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http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110010137

"The Conservative Mind
The American right is a cauldron of debate; the left isn't.

BY PETER BERKOWITZ
Tuesday, May 29, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT

The left prides itself on, and frequently boasts of, its superior
appreciation of the complexity and depth of moral and political life.
But political debate in America today tells a different story.

On a variety of issues that currently divide the nation, those to the
left of center seem to be converging, their ranks increasingly
untroubled by debate or dissent, except on daily tactics and long-term
strategy. Meanwhile, those to the right of center are engaged in an
intense intra-party struggle to balance competing principles and goods.

One source of the divisions evident today is the tension in modern
conservatism between its commitment to individual liberty, and its
lively appreciation of the need to preserve the beliefs, practices,
associations and institutions that form citizens capable of preserving
liberty. The conservative reflex to resist change must often be
overcome, because prudent change is necessary to defend liberty. Yet the
tension within often compels conservatives to wrestle with the
consequences of change more fully than progressives--for whom change
itself is often seen as good, and change that contributes to the
equalization of social conditions as a very important good.

To be sure, some standard-order issues remain easy for both sides.
Democrats instinctively want to repeal the Bush tax cuts, establish
government supervised universal healthcare, and impose greater
regulation on trade. Just as instinctively Republicans wish to extend
the Bush tax cuts, find market mechanisms to broaden health care
coverage and reduce limitations on trade.

But on non-standard issues--involving dramatic changes in national
security and foreign affairs, the power of medicine and technology to
intervene at the early stages of life, and the social meaning of
marriage and family, the partisans show a clear difference: the left is
more and more of one mind while divisions on the right deepen.

Consider Iraq. The split among conservatives has widened since Saddam
was toppled in the spring of 2003. Traditional realists continue to put
their trust in containment, and reject nation-building on the grounds
that we lack both a moral obligation and the requisite knowledge of
Arabic, Iraqi culture and politics, and Islam. Supporters of the war
still argue that, in an age of mega-terror, planting the seeds of
liberty and democracy in the Muslim Middle East is a reasonable response
to the poverty, illiteracy, authoritarianism, violence and religious
fanaticism that plagues the region.

In contrast, Democrats today are nearly united in the belief that the
invasion has been a fiasco and that we must withdraw promptly. Indeed,
rare is the Democrat (Sen. Joe Lieberman was compelled to run as an
Independent) who does not sound like a traditional realist denying both
America's moral obligation to remain in Iraq and its capacity to bring
order to the country.

Consider also abortion rights and embryonic stem-cell research. Here
too, the right is torn, with the social conservative wing opposed to
both, and the small government, libertarian wing supporting both. No
such major divisions are in evidence on the left. Rare is the
progressive man or woman who opposes abortion rights, or who regards the
destruction of embryos as the taking of human life, or even as a
dangerous precedent corroding our respect for the most vulnerable among us.


And look at same-sex marriage. Again, the right is rent by serious
difference of opinion. A crucial segment of those who voted for Bush in
2000 and 2004 think that the Constitution should be amended to protect
the traditional understanding of marriage as a union between one man and
one woman. Another crucial segment of the Republican coalition rejects
alteration of the Constitution to advance debatable social policy,
preferring that states function as laboratories of innovation.

Meanwhile, on the left, despite ambivalence among the rank and file, all
that remains to be decided at the elite level is how and in what ways to
endorse same-sex marriage. Few doubt that presidential candidate John
Kerry's opposition to same-sex marriage in 2004 was driven more by
political calculation than moral conviction. And rare is the man or
woman of the left who, in public debate, identifies competing principles
and goods that ought to cause hesitation or doubt about same-sex
marriage's justice or benefits to the nation.

This absence on the left of debate or dissent about moral and political
ends has been aided and abetted by many of the party's foremost
intellectuals, who have reveled in denouncing George W. Bush as a
dictator, in declaring democracy in 21st-century America all but
illegitimate, and in diagnosing conservatism in America as in the grips
of fascist sentiments and opinions.

A few months ago, Hoover Institution research fellow Dinesh D'Souza
published a highly polemical book, "The Enemy at Home," which held the
cultural left responsible for causing 9/11 and contended that American
conservatives should repudiate fellow citizens on the left and instead
form alliances with traditional Muslims around the world. Conservatives
of many stripes leapt into the fray to criticize it. But rare is the
voice on the left that has criticized Boston College professor and New
Republic contributing editor Alan Wolfe, former secretary of labor and
Berkeley professor Robert Reich, New Republic editor-at-large and
Council on Foreign Relations senior fellow Peter Beinart, Berkeley
professor George Lakoff, and New York University law professor Ronald
Dworkin--all of whom have publicly argued in the last several years that
conservatives form an enemy at home.

One explanation of the unity on the left is its belief that today's
divisive political questions have easy answers--but because of their
illiberal opinions and aims, conservatives are unable to see this and,
in a mere six years, have brought democracy in America to the brink.
This explanation, however, contradicts the vital lesson of John Stuart
Mill's liberalism that political questions, as opposed to mathematical
questions, tend by their very nature to be many-sided. Indeed, it
contradicts the left's celebration of its own appreciation of the
complexity and depth of politics.

Another explanation is that blinded by rage at the Bush administration
and resentment over its own lack of power, the left has betrayed its
commitment to grasp the many-sidedness of politics, and, in the process,
has lost appreciation of modern conservatism's distinctive contribution
to the defense of a good, liberty, which the left also prizes. Indeed,
the widespread ignorance among the highly educated of the conservative
tradition in America is appalling.

In contrast to much European conservatism, which harks back to premodern
times and the political preeminence of religion and royalty, in
America--which lacked a feudal past to preserve or recover--conservatism
has always revolved around the preservation of individual liberty. Of
course modern conservatism generally admires virtues embodied in
religious faith and the aristocratic devotion to excellence. It also
tends to emphasize the weaknesses of human nature, the ironies and
tragedies of history, and the limitations of reason and politics. At the
same time, it wishes to put these virtues and this knowledge in
liberty's service.

Balancing the claims of liberty and tradition, or showing how liberty
depends on tradition, is the very essence of modern conservatism, the
founding text for which was provided by Whig orator and statesman Edmund
Burke in his 1790 polemic, "Reflections on the Revolution in France."
The divisions within contemporary American conservatism--social
conservatives, libertarians, and neoconservatives--arise from
differences over which goods most urgently need to be preserved, to what
extent, and with what role for government.

The varieties of conservatism are poorly understood today not only
because of the bitterness of current political battles but also because
the books that have played a key role in forming the several schools go
largely untaught at our universities and largely unread by our
professors. Indeed, perhaps one cause of the polarization that afflicts
our political and intellectual class is the failure of our universities
to teach, and in many cases to note the existence of, the conservative
dimensions of American political thought.

Rare is the political scientist, to say nothing of other faculty, who
can sketch the argument, or articulate the point of view, of such
influential works as Russell Kirk's "The Conservative Mind" (1953), F.
A. Hayek's "The Road to Serfdom" (1944) or Leo Strauss's "Natural Right
and History" (1953). Yet these works, and the schools they helped
launch, are essential to understanding not only where we come from but
where we should head.

Kirk identified six elements that make the conservative mind: belief in
a transcendent order that "rules society as well as conscience";
attachment to "the proliferating variety and mystery of human existence"
as against the routinizing and leveling forces of modern society; the
assumption that "civilized society requires orders and classes"; the
conviction that "freedom and property are closely linked"; faith in
custom and convention and consequently a "distrust of the 'sophisters,
calculators, and economists' who would reconstruct society upon abstract
designs"; and a wariness of innovation coupled with a recognition that
"prudent innovation is the means of social preservation." The leading
role in this mix that Kirk attaches to religion marks him as a social
conservative; his insistence that religion provides the indispensable
ground for individual liberty marks him as a modern conservative.

Famously, at least in libertarian circles, Hayek, an Austrian-born
economist who became a British citizen and then immigrated to the U.S.
in 1950, wrote a postscript to "The Constitution of Liberty" (1960),
explaining why he was not a conservative. For him, "true
conservatism"--which he confused with European reaction--was
characterized by "opposition to drastic change" and a complacent embrace
of established authority. Because his overriding goal was to preserve
liberty, Hayek considered himself a liberal, but he recognized that in
the face of the challenges presented mid-century by socialism, he would
often find himself in alliance with conservatives. As a staunch member
of the party of liberty, Hayek was keen to identify the political
arrangements that would allow for "free growth" and "spontaneous
change," which, he argued, brought economic prosperity and created the
conditions for individual development. This meant preserving the
tradition of classical liberalism, and defending limited, constitutional
government against encroachments by the welfare state and paternalistic
legislation.

For Strauss, what was most urgently in need in preservation was an idea,
the idea of natural right. Like Kirk, Strauss believed that modern
doctrines of natural right derived support from biblical faith. Like
Hayek, Strauss taught that limited, constitutional government was
indispensable to our freedom. But Strauss also saw that modern doctrines
of natural right contained debilitating tendencies, which, increasingly,
provided support for stupefying and intolerant dogmas. To arrest the
decay, he turned to the classical natural right teachings of Plato and
Aristotle, who were neither liberals nor democrats, but whose
reflections on knowledge, politics and virtue, Strauss concluded,
provided liberal democracy sturdier foundations.

There can not be a conservative soul today in the way one can speak of a
liberal soul or spirit. Whereas the latter revolves around the paramount
good of freedom, modern conservatives, while loving liberty, differ over
its position in the hierarchy of goods most in need of preservation, and
indeed differ over the paramount good. Yet the writings of Kirk, Hayek
and Strauss do form a family. All developed their ideas with a view to
the 20th century totalitarian temptations of fascism and communism. All
agreed that liberal democracy constituted the last best hope of modern
man. And all showed that defending liberty involves a delicate balancing
act.

Conservatives, facing uncertainty about George W. Bush's legacy, and the
reality of their own errors and excesses, have good reason just now to
read and ponder Kirk, Hayek and Strauss. Progressives, too prone these
days to perceive difficult moral and political questions as one-sided
and too keen to characterize their allies at home in the defense of
liberty as enemies, have good reason to do so themselves.

Mr. Berkowitz is a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover
Institution."

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