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babylonsister

(171,063 posts)
Sat May 26, 2012, 08:34 AM May 2012

E.J. Dionne Jr.: Conservatives used to care about community. What happened? [View all]

Conservatives used to care about community. What happened?

By E.J. Dionne Jr.


To secure his standing as the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Mitt Romney has disowned every sliver of moderation in his record. He’s moved to the right on tax cuts and twisted himself into a pretzel over the health-care plan he championed in Massachusetts — because conservatives are no longer allowed to acknowledge that government can improve citizens’ lives.

Romney is simply following the lead of Republicans in Congress who have abandoned American conservatism’s most attractive features: prudence, caution and a sense that change should be gradual. But most important, conservatism used to care passionately about fostering community, and it no longer does. This commitment now lies buried beneath slogans that lift up the heroic and disconnected individual — or the “job creator” — with little concern for the rest.

Today’s conservatism is about low taxes, fewer regulations, less government — and little else. Anyone who dares to define it differently faces political extinction. Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana was considered a solid conservative, until conservatives decided that anyone who seeks bipartisan consensus on anything is a sellout. Even Orrin Hatch of Utah, one of the longest-serving Republican senators, is facing a primary challenge. His flaw? He occasionally collaborated with the late Democratic senator Edward M. Kennedy on providing health insurance coverage for children and encouraging young Americans to join national service programs. In the eyes of Hatch’s onetime allies, these commitments make him an ultra-leftist.

I have long admired the conservative tradition and for years have written about it with great respect. But the new conservatism, for all its claims of representing the values that inspired our founders, breaks with the country’s deepest traditions. The United States rose to power and wealth on the basis of a balance between the public and the private spheres, between government and the marketplace, and between our love of individualism and our quest for community.


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http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/conservatives-used-to-care-about-community-what-happened/2012/05/24/gJQAsR8inU_story.html

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Grover Norquist. He's tied the repubs' hands. imho nt snappyturtle May 2012 #1
How in the name of all that is good and holy is HE able to do this???? Moostache May 2012 #13
I don't understand his power but obviously he has it...a lot of it! nt snappyturtle May 2012 #19
This helps explain why so many otherwise decent people astoundingly >>> Gidney N Cloyd May 2012 #2
Dionne nails this. longship May 2012 #3
They are in a a panic to be the wealthiest in order to buy a space trip off boiling planet. glinda May 2012 #4
I believe you nailed it glinda, they're not stupid, they know the truth but instead of trying to Uncle Joe May 2012 #6
The very thing that makes them rich is the very thing that kills us all. glinda May 2012 #8
Some one should investigate who gives the largest sums of money to glinda May 2012 #21
Don't get me wrong, Uncle Joe May 2012 #22
The conservative EJ refers to had living memory of the dangers of fascism. kristopher May 2012 #5
They also had a "living memory" of the great depression. 25 to 33 percent out of work...nt Stuart G May 2012 #18
The problem he doesn't name is that economic Libertarianism has completely taken over the GOP. pnwmom May 2012 #7
When did conservatives care about community? Zoeisright May 2012 #9
I'm with you. The conservative R's when I was LibDemAlways May 2012 #11
They have always been on the wrong side of history. Zoeisright May 2012 #20
They cared if Sears had enough customers. They cared if Detroit could sell cars. McCamy Taylor May 2012 #16
Point well made Demeter May 2012 #17
The conservatives in my community were more concerned about destroying it Art_from_Ark May 2012 #25
it's the spread of Randism muriel_volestrangler May 2012 #10
Dionne is Delusional Demeter May 2012 #12
When the GOP represented all business, not just a handful of venture capital predators McCamy Taylor May 2012 #15
Gore Vidal said we have one party--the Money Party. But that was before Citizen's United. McCamy Taylor May 2012 #14
No money in "Community." blkmusclmachine May 2012 #23
The conservatives are all in the Democratic party. Neocons are something else entirely. WriteWrong May 2012 #24
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