As I read this, I felt Mr. Gerson was describing my own political philsophy of rational conservatism. Good reading and cause for reflections. - Glenn N. Holliman
By Michael Gerson
By Michael Gerson
It is one of fate’s
cruel jokes that conservatism should be at its modern nadir just as the Republican Party is at its zenith — if conservatism is
defined as embracing limited government, displaying a rational, skeptical and
moderate temperament and believing in the priority of the moral order.
All these principles
are related, and under attack.
Conservatives believe
that human beings are fallible and prone to ambition, passion and selfishness.
They (actually, we) tend to become swaggering dictators in realms where we can
act with impunity — a motor vehicle department office, a hostile traffic stop,
a country under personal rule. It is the particular genius of the American
system to balance ambition with ambition through a divided government
(executive, legislative and judicial). The American system employs human nature
to limit the power of the state — assuming that every branch of government is
both dedicated to the common good and jealous of its own power.
Conservatives believe
that finite and fallen creatures are often wrong. We know that many of our
attitudes and beliefs are the brain’s justification for pre-rational tendencies
and desires. This does not make perception of truth impossible, or truth itself
relative, but it should encourage healthy self-examination and a suspicion of
all forms of fanaticism. All of us have things to learn, even from our political
opponents. The truth is out there, but it is generally broken into pieces and
scattered across the human experience. We only reassemble it through listening
and civil communication.
And conservatives
believe that a just society depends on the moral striving of finite and fallen
creatures who treat each other with a respect and decency that laws can
encourage but not enforce. Such virtues, often rooted in faith, are what turn
families and communities into the nurseries of citizenship. These institutions
not only shape good people, they inculcate the belief that humans have a
dignity that, while often dishonored, can never be effaced. In the midst of all
our justified skepticism, we can never be skeptical of this: that the reason
for politics is to honor the equal value of every life, beginning with the
weakest and most vulnerable. No bad goal — say, racial purity or communist
ideology — outweighs this commitment. And no good goal — the efficiency of
markets or the pursuit of greater equality — does either.
So how do we get this
set of beliefs and commitments when they seem in short supply? It is hopeless
to demand results from an organic process — to order the grass to grow faster.
But this type of conservatism — a conservatism of intellectual humility and
moral aspiration — also has the advantage of being organic. It grows with
tenacity in hidden places, eventually breaking down the cement and asphalt of
our modern life. It appeals to people who would never call themselves
conservatives — who probably wouldn’t use words like “nadir” and “zenith” — who
provide examples of hard work, personal responsibility, unfailing decency,
family commitment, quiet faith, inspiring compassion and resilience in
adversity. They are the potential recruits of a humane political conservatism.
This is not the
political force that has recently taken over the Republican Party — with a
plurality in the presidential primaries and a narrow victory in November. That
has been the result of extreme polarization, not a turn toward enduring values.
The movement is authoritarian in theory, apocalyptic in mood, prone to
conspiracy theories and personal abuse, and dismissive of ethical
standards. The president-elect seems to offer equal chances of constitutional
crisis and utter, debilitating incompetence.
The plausible case
that Russian espionage materially
contributed to the election of an American president has been an additional
invitation to anger. Now, not only the quality but also the legitimacy of our
democracy is at stake. This extreme threat would seem to require a
commensurately radical response — some way to change the outcome.
But what is the
proper conservative response? It is to live within the boundaries of law and
reality. There is no certain way to determine if Russian influence was
decisive. And no serious constitutional recourse seems to remain. While open to
other options, I see none.
It will now fall to
citizens and institutions to (1) defend the legislature and judiciary from any
encroachment, (2) defend every group of people from organized oppression,
including Muslims and refugees, (3) expand and defend the institutions — from
think tanks to civil liberty organizations — that make the case for a politics
that honors human dignity. And pray for the grass to grow.
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