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David R Gold
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 21089
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Posted: Tue Feb 21, 2006 7:46 pm Post subject: "Crunchy Conservatives" |
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Rod Dreher will be my guest this evening on WBAP
Dreher
Dallas MN
Rod Dreher:
The new conservatism: It's crunchy
His new book says a countercultural revolution - led by home-schooling, tree-hugging, right-wing, family-values traditionalists - is starting to shake America
05:41 AM CST on Tuesday, February 21, 2006
Afew summers ago, when I worked for the conservative National Review magazine, I told my boss I needed to leave early to get home to Brooklyn in time to pick up our weekly delivery of organic vegetables from the co-op to which my wife, Julie, and I belonged. "Ewgh, that's so lefty," my editor teased.
She had a point. On the subway home, I reflected on how a taste for organic vegetables is a cultural marker that identifies someone as a "crunchy" liberal – you know, tree-huggers, granola-eaters and the like. In truth, we belonged to the co-op because we found locally grown produce so much more flavorful than the supermarket stuff. And we liked the idea of supporting local family farms with our consumer dollar.
Still, we had crossed a cultural line.Another cultural marker is Birkenstock sandals – like, um, the pair I was wearing on my feet that day. I'd balked the summer before when Julie suggested that a pair of Birks might be just the thing for my aching feet. Why would I put on a pair of shoes that brought to mind pot, patchouli and ponytails on men? But I did, just to humor her – and, yow! They were the most comfortable shoes I'd ever put on in my life.
The subway epiphany made me think about the ways my family's kind of conservatism made us an uneasy fit among mainstream Republicans. It wasn't because we were closet liberals; in fact, we were by some measures more conservative than the average Republican. Our Christian faith and cultural traditionalism meant our conservative heroes were men like Pope John Paul II, J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis and G.K. Chesterton, not the roster of Republican Party all-stars.
As a general rule, my Earth-Mother Republican wife and I prefer Small, Local, Old and Particular over Big, Global, New and Abstract. We believe big business deserves as much skepticism as big government. We believe God calls mankind to be good stewards of the natural world. Most important, we hold with Russell Kirk that the family is the institution most important to conserve, and our entire politics is constructed around that goal.
Four years into marriage and two years into parenthood, Julie and I found that we'd begun to live in certain ways that seemed at odds with the Republican mainstream, but that flowed naturally from our conservative beliefs.
The advent of our firstborn son made us more deeply aware of how some things we uncritically admired as conservatives – chiefly the free market – served to undermine the family and the institutions we would need to raise good children. We contemporary conservatives, with our exaltation of consumer choice and the sovereign individual, are dismantling the kind of society necessary to raise good kids as effectively as the left-wing libertines we oppose. Economist E.F. Schumacher wrote that "the essence of civilization is not in a multiplication of wants but in the purification of human character." That's a conservative truth that we on the right have forgotten.
There is an emerging conservative sensibility that crosses party lines, rendering standard political labels and facile media classifications stale and outdated. I call it "crunchy conservatism," a contemporary revival of the traditionalism that, along with libertarianism, is one of the two great streams of the conservative intellectual tradition in America.
Crunchy cons are people like the Hutchins and Hale families of Greenville, Christian farmers who home-school their kids and raise livestock organically, because they believe that's how God intended it. They vote Republican but often feel that they have as much in common with countercultural liberals who have adopted an adversarial stance toward consumer culture than they do with fellow GOPers.
Robert Hutchins, who sells his meat at the Dallas Farmers Market, was a defense contractor on flush with worldly success when he realized that he was losing touch with his faith and his family. So he dropped out of the rat race to be more faithful to what he knew, as a Christian and a conservative, to be right.
The entire Hutchins clan – 12 kids, all home-schooled, all polite and mature in a way that most kids just aren't anymore – work together on the farm. While most kids are sitting slack-jawed in front of television sets, being passively pounded into good little consumers, the Hutchinses are every single day connecting deeply to the Earth, to tradition and to each other.
Mr. Hutchins said that choosing to home-school their kids was a turning point in becoming countercultural. When "you begin challenging fundamental common practices in today's society, once you challenge one, it's easy to challenge them all," he told me. I hear that loud and clear. Julie and I are doing a hybrid home-schooling program with our school-age son, in conjunction with a neighborhood Christian school. When some people, even conservatives, hear that we want to home-school, they think that we are unrealistically trying to raise our kids in a bubble.
We choose a form of home-schooling not to run away from something, but to embrace the radical notion that we know what's best for our children. I want my boys to go as far and as fast as they can in learning about the world, and not to have their imaginations and intellects stifled by conformity. And having gone to public school myself, I don't want my kids socialized by a hypercompetitive and sexualized youth culture where traditional values are sneered at.
Home-schooling is so common now that there are lots of kids whose parents share a common set of cultural values, and who are creating healthy countercultural peer groups for them. Being nonconformist about your kids' schooling doesn't mean you have to turn into hermits, but it does mean taking a stand outside the mainstream.
To be sure, not everybody has to move to the country and become a home-schooling farm family, or take up home-schooling at all. But there are few of us who can't learn from Mr. Hutchins' example of putting the spiritual and moral interests of his family first, even at the expense of society's approval and material gain.
Take Collin County, one of the most Republican and Christian places on the planet. In theory, it should be an ideal conservative society. But last year, The Dallas Morning News reported on how many residents there are living too large, driving families into bankruptcy. Sighed one minister, "They all really do feel like they need these things, this 3,400-square-foot house with three kids."
That's a destructive lie, of course, but it is hard to imagine a Republican politician pointing this out to a nation strung out on a spending and consuming binge that is going to bankrupt us all.
As Russell Kirk wrote, "In America especially, we live beyond our means by consuming the portion of posterity, insatiably devouring minerals and forests and the very soil, lowering the water table, to gratify the appetites of the present tenants of the country." He demanded that Americans behave more prudently to honor "the future partners in our contract with eternal society."
Do today's mainstream conservatives even know what Mr. Kirk was talking about? Do we care to?
Crunchy conservatism is not an ideology or a set of policy prescriptions. In fact, it's a form of what the Czech anti-Communist Vaclav Havel called "anti-political politics" – a kind of politics that seeks to renew the culture at an intimate level by making ethical choices in our everyday lives. We should start by building up what Edmund Burke called the "little platoons" – families, churches, civic and fraternal organizations that hold society together. We do this by creating a culture in which we ask not, "What's in it for me?" – but what we ought to do to live meaningful lives together.
No society can long endure the fragmentation that follows a loss of vision, of idealism, of common purpose. Humankind will always seek after the good, the true and the beautiful and will not be long satisfied without it. A politics, left or right, that cannot speak convincingly to the deepest spiritual aspirations in a people cannot be sustained forever. Nor can any people who exchange spiritual truths for material gain.
We conservatives know we can't keep going like this. There are honorable liberals with whom we can stand in an effort to rebuild a common civic culture. Catholic philosopher Peter Kreeft once predicted that "beneath the current political left-right alignments there are fault lines embedded in the crust of human nature that will inevitably open up someday and produce earthquakes that will change the current map of the political landscape."
Ten years later, one can feel the earth beginning to shake.
Rod Dreher is assistant editorial page editor and author of "Crunchy Cons" (Crown Forum), in bookstores today. His e-mail address is rdreher@dallasnews.com.
LEARN MORE AND MEET DREHER
Rod Dreher will be talking about Crunchy Cons on David Gold's WBAP News/Talk 820 radio show tonight at 9. Today's episode of CBN's The 700 Club will air a report on crunchy conservatism, featuring North Texas crunchy cons.
Additionally, National Review Online today launches a new blog to discuss crunchy conservatism (crunchycon.nationalreview.com).
And Rod Dreher will lecture and sign books at 7 p.m. Feb. 28 at the Borders bookstore at Preston and Royal.
A CRUNCHY CON MANIFESTO
I. We are conservatives who stand outside the conservative mainstream; therefore, we can see things that matter more clearly.
II. Modern conservatism has become too focused on money, power and the accumulation of stuff, and insufficiently concerned with the content of our individual and social character.
III. Big business deserves as much skepticism as big government.
IV. Culture is more important than politics and economics.
V. A conservatism that does not practice restraint, humility and good stewardship – especially of the natural world – is not fundamentally conservative.
VI. Small, Local, Old and Particular are almost always better than Big, Global, New and Abstract.
VII. Beauty is more important than efficiency.
VIII. The relentlessness of media-driven pop culture deadens our senses to authentic truth, beauty and wisdom.
IX. We share Russell Kirk's conviction that "the institution most essential to conserve is the family."
X. Politics and economics will not save us. If our culture is to be saved at all, it will be through living faithfully by the Permanent Things, preserving ancient moral truths in the everyday choices we make.
From "Crunchy Cons," by Rod Dreher (Crown Forum, 2006)
Last edited by David R Gold on Fri Feb 24, 2006 7:33 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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border
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 88 Location: North Texas
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Posted: Tue Feb 21, 2006 10:46 pm Post subject: |
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I so agree with this. I even have a pair of Birkenstocks. I have to work tonight, but will ask my wife to listen in.
What I would like to see expanded upon is how the free market undermines the family and institutions and, if that is true, what is the proper recourse. |
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Orin
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 3858 Location: Republic of Texas
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Posted: Tue Feb 21, 2006 10:54 pm Post subject: |
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Conservative organic gardener here. No chemicals on my lawn/flowers/vegies. _________________ Voodoo Economics with Zeb
"Now, if you're so stupid as to think we didn't have a surplus, you're not going to believe the GAO figures either.... " as he tries and pass off PBGC budget as the national budget. Twice and in Red nonetheless. |
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David R Gold
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 21089
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Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2006 4:52 am Post subject: |
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Sorry. I didn't realize we had sports this evening. Rod Dreher has been rescheduled until March 2. This Sat. on KSFO. Cruchy Conservatives Blog
HERE |
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seattlegal
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 2304
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Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2006 6:19 am Post subject: |
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My stepmom is a crunchy conservative. _________________ Show me a sane man and I will cure him for you.
- Carl Gustav Jung |
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David R Gold
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 21089
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Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2006 4:24 am Post subject: |
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Jonah Goldberg is not a fan.
I think Rod and Jonah are both correct. Conservatism is Freedom. I can be free to build a McMansion or I may be FREE to eat free range chicken. I do think consumerism is out of control. However, that's an individual moral question to be decided internally. National Review
Huh?
Going after the “Crunchies.”
SOURCE
Nearly 50 years ago, Whittaker Chambers famously "read" Ayn Rand out of the conservative movement. His most famous, though not really his most constructive, passage was his assertion that "From almost any page of Atlas Shrugged, a voice can be heard, from painful necessity, commanding: 'To a gas chamber — go!'" Now, I'm no Whittaker Chambers, nor have I been granted the power to excommunicate anybody, but there are times where Rod Dreher is simply begging for the Rand treatment. And not just because from almost any page of Crunchy Cons, a voice can be heard, from painful necessity, commanding: "To your local organic food co-op — go!"
There are other times when Rod is insightful, endearing, and even quite persuasive. Rod updates a very old (and, frankly, common) critique within conservatism: that the market cannot provide answers to what we should do with our wealth. The good life and the prosperous life can — and often do — overlap, but there is nothing which requires that they do. Indeed, there are times when the pursuit of wealth can be idolatrous, seducing us down a false path. To the extent that Rod's project is to encourage people to understand this elemental point of the conservative worldview, I think he's making an important contribution, particularly among those otherwise immune to the conservative message.
Hey, You Mean I'm Not a Stuart Smalley Caricature?!
The problem is this: Rod engulfs this useful, nay vital, baby within a lagoon of intellectually murky bathwater. Plenty of other writers have pointed to what is good about Rod's book. Here on National Review Online, we even have a blog entirely dedicated to it, in which most of the contributors seem committed to finding new and exciting ways to illustrate the genius of the book and the insights of its author. My own contributions to the blog amount to standing athwart crunchy conservatism yelling "Stop!" Regardless, I hope readers and Rod alike understand that I'm focusing on what's wrong about Rod's book in part because others have stated eloquently what's right about it.
I'm also partly focusing on what's wrong with crunchy conservatism because, well, I find it insulting.
Crunchy conservatism strikes me now — as it did back when I first heard about it — as a journalistic invention, a confabulation fit for some snarking liberal reporter at the Washington Post "Style" section. It plays upon the Left's stereotype of conservatives and adopts it as its own. To Rod's credit, he doesn't claim that "mainstream conservatives" are racists; but he does claim that they are uptight, blue blazered, two-dimensional men motivated by greed. They are Godless materialists, unthinking dupes of Madison Avenue, with no connection to spirituality or religion unless, that is, you think being an idolatrous votary of the free market counts as being religious.
For example, Rod writes on page 15 of the book:
You don't have to be a religious believer in the formal sense to be a crunchy conservative, but you do have to believe that accumulating wealth and power is not the point of life. Now, if you took a poll, ninety-nine out of a hundred conservatives would deny that they subscribed to that vulgar credo. But that's not how they live — even if they profess to be religious.[emphasis mine]
How is one supposed to read this as anything but an invidious slap at conservatism? Not only is Rod saying here that non-crunchy conservatives are grotesque materialists concerned only with "wealth and power," not only is he questioning the sincerity of their religious convictions, but he is also saying that these conservatives are fools, suffering from a kind of Marxist false consciousness, if they deny that they are only concerned with wealth and power. Because, you see, "that's not how they live" — because Rod says so.
On page after page, Rod attributes Republican and "mainstream conservative" adulation of the free market to greed and envy. Mainstream conservatives "believe that a merchant or a manufacturer owes no loyalty to his community, nor the community to the manufacturer." Other motivations for support of the free market — say, liberty, or skepticism in the government's ability to glean the "better way" — are given little to no serious consideration. In the CCblog, Rod is giddy with excitement at the prospect that some liberal will read his book and discover that "Frankenesque" — as in Al Franken — conservative stereotypes aren't true and that there are in fact "honorable conservatives" out there. Which conservatives are those? Why, crunchy conservatives of course.
Yes, yes, often Rod offers caveats about how capitalism is preferable to other systems, how he's not a socialist, that wealth and prosperity are important tools for fixing social problems and the like. But when he does this, he describes these insights and convictions as "crunchy" insights. "Mainstream conservatives," meanwhile, are never given the benefit of the doubt. Rod is committing the ageless sin of the self-hating conservative, bee-bopping and scatting all over fellow conservatives so as to sound better, nicer, and more humane, as if to say, "I'm not one of those conservatives." Indeed, one could go through the entire book and simply scratch out the phrase "crunchy conservatives" and replace it with "good conservatives" and Rod's meaning would rarely, if ever, change. Because, you see, crunchy cons are the ones who "get it," they are in the know on the Gnostic insight to the good life. Everyone else has blinders on. Rod even writes that he "doesn't expect conventional liberals and conservatives to get crunchy conservatism."
Many self-described crunchy cons use this noxious form of argumentation as a shield to protect themselves from criticism. After all, there is no rejoinder to "you just don't get it."
Huh? What's that now?
Nonetheless, there is a lot I don't get about crunchy conservatism. But, in my own defense, I don't think this is because I have failed to turn my face to the warm beam of God's enlightenment, radiantly glowing forth from inside the cellophane oyster shell of a Whole Foods couscous platter. I think my failure is more prosaic than that. I don't "get" crunchy conservatism because, often, I simply don't know what the hell Rod is talking about.
Maybe we're not reading the same newspapers, but I could swear conservatives — and not primarily the crunchy ones — have been making a quite a fuss about issues which offend their sense of spirituality, morality, and community for quite some time. Let's start 20 years ago. In 1987 there was the fight over Robert Bork. Free-market economics were a pretty minor part of that fight. Ditto Clarence Thomas. Then there was Dan Quayle versus Murphy Brown. The early 1990s were largely consumed with debates over illegitimacy, affirmative action, flag-burning, and gays in the military. Bill Clinton's character, including his draft status, came up a few times too. The Heritage Foundation — which surely must qualify as the stygian heart of Mordor in Rod's worldview — dedicated itself back then to a restoration of civil society. In the late 1990s, we were informed by Andrew Sullivan and everyone to his left that the GOP had been taken over by "scolds" and Cotton Mathers. More recently, conservatives have expended a great deal of time and effort on gay marriage, abortion, public displays of the Ten Commandments, and other issues hard to pigeonhole into Milton Friedman's worldview. The Republican-controlled Congress went ass-over-tea-kettle about Terri Schiavo's feeding tube, not over imposing a flat tax. Indeed, most of us conservatives have spent the last decade arguing primarily about social and cultural issues, not economic ones.
The same holds true for conservative intellectuals. Conservative and rightwing publications — National Review, The Weekly Standard, First Things, The Public Interest, Policy Review, Crisis, The Claremont Review of Books, The American Conservative, and even The American Enterprise and Reason — have probably dedicated more pages to cultural (or let us say non-free market) arguments and issues by, I would guess, an order of 10 to 1. Two groups of intellectuals have been charged with "taking over" the conservative movement in the last 30years: Neoconservatives and Christian conservatives. Neither of these factions have invoked free-market economics as their north star. On domestic policy, neither faction could in any serious way be described as libertarian or even classically liberal when it comes to economic issues. And, a third group, the so-called paleoconservatives (Buchananite is a far more accurate label) who have been trying to mount a counter-offensive are even less free-market than either the neocons or the Christian right.
Rod would have us believe all of these battles in the culture war took place in some parallel universe. Or, to be more fair, he would have us believe that they are trivial, irrelevant, or that conservatives don't really mean what they say. To bring up these examples is proof that I don't get it. Or, he might say — with considerable merit — that these battles constitute symptoms of the larger problem of modern alienation. Until we order our characters properly — by, duh, adopting the crunchy-con sensibility — we will continue debating these symbolic or secondary battles. This, I think, is a very, very strong point, and it is one Rod makes artfully and humanely. But it doesn't help his cause nearly as much as he thinks.
Just for a moment, imagine how a dedicated pro-lifer would greet this assertion. He would read Crunchy Cons with its poetic perambulations through the world of organic food and comfortable shoes, its odes to home cooking, family meals, and a prayerful life, and its denunciations of shopping-mall idolatry, and he would probably nod along to much of it. But if you were to suggest that Rod's fundamentally statist prescriptions for agriculture and the environment (which, by the way, would reap hardship and misery on millions) should take precedence over, say, saving millions of unborn babies, he'd say "You're nuts. Sure we can fight for the right to eat organic chevre wrapped in a fig leaf later, but first we're going to save babies."
Of course, Rod is not explicitly arguing that pro-lifers should drop their cause in favor of his, and I'm sure he would reject the insinuation. But that is the upshot of his depiction of the political landscape. Politics is about picking your battles; governing is about making choices. The millions of non-crunchy cons who also believe that man doesn't live by bread alone, who believe that religion and transcendence should inform both their politics and daily lives, have picked a different battle than Rod has. But they have picked one. Rod weirdly chooses to ignore it and calls them all market-idolators.
Indeed, there's much else that is similarly otherworldly in Rod's description of America. Until recently, the conventional view of political America was that it is divided between "red states" and "blue states," with the former brimming with anti-abortion and anti-gay-rights voters. Save for the crunchy ones, these people are largely invisible in Rod's world. Not only that, they're persecuted by free-market zealots. "It's hard for conservative journalists and activists who live in [blue state cities like New York and Washington] to appreciate how difficult it can be for conservatives in the Red America heartland...to dissent from the Republican Party mainstream." This statement segues into Rod's Golden Anecdote about his friend Mike who raised concerns about too much development while serving on his town's "smart growth" committee. Mike was verbally roughed up by some developers on the committee who questioned his conservatism because he wasn't "free market" enough. This anecdote carries much of the freight for Rod's claim that traditional conservatives who are skeptical of the free market are culturally oppressed in the libertarian state of nature known as Red State America. Maybe it's just me, but as flawed as the stereotype of Red State America as a land of snake-handling bible-thumpers surely is, I need a bit more data than the dark tale of Mike's journey into Smart Growth Committee Hell before I buy Rod's version of middle-America as the Hong Kong of the prairies.
But perhaps the weirdest oversight is Rod's complete avoidance of "compassionate conservatism" (if he mentions the phrase anywhere in the book, I missed it). Here is an idea, quite serious when it was in the hands of Marvin Olasky and others, which was a religiously informed, socially conservative, rejection of conventional free-market economics and limited state conservatism — and it's not mentioned in this book. "Compassionate conservatism" not only shares the same initials as crunchy conservatism, it even buys into the exact same insulting assumption that adjective-free conservatism is somehow inhumane or uncompassionate. George W. Bush invested both financial and political capital in compassionate conservatism, and if you don't focus on Birkenstocks and granola, it's hard to see how he isn't a crunchy con. He talks about how "When somebody hurts, the government has to move." He wants to help religious charities. He spends money on marriage counseling and talks about how Jesus was his favorite political philosopher. Meanwhile, libertarians and small-government types are so mad they might spontaneously combust, and here comes Rod saying the pro-life, compassionate conservative, religiously inspired GOP is too beholden to the Cato Institute. That's just weird, man, really, really weird.
Who's A Materialist?
But Rod almost has no choice but to describe this phantasmagorical America, because that's where his assumptions force him to go. I believe it was Tom Sowell who first suggested that the person who walks into a room and immediately starts counting how many blacks are in the room is the real racist. Sowell's point was that liberals who fixate on the category of race are bound by the category of race. We see this sort of thing all the time. Racial leftists attribute all bad actions to racism. Marxists assume that all bad people operate on the basis of greed. Feminists blame sexism whenever they hit a bump in the road. When presented with evidence that this narrowly totalizing vision doesn't explain reality, they dismiss it as trivial or a mirage distracting us from the larger structural reality. And Rod's Manichean assumption that people who don't agree with crunchy conservatism are materialists forces him into making a materialist critique of everything.
Rod's problem is that he has essentially bought into a Christian Marxist worldview. Now, I don't like using the word Marxist much because too many conservatives throw it around promiscuously (Social Security isn't Marxist, for example). But all of his talk about alienation and worker exploitation, his contempt for bourgeois careerism, and his relentless abuse of the word "materialistic" all point in that direction. The fact that he also favorably invokes Marxist activists, scholars, arguments, and movements, while ignoring, say, Robert Nisbet's work on community, is also a bad sign. And then there's this whopper of a statement: "Adam Smith and Karl Marx are two sides of the same coin: they define man as primarily economic man."
Putting aside the grotesque slander to Smith, who was one of the great moral philosophers of the last three centuries, it's simply untrue that the free-market is rooted in materialism or that Smith's intellectual descendants define man in economic terms. Classical liberals root their case for laissez-faire in the autonomy of the individual, the primacy of freedom, the faith that virtue not freely chosen isn't virtuous, and in a deeply religious conception of the individual conscience (another sorely missing voice in Rod's book is Michael Novak, the world's leading authority on the intersection of market economics and Catholicism). Save for a few Randians (heh), the only people who really think the free market is based on a materialist vision in an intellectually serious way are themselves Marxist materialists, in much the same way that the only people who see white racism behind every black problem are people convinced of the primacy of race.
Besides, we don't even get the sort of metaphysical materialism Rod talks about from Marx, or even from economics. We get it from Darwin and Malthus. Marx wanted to dedicate Das Kapital to Darwin, and Darwin believed his theory of evolution was merely an application of Malthusian ideas to the natural world. And it was Malthus who believed that humans should be seen demographically, as masses of rutting automatons overtaking the natural environment. This led to socialist and eugenicist panic about Mass Man. Rod's discussions about oil and the environment, and to a lesser extent culture, are straight out of the Malthusian tradition (Jimmy Carter is the book's most heroic president). Not only does Rod not appreciate this, he overlooks the fact that non-crunchy conservatives have been battling Darwinian materialism quite a bit over the last couple decades. Regardless of the merits of that very mixed effort, it certainly contradicts the notion that conservatives are institutionally wedded to materialism.
Crunchy Mush
And from here confusion begets confusion. On the one hand, Rod denounces consumerism as the whisper of Satan in your ear. On the other hand, buying the right expensive foods for the right reason is not only a politically redeeming act, it is in fact a religiously "sacramental" deed. Buying yummy food — preferably locally grown organic food — and sharing it over wine with smart friends is a means and an end to personal and social transformation, redounding outward and inward in a virtuous spiral of catholic goodness in opposition to the malignant "cult of efficiency" destroying our society. But, Rod confesses, "Would I stand by the little guy if doing so meant paying premium prices for second-rate products? Nope." Well, so much for all that.
The reader is informed again and again that the free market cannot satisfy the spiritual and communal needs of the society — except that is, when it can. Whole Foods — something of a cathedral of crunchy conservatism — is growing like kudzu across the United States, forcing even conventional grocery stores to stock up on the more sacramental organic foods. This trend, and trends like it, is direct proof that "crunchy conservatism" is spreading across the United States. And as Rod concedes, "There is no more powerful force for social change than the consumer dollar." So if the market is providing these things, why exactly do we need an anti-market movement to provide them?
Rod denounces, simultaneously, rent-seeking, influence-buying, and corporate welfare, which allows big business to collude with government to crush the little guy — particularly the small farmer — while at the same time complaining that we have a libertarian free-market economy. Well, these are two diametrically opposed predicaments and, at the end of the day, the only way truly to eliminate the former is to create the latter, not lament its fictional tyranny.
I could go on and on and on (and some will no doubt complain I already have). I'm sure Rod and his defenders will respond that I don't get it, that crunchy conservatism is merely a sentiment or a sensibility, not a program or a philosophy (I know they will because they already have). And to a certain extent that's fine. I am being honest when I say there are some legitimately moving and useful parts to this book. Rod is quite gifted at conveying a sense of loss and alienation with mainstream culture I think most conservatives either share or should have sympathy for. Technology and capitalism are inherently destabilizing of tradition and community.
But the basic problem with crunchy conservatism — much like Andrew Sullivan's various attempts to create some new political movement out of his own random collection of biases and convictions — is that it is narcissistic. Rod extrapolates from his personal preferences and priorities an entire branch of conservatism. When he hears from other confused readers that they too like whole grain bread and home schooling, he assumes he's found a new trend. Thus he casts about for, and finds, a bunch of social conservatives who live crunchy lifestyles and assumes they are intellectually distinct from other social conservatives (and he overlooks the fact that many, many "crunchy" rightwingers are in fact libertarians). Crunchy cons vote Republican, read traditional conservative books, even listen to Rush Limbaugh, but because they live according to Rod's personal definition of the good life, they must represent something different and intellectually unique. Well, they are only unique if you think footwear and eating habits are very, very important, or if you think "Frankenesque" stereotypes are valid. I don't.
Rod frets over mass man like a Fabian socialist, tut-tutting their wants and poo-pooing their desires. He buys into the Malthusian fetish of scarcity. He embraces the environmentalism of the left and — at least by implication — the condescending aesthetics of the anti-globalization movement. (If traditional cultures are as wonderful as Rod thinks, one wonders why millions of those living in them are voting with their feet as they cross our borders, while so few of us are opting for a life where we have to carry the well water home everyday). He sounds like Al Gore in Earth in the Balance when he talks about modernity, and he lavishes praise on Hillary Clinton's view that it takes a village to raise a child (a somewhat odd view for someone so passionate about the glories of homeschooling). He claims Russell Kirk as his hero, but he often sounds like Jean-Jacques Rousseau in a Russell Kirk mask. Again and again and again, Rod buys into leftist categories of thinking and thinks that by merely calling them "crunchy" they will suddenly become conservative.
This is unsustainable. I think Rod's a conservative — and great many conservatives I know admire this book (and him) a great deal. So he'll stay in the family, and we'll debate what it means that another marketing slogan has been slapped on conservatism, creating yet another intellectual fad and all the rest. But I can't shake the suspicion that while nobody is going to say, from painful necessity, "To the Left, Go!" that sometime in the next decade or so Rod will gamely proclaim "To the Left, Here I Come." |
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Rafael
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 3657 Location: North Texas
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Posted: Fri Mar 03, 2006 6:06 am Post subject: |
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| David Gold wrote: | A CRUNCHY CON MANIFESTO
I. We are conservatives who stand outside the conservative mainstream; therefore, we can see things that matter more clearly. |
Hmmm. Some kind of elite, huh?
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II. Modern conservatism has become too focused on money, power and the accumulation of stuff, and insufficiently concerned with the content of our individual and social character. |
Conservatism hasn't focused on these things. Some conservatives have. The focus of conservatism should be freedom. If some do not choose to use their freedom wisely, they must answer for it themselves. It is not the place of these people to look down on those who choose a path different from themselves.
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III. Big business deserves as much skepticism as big government.
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Make sure that the business is straight with the stockholders and make it obey the law like anyone else.
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IV. Culture is more important than politics and economics.
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Culture is an individual matter and policy should only protect the freedom of the individual to follow his heart and not charge others for the cultural desires of some group.
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V. A conservatism that does not practice restraint, humility and good stewardship – especially of the natural world – is not fundamentally conservative.
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One man's restraint is another's shackles. The issue that should be addressed is freedom. If a group of citizens does not wish to see an old forest cut, it should be free to buy the forest and thereby have its wishes satisfied. It should not be able to tell the owner of the forest what to do.
Destroying the environment of others should only come at a price. In other words, if others must pay in some way for your plant's production, then they should be reimbursed.
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VI. Small, Local, Old and Particular are almost always better than Big, Global, New and Abstract.
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This is just a matter of taste and it is an individual matter. An individual can make such judgments for himself, but even if favored by a majority, such imposition should be quite limited so as to protect the freedom of each individual.
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VII. Beauty is more important than efficiency.
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Again, a personal opinion that should not impose on others who may or may not agree as to what is beautiful.
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VIII. The relentlessness of media-driven pop culture deadens our senses to authentic truth, beauty and wisdom.
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Such an opinion is easily satisfied by the individual's simply not indulging in activities that he sees as harmful. He should not be allowed to make such decisions for others.
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IX. We share Russell Kirk's conviction that "the institution most essential to conserve is the family." |
I am skeptical of any such 'authority', but I agree that the family must be protected and the govenment should make no policy that is destructive of the traditional family.
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X. Politics and economics will not save us. If our culture is to be saved at all, it will be through living faithfully by the Permanent Things, preserving ancient moral truths in the everyday choices we make.
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Probably true, but each person is his on arbiter of what path to follow. What makes America great is freedom, and anything that detracts from that is an abomination and unAmerican.
My overall acessment is that it sounds as if these people 'have it figured out' and are ready to tell the rest of us how to live. Perhaps I'm wrong. If this is true, then they are just like any sincere liberal that thinks the rest of us are just a bunch of hayseed rednecks who would be greatly improved by living according to their prescription.
If I've failed to state it up to now, this hayseed redneck from East Texas favors freedom. _________________ "Let us go forth ... asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God's work must truly be our own." |
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David R Gold
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 21089
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Posted: Tue Mar 07, 2006 1:04 am Post subject: |
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Raffy
You put it perfectly. Well done. Some say Rod is creating this out of whole cloth. I don't believe that. His point that even in a Capitalistic society we need values to guide us. However, as you said, that's personal. Different strokes. It's about FREEDOM. Freedom to live large. Freedom to live small. However, when Rod discusses initiatives to enforce his ideals I split. |
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Rafael
Joined: 01 Jan 1970 Posts: 3657 Location: North Texas
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Posted: Tue Mar 07, 2006 2:44 am Post subject: |
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| David R Gold wrote: | Raffy
You put it perfectly. Well done. Some say Rod is creating this out of whole cloth. I don't believe that. His point that even in a Capitalistic society we need values to guide us. However, as you said, that's personal. Different strokes. It's about FREEDOM. Freedom to live large. Freedom to live small. However, when Rod discusses initiatives to enforce his ideals I split. |
Exactly. Some think they were created special. _________________ "Let us go forth ... asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God's work must truly be our own." |
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