Remember the rule: only pay heed to those who you agree with

I got the rule from my friend Peter Smith. Everyone follows that rule, unconsciously or not. For us conservatives, it means that anyone who seems to side with the left on key issues can no longer be trusted in discussing other issues.

For those of us on the right, the rule does not mean that we never get to hear what the left believes and what its latest delusions are. Not only do we know what these beliefs are, it’s essential to understand pretty well all of what they believe if for no other reason than just as a means to protect ourselves from whatever forms of madness is their latest fad belief.

For the left, that is all they know and are never allowed to hear what their critics say. Living in a world populated by conservatives seldom harms the lives of anyone on the left. In fact, it is all that protects them from their own idiocies and beliefs. Living in a world as they conjure it would plunge them, along with everyone else, into deep pockets of misery and destitution, as has happened often enough.

Here is the basic truth: everyone is conservatives about things they know something about, especially about things which will affect their lives and livelihoods. It is actual personal knowledge about some subject that makes one a conservative, but for those without a conservative disposition, only about that particular subject, tending to limit wild flights of unrealistic conjecturing about things they know from personal experience. I think this quote expresses the same sentiment quite well:

Like Aristotle, conservatives generally accept the world as it is; they distrust the politics of abstract reason – that is, reason divorced from experience.

And more fully, there is a quote from John Stuart Mill that was first stated during a Parliamentary debate in 1866, which given the re-branding of various political inclinations in today’s world, is now best stated in this way:

I did not mean that people on the left are generally stupid; I meant, that stupid persons are generally on the left.

Anyone who genuinely tries to think about the problems of society and how to solve them cannot base their solutions on more than a handful of people ever acting other than in their own interests, with the subtext being that people acting in their own interests are not likely, when acting in a social setting, to lead a community into chaos and ruin, political leaders aside. They may wish to do good but all to often do not. But even without doing good being their intention, they usually cannot go too far because in the end everyone else will stop. Or at least they usually will, but unfortunately not always.

Gladstonian liberalism in the modern age

If I am going to get into personal labels, I am a Gladstonian liberal. So here we are with the naming of things where “liberal” is the equivalent of insane while “conservative” is prudential common sense:

The differences between the classical-liberal and conservative traditions have immense consequences for policy. Establishing democracy in Egypt or Iraq looks doable to classical liberals because they assume that human reason is everywhere the same, and that a commitment to individual liberties and free markets will arise rapidly once the benefits have been demonstrated and the impediments removed. Conservatives, on the other hand, see foreign civilizations as powerfully motivated—for bad reasons as well as good ones—to fight the dissolution of their way of life and the imposition of American values.

Integrating millions of immigrants from the Middle East also looks easy to classical liberals, because they believe virtually everyone will quickly see the advantages of American (or European) ways and accept them upon arrival. Conservatives recognize that large-scale assimilation can happen only when both sides are highly motivated to see it through. When that motivation is weak or absent, conservatives see an unassimilated migration, resulting in chronic mutual hatred and violence, as a perfectly plausible outcome.

Since classical liberals assume reason is everywhere the same, they see no great danger in “depreciating” national independence and outsourcing power to foreign bodies. American and British conservatives see such schemes as destroying the unique political foundation upon which their traditional freedoms are built.

Here is the definition of Gladstonian liberal from Wikipedia which seems accurate enough for me and is utterly and in every way distinct from the “classical” variety as defined above.

Gladstonian liberalism is a political doctrine named after the British Victorian Prime Minister and leader of the Liberal Party, William Ewart Gladstone. Gladstonian liberalism consisted of limited government expenditure and low taxation whilst making sure government had balanced budgets and the classical liberal stress on self-help and freedom of choice. Gladstonian liberalism also emphasised free trade, little government intervention in the economy and equality of opportunity through institutional reform. It is referred to as laissez-faire or classical liberalism in the UK and is often compared to Thatcherism.

It is also the essence of the economics and political philosophy of John Stuart Mill. See his Principles of Political Economy and On Liberty to see these things spelled out. (A modern version of the economics of Mill can be found in my Free Market Economics.)

Personal freedom and personal responsibility within a society of limited government, tolerance and open enquiry guided by an all pervading Judeo-Christian ethic. And to go back to Wikipedia, this is the foreign policy approach for a Gladstonian liberal.

In foreign policy, Gladstone was in general against foreign entanglements, but he did not resist the realities of imperialism. For example, he approved of the occupation of Egypt by British forces in 1882. His goal was to create a European order based on co-operation rather than conflict and on mutual trust instead of rivalry and suspicion; the rule of law was to supplant the reign of force and self-interest. This Gladstonian concept of a harmonious Concert of Europe was opposed to and ultimately defeated by a Bismarckian system of manipulated alliances and antagonisms.

Let me therefore go to the last para of the first article discussed for an interesting and enlightening comparison.

Brexit and Mr. Trump’s rise are the direct result of a quarter-century of classical-liberal hegemony over the parties of the right. Neither Mr. Trump nor the Brexiteers were necessarily seeking a conservative revival. But in placing a renewed nationalism at the center of their politics, they shattered classical liberalism’s grip, paving the way for a return to empiricist conservatism. Once you start trying to understand politics by learning from experience rather than by deducing your views from 17th-century rationalist dogma, you never know what you may end up discovering.

Labels will get in the way but I think the core principles are clear. And it need hardly be pointed out that the worst imaginable rationalist dogma is found under the heading of “socialism”, the absolute antithesis of Gladstonian liberalism which is socialism’s most intractable enemy.

Coming out conservative

It’s actually a quite to the left video since she accepts the left on every issue but the economy. I suppose you have to start somewhere.

Let me match that with something from Steve Hayward discussing a presentation he had made at Berkley!

although I identified myself proudly to the audience as a Fox News-watching, certified card-carrying member of the Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy, the most hostile questions from the audience were not directed at me, but rather at the new Chancellor, Carol Christ, who is an old-fashioned John Stuart Mill-quoting liberal. Just as in the 1960s, the far left hates liberals more than conservatives.

And JSM-quoting liberals are the worst, bless them.

Santa is a conservative

That Santa Claus is a conservative is conclusively shown on this post. There are thirteen pieces of evidence but I’ll only list numbers one and eleven:

1. Did you ever hear Santa wishing someone a ‘Happy Holidays?’ No, for the man in red, it’s always ‘Merry Christmas’ – no matter who it offends.

11. The naughty or nice list also shows an objective moral compass. Santa apparently rejects liberal relativism or explaining away bad behavior with pop psychology and ‘culture’ issues.

And not a government handout anywhere to be seen.