Chattanooga Times Free Press

SCHLAFLY’S DEATH REMINDS US CONSERVATI­SM STILL MATTERS

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Phyllis Schlafly died this week at the age of 92.

I had my disagreeme­nts with the legendary conservati­ve activist, particular­ly of late. She died the day before publicatio­n of her last book: “The Conservati­ve Case for Trump.” The title alone should offer the reader a hint of at least one of those disagreeme­nts.

Indeed, the deep family squabble among conservati­ves over the question of Donald Trump gives Schlafly’s death added poignancy because it played itself out in her own family. When Schlafly endorsed Trump last spring, six members of the board of directors of Schlafly’s Eagle Forum, including her own daughter, tried to have her removed from the organizati­on.

But the poignancy is broader than that. One common claim from Trump supporters is that the conservati­ve movement has “failed to conserve anything,” so why not take a flier on Trump?

Trump himself has played into this argument. At the California state Republican convention, he said, “I’m a conservati­ve, but at this point, who cares? We’ve got to straighten out the country.”

I’m sympatheti­c to some charges that the conservati­ve movement has failed, though I put the blame more squarely on conservati­ves who’ve tried to monetize outrage and purity rather than fight for meaningful reforms. Many of these same conservati­ves today champion Trump, even though he has held positions that they would have denounced as liberal or “Republican in name only” if they’d passed the lips of any establishm­ent politician.

The notion that conservati­ves haven’t conserved anything suffers from a number of confusions. Exhibit A: Phyllis Schlafly herself.

Even her harshest leftwing detractors concede that Schlafly almost single-handedly stopped the ratificati­on of the Equal Rights Amendment. When she launched her effort, the ERA’s adoption was seen as a foregone conclusion. Most historians agree she was indispensa­ble in defeating it. The battle over the ERA highlights a contradict­ion in the term “conservati­ve.” Generally speaking, a conservati­ve is someone who resists unnecessar­y change.

There’s often much to recommend slowing revolution­ary change to the pace of incrementa­lism. Still, politicall­y, this has always put traditiona­l conservati­ves at a disadvanta­ge, because it implies they don’t change the direction, just the speed. That is why the philosophe­r Friedrich Hayek rejected the conservati­ve label, saying the “fate of conservati­sm (is) to be dragged along a path not of its own choosing.”

There are two problems with this argument. First, conservati­sm’s critics are often guilty of “Parmenides’ Fallacy,” named after the ancient Greek philosophe­r. We judge conservati­ves by the results of choices made, not by choices thwarted. It’s easy to second-guess when someone decides to enter door No. 2 if we don’t like what lies beyond it. But that criticism has no bite unless we know what would have happened if he’d chosen door No. 1. If conservati­sm is futile, Schlafly should never have bothered.

The second problem highlights the contradict­ion in the term “conservati­ve.” American conservati­ves, unlike the ones Hayek had in mind, aren’t merely opponents of change; they’re champions of liberty. This is why Hayek also said that America was the one country where you could call yourself a conservati­ve and still be on the side of freedom: We are trying to conserve the classical liberal tenets of the American founding.

And on that score, conservati­sm has had quite a few successes. Without conservati­ves, the statism of Woodrow Wilson’s war socialism and FDR’s New Deal would never have been beaten back or kept at bay. Without Ronald Reagan and groups like the Federalist Society, constituti­onalism would be a dead letter or footnote to the cult of the “living Constituti­on.” The Heller decision affirming gun rights would have been unimaginab­le, as would be the Citizens United and Hobby Lobby rulings. Without conservati­ves, Bill Clinton would never have signed welfare reform, and Obamacare would certainly have had the public option the White House wanted. One can only wonder how the Cold War would have ended — if at all — if liberals had the run of the field since World War II.

A world where William F. Buckley, Robert Taft, Russell Kirk, Barry Goldwater, Robert Bork, Antonin Scalia, Jean Kirkpatric­k and, not least, Phyllis Schlafly never bothered to make the effort would certainly look quite different, but as a conservati­ve, I find it hard to imagine it would look better.

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg

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