more relevant history
 
 
Washington  Monthly  
June 1, 2004
 
 
Frontier myth: the spirit of the American pioneer did not  inspire 
modern-day conservativism.

By : Michael  Lind
 
American readers of the "Lexington" column in the British newsmagazine The  
Economist often have the same response to its survey of a particular _U.S. 
state_ (http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/U.S.+state)  The separate 
state  governments and the federal government share sovereignty, in that an 
American is  a citizen both of the federal entity and  or region: Many of 
the  details are right, but the picture as a whole is not quite recognizable.  
American readers of The Right Nation, by The Economist's U.S. editor _John 
Micklethwait_ (http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/John+Micklethwait)  
John  Micklethwait, born in 1962, has been editor-in-chief of The  
Economist magazine since March 23, 2006. Previously he was United States  
editor of 
the publication and ran the New York Bureau for two years, having  edited 
the Business Section of the newspaper for the  and its  Washington 
correspondent, _Adrian Wooldridge_ 
(http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Adrian+Wooldridge)  Adrian  
Wooldridge is the Washington Bureau Chief and 'Lexington' 
columnist for the  Economist magazine.

Wooldridge was educated at Balliol College,  Oxford, where he studied 
modern history, and was awarded a fellowship at All  Souls College, also at 
Oxford, where he , may have similar reaction.  Micklethait and Wooldridge are 
intelligent, entertaining writers, and first-rate  reporters. But their 
analysis of both contemporary American polities and U.S.  political history is 
as 
conceptually flawed as it is politically biased.  



Although the authors claim that "we are not members of either of the  two 
great political tribes that dominate the American _commentariat_ 
(http://www.thefreedictionary.com/commentariat)  ," the truth is that they and 
The 
Economist belong to  the libertarian wing of the right (and the imperial wing, 
too--The Economist was  a cheerleader for the disastrous war in Iraq). By 
repeatedly attributing the  political success of the Republican right to its 
alleged roots in America's core  political traditions, the authors lend 
credence to Reagan Interior Secretary  James Watt's 1980s claim that the real 
distinction is not between liberals and  conservatives but between liberals and 
Americans. 

The thesis of The  Right Nation is that the present Republican ascendancy 
is the result, not of a  temporary national political coalition and the 
exaggeration of the conservative  minority's power by the _electoral  college_ 
(http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Electoral+college)  electoral  
college, in U.S. government, the body of electors that chooses the  president 
and vice president. The Constitution, in Article 2, Section 1,  provides: 
"Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof  may 
direct, a Number of Electors,  and the Senate, but rather of  deep trends in 
American society whose values am represented more truly by  Republicans than by 
Democrats. The Republican Party is not a loose coalition of  different 
groups, but the political manifestation of a "right nation"--a  coherent 
conservative tribe which Micklethwait and Wooldridge all too often  identify 
with 
America as a whole. What the European left hates about the "right  
nation"--religiosity, laissez-faire economics, the gun culture, foreign policy  
unilateralism--am precisely the features that make the _United  States_ 
(http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/United+States)   [ the ] United  
States...
 
As this summary suggests, The  Right Nation is a contribution to the 
emerging literature which holds that  American society, and not merely the 
electoral college, is divided into a  conservative "red nation" and a liberal 
"blue 
nation" (their "right nation" is  simply another word for "red nation.") In 
reality, the "red nation/right nation"  does not exist, except on maps of 
electoral college voting. The Republican Party  electorate today is largely a 
coalition of three distinct subcultures--Southern  whites, Northern 
Catholic "ethnics," and Prairie Protestants of Yankee, German,  and 
Scandinavian 
descent (Jewish and non-Jewish neoconservatives are important  in the elite 
but not the electorate). Micklethwait and Wooldridge do not analyze  the 
Catholic ethnics or the Prairie Protestants, without whose votes the  
Republican 
Party would be a minority coalition representing only the former  
Confederate states. They recognize the southern influence on the right, but 
tend  to 
treat the South's synthesis of God, guns, and free trade as though it were a  
variant of a common national conservative tradition. But if the base of the 
 right were Catholic ethnics in the Northeast and Midwest, American 
conservatism  would resemble European Christian democracy.

Like many foreign (and East Coast) observers, Micklethwait and  Wooldridge 
can't distinguish the Yankee-Germanic West from the Anglo-Celtic  South 
(which includes Texas, more a Southern than a Western state). They  erroneously 
attribute America's fundamentalist _religiosity_ 
(http://www.thefreedictionary.com/religiosity)  

Guns were  essential to people who were taming a wild frontier." But the 
Southern right  finds its closest allies on social issues not among heartland 
Lutherans but  among urban Catholics. And the gun culture is alien to 
Prairie Protestants,  whose social values, according to recent surveys of 
"civic 
culture," remain  close to those of the Midwest and New England--even if they 
do vote for  Republicans nowadays. 

The truth is that the fervent Protestantism and  the penchant for violence 
of the Bible Belt South are not responses to the  American frontier 
environment. These mats are ethnic inheritances that the  Scots-Irish brought 
with 
them from Northern Ireland in the 18th century and took  with them as they 
moved from the Appalachians to the Ozarks to finally, Southern  California ha 
the 1930s as "_Okies_ (http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Okies) 



The Right Nation is just as misleading when it comes to the  history of 
liberalism and conservatism. Today's liberalism is treated as a  continuation 
of the liberalism of FDR and LBJ; thus, the authors entitle one  chapter "The 
Melancholy Long Withdrawing Roar of Liberalism." By the same token,  they 
treat today's conservatism as an outgrowth of the Goldwater-Buckley  
conservatism of the 1960s. In doing so, they follow the conventional 
wisdom--but  
that is no excuse. The truth is that the post-60s Civil Rights  
Democrats--essentially a coalition of left-liberal blacks, Jews, northern  
Protestants and 
Latinos--were a new, different party, not a later stage of the  New Deal 
Democrats whose coalition included Southern segregationists and  Catholic 
social conservatives. By the same token, today's Republicans am  dominated by 
former Southern Democrats or "Dixiecrats." The electoral maps  appended at the 
front of the book, which show the two parties switching their  regional 
bases, are labeled "The Changing Geography of the Right Nation." This  label 
makes sense only if one equates "liberal" with Democrat and "conservative"  
with Republican. But the South has simply exchanged right-wing Democrats for  
right-wing Republicans. 

"If our story has been one of conservative  success, it has also been one 
of liberal failure," Micklethwait and Wooldridge  write. Really? Liberals in 
the New Deal tradition have been defeated ha their  attempts to create 
universal health-care coverage, a goal since the 1930s. But  the far more 
numerous defeats of the right have forced conservatives to abandon  their goals 
and 
crawl toward the center. In the Cold War, Reagan dropped the  right's 
"rollback" policy and adopted the liberal containment strategy. The  Republican 
right has not only abandoned its opposition to Medicare but has also  
extended its scope and cost. A Republican Supreme Court has struck down sodomy  
laws and upheld _affirmative  action_ 
(http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Affirmative+Action) affirmative 
action, in the United States,  programs 
to overcome the effects of past societal discrimination by allocating  jobs 
and resources to members of specific groups, such as minorities and women.  
..... Click the link for more  information.. Plans for partial 
_privatization_ (http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/privatization) 
privatization: see nationalization.  
  
____________________________________

privatization

Transfer of government services or assets to  the private sector. 
State-owned assets may be sold to private owners, or  statutory restrictions on 
competition between privately and publicly owned  
..... Click the link for more  information.
of Social Security am compatible with that  program's purpose; indeed, 
President Clinton almost proposed the idea.  Government polities encouraging 
widespread single-family home ownership and  suburbanization, which 
Micklethwait and Wooldridge identify with conservatism  and the frontier 
(again, the 
damned frontier!) are examples of successful New  Deal social engineering. 
Unable to repeal any major New Deal/Great Society/Civil  Rights program, and 
lacking anything beyond trivial policy initiatives (like  faith-based 
welfare), the Republican right has focused on malting the tax system  that 
funds the 
Rooseveltian state more regressive--a bad policy; bur hardly a  
conservative counter-revolution. 

Micklethwait and Wooldridge concede:  "It is worth admitting that the 
conservative movement's two main  crusades--against big government and moral 
decay--have so far been more  successful as rallying cries than as policies." 
The profound failure of the  conservative counter-revolution against the New 
Deal, the Great Society, and the  Civil Rights revolution proves the enduring 
power of the center in American  politics, if Micklethwait and Wooldridge 
had written a book about how centrists  have frustrated both conservatives 
and the left and had tided it The Central  Nation, they would have broken with 
the conventional wisdom. But they would have  been right. 
-----------------------------------------

Michael Lind, the Whitehead senior fellow at the _New America Foundation_ 
(http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/New+America+Foundation) The New  
America Foundation is a non-profit public policy institute and think tank  
located in Washington, D.C. that promotes innovative political solutions  
transcending conventional party lines -- what they call radical centrist  
politics. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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