishment may maintain the pretense of opposing Big Government, but pretense it is.

Social conservatives counting on McCain to return the nation to the path of righteousness are kidding themselves. Within this camp, abortion has long been the flagship issue. Yet only a naïf would believe that today’s Republican Party has any real interest in overturning Roe v. Wade or that doing so now would contribute in any meaningful way to the restoration of “family values.” GOP support for such values is akin to the Democratic Party’s professed devotion to the “working poor”: each is a ploy to get votes, trotted out seasonally, quickly forgotten once the polls close. …

<snip>

Above all, there is this: the Iraq War represents the ultimate manifestation of the American expectation that the exercise of power abroad offers a corrective to whatever ailments afflict us at home. Rather than setting our own house in order, we insist on the world accommodating itself to our requirements. The problem is not that we are profligate or self-absorbed; it is that others are obstinate and bigoted. Therefore, they must change so that our own habits will remain beyond scrutiny.

Of all the obstacles to a revival of genuine conservatism, this absence of self-awareness constitutes the greatest. As long as we refuse to see ourselves as we really are, the status quo will persist, and conservative values will continue to be marginalized. Here, too, recognition that the Iraq War has been a fool’s errand—that cheap oil, the essential lubricant of the American way of life, is gone for good—may have a salutary effect. Acknowledging failure just might open the door to self-reflection. …

<snip>

Yet if Obama does become the nation’s 44th president, his election will constitute something approaching a definitive judgment of the Iraq War. As such, his ascent to the presidency will implicitly call into question the habits and expectations that propelled the United States into that war in the first place. Matters hitherto consigned to the political margin will become subject to close examination. Here, rather than in Obama’s age or race, lies the possibility of his being a truly transformative presidency.

Said it time and time again but it only has real force when coming from an actual conservative: The Iraq war is not, and never was, a “conservative” endeavor. It doesn’t matter what Teh Leader or Darth Cheney said, it doesn’t matter what Limbaugh and Hannity think; the Iraq war was a war on spec, an attempt at transformative war, and we’ve gotten an imperial presidency in the process, a grotesque expansion of executive power and privilege claimed. But that movement conservatives see the Iraq war as conservative on the mere grounds that it’s militarism in action, and they’re always in favor of military action regardless of the consequences, just underscores how far conservatism has come from what it used to be - prudent, and wary of “transformative” anything.

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  3 comments  Tags: Obama · War in Iraq

There are currently 3 comments on this blog post
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Kate
3/26/08
9:17 PM
Hey Gil, maybe you could discuss this issue with Mitt Romney. He's coming to town on April 10.

Let me know, I'll see if I can get a ticket for you. tongue.gif
gsmart
3/27/08
9:08 AM
QUOTE(Kate @ Mar 26 2008, 09:17 PM) [snapback]370727[/snapback]
Hey Gil, maybe you could discuss this issue with Mitt Romney. He's coming to town on April 10.

Let me know, I'll see if I can get a ticket for you. tongue.gif




Mitt. Mitt is the classic example of a politician who will say anything, be anything, in order to court a specific demographic and get himself elected.



We all know Mitt wasn't the winger he portrayed himself as during the campaign. Really, it's the same with Mike Brubaker and his Hate Teh Gay legislation - I've little doubt that Brubaker, personally, isn't such a neanderthal. But he's got to play one on TV - or at least in your newspaper - to court that specific demographic.

Kate
3/27/08
9:13 AM
http://www.wgal.com/video/15711652/index.html?source=CNN

YouTube candidate spoofs. Ya gotta laugh at the ridiculous antics. tongue.gif
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