Brian Doherty | December 15, 2008
(Page 2 of 3)
It’s critical for conservatives to also operate independently of the GOP and launch thousands of new organizations at the national, state, and local level, dealing with narrowly focused issues, public education, or maybe in your local community it might be property rights, it could be taxes, whatever the issue might be, work on those issues wherever your abilities and talents lead you to. In my lifetime the most successful public policy issue has been the state of Israel. It’s so successful it’s off the table: Everyone supports Israel. The issue did not get tied to a political party, and any time you tie an issue to a party, your grandchildren will be fighting that issue.
reason: You were involved in an aborted attempt to get conservatives around the GOP in 1976 by trying to take over the American Independent Party, George Wallace’s operation. Your third party involvement has continued; you spoke at the Libertarian Party convention, and were rumored to be heavily involved in Bob Barr’s choice to run for LP...
Viguerie: I was keynote speaker at the LP convention, and the Constitution Party one as well. Bob [Barr] is a friend, we’ve been friends since he came to Congress. His father worked for me for some years. I advised Bob over the years but once he got the LP nomination, I didn’t really get into strategy, because I was supporting McCain. People got that confused.
I’ve been taking the attitude for some years that conservatives can govern America, but it’s not going to happen quickly or easily. If I could have selected the president, conservatives still would not govern, because we would not have the House or Senate or state legislatures or governors.
But as for the LP or Constitution Party, I am a Frank Meyer disciple, a Frank Meyer fusionist. It’s just reality: I can’t find 51 percent of the people who agree with me all the time on everything. Unfortunately, it seems impossible for some of our conservative leaders and activists to reach out and work with everybody that I consider in the ball park of our ideology.
reason: A common idea floating among the more establishment right, like Bill Kristol, is that the GOP is hobbled by any perceived dedication to smaller government. What do you think?
Viguerie: Kristol says something about how we had five GOP presidents in the past 50 years and only Reagan ran on small government, and Reagan, he said, wasn’t very successful at actually reducing government, and the other four were Big Government Republicans and were successful.
What Kristol doesn’t mention is that each one [besides Reagan] left the party in shambles! Conservatives are in the wilderness these days, but like Churchill in the 1930s, who raised a standard to which the honest and wise could repair so that at one point Britain decided to turn to him for salvation. If we become Democratic Party Lite, liberalism lite, and at some point the house of cards financially that our country is standing on comes crashing down—and we are moving in that direction strongly now—why turn to us if we haven’t been true to our principles and why think we have any answers? I do not see salvation for the GOP in openly abandoning conservative principles.
A well-known conservative friend of mine who I visit with after mass most Sunday mornings asked me last year: “Richard, I identified 17 neocons—can you think of any more?” They have got The Weekly Standard and access to The New York Times and Fox, but I think the conservatives are obviously the base of the Republican Party.
reason: You are known as the father of direct mail ideological fundraising. Is that dying in an Internet age?
Viguerie: Not at all. Radio didn’t go away when TV came along. Direct mail is alive and well and has a major role to play in the public policy arena. When I started doing my thing back in the 1960s and '70s I was fortunate to pioneer political and ideological direct mail, and I developed a business model that has been replicated hundreds if not thousands of times from people on the left and right. But no one has done that for the Internet. You can’t take what Obama did across the street and do it for some other candidate.
reason: You were a Pat Buchanan supporter in the 1990s. Do you agree with his anti-interventionist, antiwar foreign policy?
Viguerie: Absolutely. Most conservatives are opposed to a neocon approach to foreign policy. I like to use Reagan as an example. Reagan said we were not going to defeat communism so much as transcend it. Planes didn’t fly, tanks didn’t roll, guns didn’t fire. There were times during Reagan’s presidency where I didn’t think he did what needed to be done [to fight communism], but in hindsight he was very right and I was wrong. But most conservatives I know think of themselves as noninterventionist; it’s part of our makeup, our DNA.
reason: You were key in bringing the religious right into the conservative political coalition in the 1970s. Do you still think that culture and values issues are key to conservatism?
Viguerie: When I started in politics in the late '50s, Republicans would customarily get 45 to 47 percent, not often 51. In those days the base of the GOP to a large extent sat on a two-legged stool: anti-communism and fiscal responsibility. Then in the late '70s when the Moral Majority formed and the Republicans began to bring the religious right on board, everything changed. Then Republicans would get 51, 52, 54 percent of the vote.
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Fuck conservatives. Fucke em I say!
Whenever you come across a conservative, bend him over and dry fist
him before you even say hello.
If every conservative had this done to him three times a day, six
days a week, for the next forty years, then we'll call it even.
Whenever you come across a conservative, bend him over and
dry fist him before you even say hello.
But if you videotape this, don't sell it in Indiana.
Interesting insights into this guy's mind. Too many
fundementally flawed - and in some cases contradictory* -
assumptions to count, but fascinating nonetheless.
(*for example, McCain is 'highly inarticulate', but Palin was 'a
brilliant choice'?)
Wow, what an asshat. And conservatives wonder why they can't get respect from anyone except their fellow kool-aid drinkers? Often times not even that. Back to Bedrock for Mr. Flintstone here.
You have two main ideologies in America, associated with the two major parties: 1) Socialism; 2) socialism. The difference between the two is that the latter pretends that it wants small government.
Yadd, yadda, yadda. What we have in this country today is a one
party system. Symptoms? Corruption; the elevation of mediocrities;
intense squabbles over stands on the issues that are essentially
the same. Who is the dumb one here?
Vote against ALL incumbents. Demand term limits. Cash out your IRA
before Herr Obama nationalizes it to pay for his follies. Put your
money somewhere, where you aren's buying US Treasuries. If Bush
bails out Detroit, don't EVER buy another Big 3 product again.
Spread the word around.
I remember a German friend talking about the collapse of East
Germany. The people just quit listening to their government. The
Communists screamed and hollered and threatened, but at the end of
the day they just packed up and got out of town. Perhaps that might
work here.
I thought, neo-conservatives were the religious right, which is it reason. Depending on who you ask, a libertarian will tell you a neocon is a theocrat(Reason), a paleocon will tell you a neocon is an agressive version of a rockefeller(Viguerie), and the neorockefellers(Bill Kristol) will tell you we are limited government, hawkish libertarian, Goldwater-Reaganites. Which is it Mr. Doherty?
Warren | December 15, 2008, 3:14pm | #
NEOCONSERVATIVE IS PIG
DO YOU WANT A BARRY GOLDWATER?
DO YOU WANT A RONALD REAGAN?
NEOCONSERVATIVES IS PIG DISGUSTING
WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY IS A MURDERER
F***KING NEOCONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT
It's critical for conservatives to also operate
independently of the GOP and launch thousands of new organizations
at the national, state, and local level, dealing with narrowly
focused issues, public education, or maybe in your local community
it might be property rights, it could be taxes, whatever the issue
might be, work on those issues wherever your abilities and talents
lead you to.
With great respect to Mr. Viguerie, it's simply never going to
happen. With the exception of a small number of think tanks and
foundations, the right in America simply isn't as motivated to push
its agenda on a day-to-day, grass roots level as the left is. The
primary focus of life for most conservatives is friends and family,
and conservatives naturally are individualists, not activist
groupthink types.
I know, it's easy to beat up Mr. Viguerie because he goes to
mass, but as an overarching strategy, cooperation would be the only
way to get small government into place. Yes, that will mean
reaching out to icky evangelicals.
It's either that or go gulching, which is harder and harder to do
nowadays, unless they invent cheap and safe space travel (I'm not
holding my breath).
Spot the contradiction:
"For whatever reason Republicans have been nominating highly
inarticulate candidates, whether Bob Dole, George Herbert Walker
Bush, George W. Bush, John McCain."
"Palin got the conservatives energized in a way I can't think
anything else would have done."
Quoth the Viguerie:
"The left screams and yells about the separation of church and
state, how it's terrible the Republicans use religion as a wedge
issue. But they complain because it has allowed conservatives to be
as effective as they have been in the last 30 years or so."
"Palin got the conservatives energized in a way I can't think
anything else would have done. We take the attitude that she has
been so vilified by the mainstream media for only one reason: She's
effective. People don't kick sleeping dogs. They see her as a
serious threat so they are trying to destroy her."
So, according to Viguerie, the reason liberals attack their
ideological opponents is only because their opponents on the right
are effective, not because they are wrong. That is, leftists are
complete hypocrites, complete political pragmatists.
But on the other hand, says Viguerie:
"Conservatives in Washington don't have the strength, many of them,
to hold to their beliefs like liberals do. The MoveOn crowd, the
environmentalists, they stand up to a Democratic president."
So leftists attacking conservatives only because the conservatives
are effective opponents. Yet, somehow leftists hold their beliefs
more stronlgly than those on the right, which is a source of
strength to the left.
Which is it? Do Viguerie's opponents gain political strength
because they are hypocritical political pragmatists, or because
they are true believers in their ideology?
No contradiction at all.
The first group couldn't articulate a conservative message because
they weren't conservative.
Sarah Palin can because she is.
With the exception of a small number of think tanks and foundations, the right in America simply isn't as motivated to push its agenda on a day-to-day, grass roots level as the left is. The primary focus of life for most conservatives is friends and family, and conservatives naturally are individualists, not activist groupthink types.
Spot on. Political gendas are plans to impose rules on others.
Those areas where some on the right do want to impose rules, you do
see activist groups (prop 8, etc). But for the most part, if a law
doesn't affect them directly, rightists tend to keep quiet.
Libertarians are the worst in this regard. Leftists who dedicate
their lives towards getting a new regulation enacted are a dime a
dozen, but few libertarians can be counted on to merely spend aan
afternoon on a petition drive to remove a regulation.
It's why the left gets so much done, they have activists. The right
just has whiners.
Viguerie says the GOP are "royalists" and he loves Palin.
But we rejected monarchy in our Constitution 200 years ago.
Keep the laughs coming, Viguerie.
"Conservatism" is nothing but reactionary anti-science
douchebaggery. Congrats - you made the case for your own
obsolescence.
shrike,
Viguerie ic contrasting the GOP and conservatives.They aren't
synonymous.
Opposing "science-informed" public policy is not the same thing as
opposing science either.
You have two main ideologies in America, associated with the
two major parties: 1) Socialism; 2) socialism. The difference
between the two is that the latter pretends that it wants small
government.
#2 also wants to legislate their own specific version of
"Christian" morality.
If we're going to have socialism, I'd rather we at least socialized
the profits along with the risk...
Opposing "science-informed" public policy is not the same
thing as opposing science either.
I cannot interpret this.
This Viguerie guy is out of touch - a real boner for the 70-yr old
set for the GOP.
The GOP has nothing for contemporary Americans - they are merely an
extension of the Falwell/Billy Graham braindead set.
#2 also wants to legislate their own specific version of "Christian" morality.
And #1 doesn't? There is a significant minority of liberals that
wish to impose their own version of Christian morality. They just
do it in a collectivist way, instead of an individualist way.
Welfare is a good example, with liberals arguing that it is the
Christian thing to do. "Liberation Theology Lite" is still big in
the US.
Forget "conservatism," please. It has been Godless and thus
irrelevant. As Stonewall Jackson's Chief of Staff R.L. Dabney said
of such a humanistic belief more than 100 years ago:
"[Secular conservatism] is a party which never conserves anything.
Its history has been that it demurs to each aggression of the
progressive party, and aims to save its credit by a respectable
amount of growling, but always acquiesces at last in the
innovation. What was the resisted novelty of yesterday is today
.one of the accepted principles of conservatism; it is now
conservative only in affecting to resist the next innovation, which
will tomorrow be forced upon its timidity and will be succeeded by
some third revolution; to be denounced and then adopted in its
turn. American conservatism is merely the shadow that follows
Radicalism as it moves forward towards perdition. It remains behind
it, but never retards it, and always advances near its leader. This
pretended salt bath utterly lost its savor: wherewith shall it be
salted? Its impotency is not hard, indeed, to explain. It .is
worthless because it is the conservatism of expediency only, and
not of sturdy principle. It intends to risk nothing serious for the
sake of the truth."
Our country is collapsing because we have turned our back on God
(Psalm 9:17) and refused to kiss His Son (Psalm 2).
John Lofton, Editor, TheAmericanView.com
Recovering Republican
JLof@aol.com
PS- Hear my exclusive interview with Viguerie here. He was not
pleased with my questions....
http://www.theamericanview.com/index.php?id=710
Libertarians are not "rightists," and certainly not
conservatives.
no government > small government
And I won't even get into the "conservatives" who are too
conservative to be conservatives, because the conservatives don't
call for an adequate level of barbarism to appease their
god-love.
Responses to two comments:
1.
"I thought, neo-conservatives were the religious right, which is it
reason. Depending on who you ask, a libertarian will tell you a
neocon is a theocrat(Reason), a paleocon will tell you a neocon is
an agressive version of a rockefeller(Viguerie), and the
neorockefellers(Bill Kristol) will tell you we are limited
government, hawkish libertarian, Goldwater-Reaganites. Which is it
Mr. Doherty?"
It's weird. But I'll say this right now: neoconservatism is not
theocratic. Certainly neoconservative wars are ardently supported
by the religious right-wing, but understand that those voters, for
the most part, follow the tradition of the martial South. They've
supported every American war, and always will. Here's where we
start to see the differences. Neoconservatives, or paleoliberals if
you want to call them that, embrace an idealistic and
interventionist foreign policy, free trade, anti-communism (now
anti-islamism); are less socially conservative, and tolerate the
welfare state to a degree. There's a lot of variation here,
especially when it comes to domestic policies, so it's very heavy
on foreign policy-- this is what really unites neoconservatives.
Think more Henry "Scoop" Jackson. It's more secular and Jewish than
Christian fundamentalist. And it goes beyond the narrow
self-interest of libertarians and paleoconservatives who don't like
spending money on foreigners.
2. "Viguerie says the GOP are 'royalists' and he loves Palin.
But we rejected monarchy in our Constitution 200 years ago.
Keep the laughs coming, Viguerie."
What he means by this (and he's exactly right) is that the
Republican Party is a top-down party. Unlike the Democratic Party,
which is an organization cobbled together from a set of often
conflicting interest groups organized at the grassroots level
(which is how you get a party made up of gays, blacks, and
industrial unions), the conservatives are beholden to a party
controlled by elders who decide where to dispense cash (or
"contributions") and direct support. You don't see upsets like
Barack Obama, who deposed the Democratic Party's "heir" to the
presidential "throne" - Hillary Clinton - in the Republican Party.
After Reagan lost to Ford in '76, he was the nominee for the next
time around. George H.W. Bush was the heir through the 1980s; Bob
Dole after him; Texas Governor George W. Bush after him; John
McCain, his challenger in 2000, after him; and now Mitt Romney, the
runner up this time around. Maybe Sarah Palin has supplanted
Romney. It's whatever is brewing in the dark subterranean basement
underneath the RNC headquarters that'll give a hint as to who it'll
be.
"Our country is collapsing because we have turned our back on
God (Psalm 9:17) and refused to kiss His Son (Psalm 2)."
So very gay...
I live in the West and am a registered independent who's
conservative/libertarian.
I combed through the presidential election results by county for
2000, 2004, and 2008 and I made some very disturbing
discoveries.
First, not counting AZ, only two counties in the West (defined as
the states of CA, OR, WA, ID, MT, WY, NM, CO, AZ. NV, UT) were more
red this election cycle than in 2004. Even worse, compared to 2000,
just 19 counties in the West were more red. In both 2004 and 2008,
no urban county voted more Republican for president.
This should be especially disturbing to the GOP since the ticket
had two Westerners running, plus it was thought that McCain's
maverick stance and Palin's individuality and strong stance on guns
and being a small business owner before entering politics would
carry the ticket far in the West.
This decline can't be blamed on evangelicals staying home. They
voted 75-25% for McCain, which is as strong or stronger showing as
Bush rec'd in 2000 and 2004.
Here's some raw data to flesh out the Republican decline:
Blue Counties in 2000 in West: 72
Blue Counties in 2004 in West: 80
Blue Counties in 2008 in West: 126
Dark Blue Counties in West (Dark Blue means Dem Candidate won by
15% or more)
Dark Blues in 2000: 31
Dark Blues in 2004: 40
Dark Blues in 2008: 66
While the GOP was not going to win California under any
circumstances, it's time to hit a panic button when reliably
Republican counties like San Diego, Riverside, and San Bernardino
voted for Obama and McCain/Palin just narrowly held onto Orange
County.
The only states with a large number of counties voting more
Republican now than in 2000 is OK, AR, and TN. Nice states, but
hardly bellwethers for political trends.
Why is the Republican Party in such decline here? I think the
answer is that the Republican Party has forgotten the importance of
good governance. The GOP historically stood for a strong defense,
limited gov't, effective gov't, free markets, and certain social
issues such as pro-life. Yet the Bush Admin. didn't handle the war
in Iraq very well for several years; Afghanistan is in trouble; the
bailouts are about to kill capitalism in order to save it; Katrina
recovery was a mess; and earmarks and corruption lost the GOP
majority in Congress in 2006.
While I understand that importance of the party's pro-life stance,
it's not an election winner. McCain/Palin were strongly pro-life
and presented a very dramatic contrast to Obama. Yet the election
returns didn't show that it mattered much to the
electorate-at-large or even in states with a large Catholic
population.
I think the hope for conservatives are the nation's governors.
Future presidential candidates should be governors who have kept
taxes low, generated lots of good paying private sector jobs,
emphasize education and keep state college tuitions low for state
residents, and have proven crisis management skills in disasters,
budget crunches, etc.
And governors with libertarian stances on issues such as guns, stem
cells, etc. would go far, too.
Reading this article made me sick to my stomach. Mentioning the
"Constitution Party" and the LP in the same sentience is actually
vomit inducing.
Thanks to all the libertarians on this thread who spoke out against
(trashed) this ass hole.
I think, if John McCain had not signed the $ 700 B Bailout, he would have won the Election. BUT, when you consider Barak Hussein Muhammed Obama being backed by George Sorose and all of the 150,000 Muslims in thsi Country and the $ Millions he got from overseas,totally the $ 1 Billion he said he would spend to gain the Whitehouse. Plus the Gullible American people "hearing Change" and not having to pay income taxes, getrting kickbacks from the rich and given to the poor. I hope the Idiots realize what they've done. They let a smooth well trained Arab African woo them into Islamic Law. GOD HELP AMERICA......
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