a liberal on conservatism
Note: This is the third of four posts about my exchange with Justin.
Also see Part 1, Part 2 and Part 4.
Justin writes:
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Conservatives are so attached to their precious tradition that when a better idea comes along, they can't see it for what it is simply because it's different from what they already know. I understand the value of tradition, but we cannot continue to use it as a substitute for governance.
The false premise here is that "tradition" is either arbitrary or antiquated when in fact it is neither.
A progressive should recognize that "traditional" American values are highly evolved, originating in a philosophical quantum leap known as the Age of Enlightenment. The lifestyle Americans enjoy is nothing less than Darwin on display: survival of the fittest. Not some zero sum game nonsense of Americans surviving while everyone else perishes, but evolution in the sense that our enlightened freedom displaces the natural poverty that other social and political structures just can't seem to eradicate.
The liberal laments that our prosperity is shackled by so much tradition (property rights, anyone?) without ever recognizing traditional values as the very source of that prosperity.
Every authoritarian government in history has been an experiment in all the same principles of liberalism. Progressives have new theories, but their ideas are neither better nor new.
Progressive income taxation did not work when the king took all the money for himself, and it does not work any better when the elites give it away to their favored interests. Prosperity isn't bound by whether there's a law against poverty -- the problem is that less gets produced when there are laws against wealth. And that's exactly what all liberal policies are, whether imposed by medieval nobility or modern-day elites.
Conservatism is not an impediment to progress; it is the source of progress. America is not what it is because of where it's going -- it's great because of where it's coming from. The individual liberty that "progressives" want to suppress in fact was, and still is, the most progressive idea in the history of human government. It was conservatism, not liberalism, that made America great.
If you want to see what liberalism has brought us, consider the $100 trillion in unfunded liabilities that would be necessary to sustain progressive sacred cows like Social Security and Medicare. Or the subprime housing mess, which is a direct result of liberals tampering with the mortgage market.
Justin also says:
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...You seem to fear science, which is hilarious to me.
I have no fear of science. Like economics, which I refer to all the time for explanations of why liberal policies don't actually work.
It's religious cults like liberalism that scare me. And rightly so, considering that leftism in all its various forms has killed over a hundred million people in the last century alone.
In fact, if liberals had ever applied the scientific method to their own ideas as they've been tried across history, liberalism would have been declared a failed experiment decades ago.
But liberals continue to hope and believe. That's faith; not science at all.