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Conservatives Looking More Like Liberals Every Day
by Harry Browne
Once upon a time, liberals in the Democratic Party were the principal
defenders of individual freedom against big government. The champions of
liberty -- people like Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, and Grover
Cleveland -- came mostly from the Democratic Party.
The conservatives -- who were the Federalists, the Whigs, and then the
Republicans -- upheld the traditional, long-standing view that our rulers
know what's best. People like John Adams, Abraham Lincoln, and Teddy
Roosevelt imposed their views of the national interest by violating the
limits on government, without caring how that hurt individual citizens.
In 1932 Franklin Roosevelt criticized conservative Herbert Hoover for
trying to cure the Great Depression with the same elixir that had caused
it -- big government. Roosevelt was the last Democrat to win the
presidency by running as a traditional liberal.
But once in office, he became even more conservative than Hoover --
reverting to the old way of using government to try to solve problems.
By the start of World War II, he had already doubled the federal
budget.
A few Democrats protested this betrayal of the liberal heritage. But the
rest were pleased that their party was no longer the minority party, and
they gladly transformed themselves into supporters of big government.
To provide a contrast, conservative Republicans had to begin posing as
advocates of smaller government. But it's doubtful that they've ever
really believed in the idea of individual liberty.
No matter how many chances they've had, they've never done anything
tangible -- even during the Reagan administration -- to make government
smaller, less expensive, less intrusive, or less oppressive.
Is there a difference?
So today both liberalism and conservatism promote big government.
Both make a big deal about obeying the Constitution. But both sides ignore
the Constitution to pursue their objectives -- liberals for social
welfare, conservatives to stamp out drugs and immorality.
And each side ignores its own stated objectives. Free-speech liberals vote to censor the Internet and put a
V-chip in your TV set, while anti-welfare-state conservatives vote for
federal intrusions into health care, education, and welfare.
So no matter who's in power, the government gets bigger and your freedom
gives way.
The political game
In truth,
it's all a game -- a political game.
Whatever real liberals and real conservatives may stand for, the
politicians on either side stand for only one thing -- power. They want to
be in office, and they'll do whatever they think will achieve that.
And political organizations, leaders, and writers play the game along with
the politicians. Today conservative activists praise George Bush's
big-government policies -- contradicting whatever they may have said about
government last year. They betray their stated ideals as easily as the
1930s liberals did for Roosevelt and as the 1990s liberals did to defend
Bill Clinton.
They're applauding whatever George Bush does -- supporting John Ashcroft
(who has voted regularly against the Bill of Rights) and applauding
big-government intrusions into education, charity and religion. They even
cheer the president's use of executive orders to circumvent Congress
--although they condemned Bill Clinton for doing the same thing.
What happened to principle?
This may seem inconsistent, but it isn't really.
In the eyes of conservative activists, Bill Clinton is bad and George Bush
is good. Thus, by definition, whatever Bill Clinton did was bad and
whatever George Bush does is good -- even though they're doing virtually
the same thing.
Every argument made against the Clinton health-care plan seven years ago
could be made against George Bush's faith-based charity scheme.
Both plans would take decisions away from free people and put them
in the hands of bureaucrats. But conservatives won't say so because the welfare scheme
comes from George Bush rather than Bill Clinton.
There are no philosophical principles at work here, no sense of absolute
right and wrong, no enduring attempt to bind government down with the
chains of the Constitution. Instead, politicians, activists, and
journalists -- conservative or liberal -- are like high school students,
cheering whatever their own team does and booing their hated rival.
Where do you stand?
We expect conservative politicians to cheer whatever George Bush does --
even when he violates supposed conservative principles. The politicians
want to get and keep power -- the power to live at your expense, the power
to reward their friends and punish their enemies.
And it's no surprise that conservative leaders and writers support
whatever he does. They want access to the presidency just as much as
liberal writers wanted access to the Clinton Presidency.
But why should _you_ support the very things you oppose? Why should you
try to make George Bush seem better than Bill Clinton -- even as George
Bush is working to expand government at your expense?
You should be better than the politicians and their prostituting
cheer-leaders.
If you support the big-government policies of either the liberals or the
conservatives -- even if you think the other side is worse -- you're
helping assure that big government will be with you for the rest of your
life.
The only political issue of importance is: _Who will run your life -- you
or the politicians?_ Bill Clinton's wicked ways and George Bush's
religious compassion are trivial matters compared to the loss of freedom
you've suffered at the hands of conservative and liberal politicians.
Only Libertarians oppose big government on principle. No, they aren't
winning important elections. But election victories mean nothing if the
winner isn't working to enhance your freedom.
And it makes no sense to cast aside your beliefs just to support
someone who seems to have a better chance to win an election.
We can't turn America around overnight. But if we don't separate ourselves
from the political prostitutes and stand up for what's right, we will
_never_ turn it around.
---
Harry Browne was the 2000 Libertarian
presidential candidate. More of his articles
can be read at http://www.HarryBrowne.org,
and
his books are available at http://www.HBBooks.com
.
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