There are one or two more installments left in the "new new right" series. Meanwhile I want to highlight a comment by Undercover Blue (of the excellent eponymous blog) on the last post, on some of the implications of the study of movement-building, and its relationship to party campaigns, for progressives:
What old-guard Democrats count on is that progressives will live down to their reputation, i.e., cranky, inexperienced upstarts who show up just long enough to try to ram their agenda down everyone else's throats, but who don't show when there's real grunt work to be done; who will take their balls and go home the first time they don't get what they want or get their issue the attention they KNOW it deserves. Establishment Democrats count on that. And when progressives leave, the old guard gets back control of its comfy social club and nothing changes.I don't think I could say it any better than that.
Why aren't progressives taken seriously? Because the old guard expects them to be a passing fad with no staying power. Until they prove they have it, they'll never be taken seriously.
The secret to building a progressive critical mass capable of reforming and reinvigorating the Democratic party is showing up day after day and outlasting the traditionalists.
Labels: movement building, progressives, Undercover Blue
Undercover Blue, beginning a series on conservative thought, considers one of the numerous paradoxes in the popular right-wing interpretation of Christian morality: the ability somehow to reconcile Jesus's example with a devotion to free markets uber alles. The contradiction, Blue points out, is heightened by their rejection of a separation between church and state:
I had not said Christian morality is incompatible with free-market economics. Just that those who promote Jesus as the inspiration for American democracy and its laws, past, present and future have an obligation to demand that America's "Christian" government attend to "the least of these my brethren." Promoting laissez-faire capitalism instead is a pathetic substitute for practicing the gospel.In short: you cannot simultaneously privatize Jesus's message while nationalizing Christianity.
Separate church and state and their obligation goes away. But that is not American conservatism today. When pushed to defend themselves, many grassroots conservatives exhibit a tortured mix of “strict father” authoritarianism, righteous patriotism, and Ayn Rand’s morality of selfishness while brandishing a cross in defense of America's right to shop.
Labels: Christians, conservatives, Republicans, Undercover Blue
The Right's Field is an outstanding group blog covering the Republican presidential contenders.
Labels: blogroll, five before chaos, meta, The Right's Field, Undercover Blue
