Bill Scher

Bill Scher

Posted: October 28, 2008 12:31 PM

Conservatives Sowing The Seeds Of Their Own Demise

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The Atlantic's Marc Ambinder wrote yesterday:

...it might be dangerous for the Republican Party to elevate the stakes for this election to a death match between competing ideologies. If Barack Obama's victory is as decisive as it is shaping up to be, the Democrats can justifiably claim that conservatism itself has been rejected as a political and governing philosophy. In the closing weeks of the campaign, as the Republican ticket continues to run against the very idea of progressive politics, they are sowing the seeds of the post-election realignment narrative.

As today's new Op-Ad from the Institute for America's Future depicts, and as David Sirota noted yesterday, this election is precisely a referendum on past conservative policies.

Ambinder astutely observes: "Conservatives find it absurd that Americans are about to elect the most liberal president of the modern era and aren't terribly upset by it." What seems to be making conservatives apoplectic is that their typical approach to debate -- lies, misinformation, out of context quoting, strained guilt-by-association attacks -- isn't working. As I've been arguing, for conservatives to regain their lost credibility, they need to stop conjuring up phony narratives, acknowledge their failures, make adjustments and re-enter the arena of reality.

But on the whole, they refuse to change their ways. The latest example: LA Times columnist Jonah Goldberg.

Goldberg argues that Obama offers nothing "new," just "old liberal ideas" like "socialized medicine," a "socialized economy" and "socialism." And he tries to make his case with a dizzying array of quote-parsing and 6-Degrees-Of-William-Ayers, tying Obama to such despised figures of American history Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, then going back to early 20th century philosopher John Dewey.

Goldberg is unwilling to make his case based on Obama's own ideas, and contrast them with new conservative ideas, because the former doesn't amount to socialism and the latter doesn't exist.

Instead, he claims Dewey wanted a "socialized economy," FDR liked Dewey, Obama mentions FDR a lot in his book, ergo Obama must be a socialist peddling old socialist ideas.

Goldberg's weak argumentation exposes the silliness of guilt-by-association.

Let's say, for the sake of argument, Goldberg is characterizing Dewey accurately as someone who wanted a "socialized economy" as we understand it to mean today. Who cares?

FDR was president for 12 years. He has a tangible record we can assess, one that believed in active government but did not try to impose complete government control of the entire economy. His "New Deal" program worked, and the progressive institutions he set up fueled much American prosperity for generations.

FDR's "associations" are provably irrelevant. Even if he did draw on Dewey, and even if Dewey had some loopy ideas, politicians are able to separate one's good ideas from their loopy ideas.

Some play guilt-by-association games with new politicians as a way to stoke suspicion. But they don't actually prove anything about what the politician would do once in office. Playing that game with a former politician -- not to mention one generally regarded as one of America's greatest presidents -- only shows how ridiculous the game is.

Sure, the debate between progressives and conservatives over the role of government is a perennial one, and perhaps always will be. But that doesn't mean someone with a progressive or conservative philosophy can come up with new ideas based on their philosophical principles.

Obama has proposed public investment in early education to prevent achievement gaps that manifest at kindergarten. He has proposed public investment in clean energy and energy-efficient technology to create jobs, make energy costs stable and affordable, reduce dependency on foreign oil and avert a climate crisis. He proposes a public-private hybrid approach to guarantee health care coverage for all.

These are new ideas. Conservatives are free to debate them on the merits with some new ideas of their own.

Instead, they continue to be addicted to misinformation, and allergic to new ideas that recognize the failure of their past policies.

Until they change their ways, they'll be planting farms of failure to feed generations of conservatives.

Originally posted at OurFuture.org

Follow Bill Scher on Twitter: www.twitter.com/billscher

The Atlantic's Marc Ambinder wrote yesterday: ...it might be dangerous for the Republican Party to elevate the stakes for this election to a death match between competing ideologies. If Barack Obama...
The Atlantic's Marc Ambinder wrote yesterday: ...it might be dangerous for the Republican Party to elevate the stakes for this election to a death match between competing ideologies. If Barack Obama...
 
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They also paint the tax cut plan as socialistic which is funny. The Earned Income Tax Credit came from Ronald Reagan. It is the same idea that the GOP is complaining about- the 40% who work and do not pay taxes getting free money. They are painting their own favorite as a socialist in this argument. I think maybe we should ask for a tax plan based on the Reagan era where the top pay 50% instead of the 36% from the Clinton era. Would this idea be attacked less because it is from the GOP's favorite, Ronald Reagan?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 10/29/2008
- tompoe I'm a Fan of tompoe 17 fans permalink

Can the Party of Corporate Welfare rebrand itself as something else, maybe Party of Small Government? I don't see the Republican Party playing a role. I see the two parties fighting to hold onto their power, but their days are numbered. The pressure on media is going to be huge in 2009. Between the recession and growing access to the Internet just might help to create a more informed public. Imagine. We could possibly have an election in 2012 that is decided on the issues.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 PM on 10/28/2008
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 145 fans permalink

I guess with this guilt by association idea, if I have read books br Nietzsche or Machiavelli then I am a very bad person who does not believe in democracy. For this reason, Republicans nominate blank slates like Sarah Palin unread on issues or in general so they are untainted by ideas and other guilt-by-a­ssociation tactics.

It is so true that Republicans have not learned that their misinformation techniques no longer work. I have a new faith in the American people because we have rejected this approach after eight long years of the Bush fiasco. However, Republicans keep telling us about the threatening Obama association with Ayers or that Obama is a socialist. They keep pushing for additional tax cuts for the wealthy, while ignoring the reality that their approach has failed after the experiment of the last eight years.

Republicans can keep ignoring the failure of their policies, while insisting that we continue them. They use jingoistic and tiresome attacks on Democrats lke labeling them as socialists. I am glad the conservative Republican approach has been tried and has only failed just short of imploding our entire economic system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:22 PM on 10/28/2008
- PATina I'm a Fan of PATina 220 fans permalink
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Bravo !!!! key phrase in this article "new ideas". My friends and I debate a lot on whether or not we are even capable of coming up w/ new ideas any more. We just keep rehashing the same old crap over duggesting that the idea is good... it was just implemented wrongly (like John Mc Cain's "I can do it").

We really need to recapture the art of critical thinking again. To stop believing every Tom, Dick and Harry simply because they have a few letters after their names.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 10/28/2008
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