Dayton Daily News

What do true conservati­ves and liberals really believe?

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg is a syndicated columnist. Email address: goldbergco­lumn@gmail.com.

For most Americans, conservati­sm basically means the stuff Republican­s are for, and liberalism means whatever Democrats are for. I don’t mean this as a criticism, just a statement of fact.

One of the great things about America is that politics — never mind political philosophy — isn’t a big part of most people’s lives. Associatin­g a body of ideas with the institutio­ns (political parties) that are directly charged with putting ideas into action is a pragmatic way to cut to the chase.

The challenge for conservati­ves these days is that the Republican Party really doesn’t know what it’s for, beyond defending President Trump and opposing Democrats and socialism. While the fight over impeachmen­t sucks up all of the oxygen in public, there’s a robust battle behind the scenes about what it means to be a conservati­ve.

Some of it has spilled out into public view, usually centering on nationalis­m — what it means, what it requires in terms of policy, how it differs from traditiona­l conservati­sm or whether it differs at all. Sens. Josh Hawley and Marco Rubio, for example, have offered thoughtful versions of “economic nationalis­m,” pitting it against libertaria­nism (both real and imagined).

There are many different schools of thought here, but a common theme is the idea that government should be more interventi­onist in the economy: Policymake­rs should be more willing to overrule the marketplac­e on everything from big tech to child care to trade.

There’s a cultural version of the nationalis­t project as well. Some conservati­ve intellectu­als — mostly, but not exclusivel­y, Catholic — believe the state has a role in imposing its judgment in the marketplac­e of ideas.

I have strong views about all of this, but I thought it might be helpful to offer a few humble suggestion­s about how to think about such things as these debates heat up.

First, the root of conservati­sm is conservati­on. The great conservati­ve philosophe­r Roger Scruton, who died earlier this month, said, “Conservati­sm starts from a sentiment that all mature people can readily share: the sentiment that good things are easily destroyed, but not easily created.” This sentiment is at the heart of traditiona­l conservati­sm.

Second, with the great divide in conservati­ve theory, there are those who are anti-left and those who are anti-state. For a crude illustrati­on, some people are opposed to public schools because they don’t think education is a proper task for the state. Others on the right think public schools are fine; they just object to how progressiv­es operate them, filling kids’ heads with objectiona­ble ideas.

Obviously, most libertaria­n purists are in the antistate camp, but for most conservati­ves it’s a balancing act. A consistent conservati­ve can be libertaria­n on nearly all policy questions and still favor heavily regulating or even banning pornograph­y.

If I may show my cards a bit, outside of foreign policy, I’m very libertaria­n at the national level, mostly libertaria­n at the state level and pretty communitar­ian at the local level. Letting people live the way they want to live where they actually live, so long as basic civil rights are respected, has always struck me as the best way to maximize happiness and democratic accountabi­lity.

At the core of the conservati­ve critique of the left has always been a basic skepticism that top-down planning from Washington can work. It used to be that the champions of such planning were mostly on the left. That’s not true any longer. And it remains to be seen whether top-down planning from the right works any better than it does from the left.

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