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"Mr. Conservative"
Jordan Richardson
February
6, 2008
So
John McCain is a Conservative, huh? Bah.
I won't attack John McCain directly, (I
did in my last post) but rather give an example
of true conservatism and let you compare the
two.
I recalled from previous studies that one
of the more outstanding conservatives in our
nation's past has been one whose name is not
mentioned much anymore. We all love (for the
most part) the tradition of conservatism that
Ronald Reagan brought to the presidency, but it
is important to realize the pattern that he
followed was a path laid before him by a
previous presidential candidate. That person was
Barry Goldwater.
Goldwater was a five-term United States
Senator from Arizona and the Republican Party's
nominee for President in the 1964 election. He
was a Major General in the U.S. Air Force
Reserves. He ran at a time when the Republican
Party was under the influence of liberalism,
fiscally and socially. His forceful attacks on
fiscal waste and his support of Joseph McCarthy
shocked many of his Republican colleagues.
His style was aggressive, and in the end
he didn't win anything worth speaking of, save
his home state and five others. However, his
influence throughout the country was
strengthened when the breed of old conservatism
meets new, came on the scene with Reagan. Now,
in today's political circles, candidates are
always trying to pass themselves off as the true
conservative, and it is Ronald Reagan this,
Ronald Reagan that.
I would like to take a walk back in
history and read the words defending a
conservative philosophy, of which I believe is
what the country needs now more than ever.
The following is the text of Barry
Goldwater's 1964 speech at the 28th Republican
National Convention, accepting the nomination
for president.
I hope as you read the words of a staunch
conservative, you will be inspired and realize
that when juxtaposing his words with the
rhetoric of modern day "conservatives," it will
become obvious which model to truly follow.
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"To my good friend and great Republican,
Dick Nixon, and your charming wife, Pat; my
running mate and that wonderful Republican who
has served us well
for so long, Bill Miller and his wife,
Stephanie; to Thurston Morton who has done such
a commendable job in chairmaning this
Convention; to Mr. Herbert Hoover, who I hope is
watching; and to that great American and his
wife, General and Mrs. Eisenhower; to my own
wife, my family, and to all of my fellow
Republicans here assembled, and Americans across
this great Nation.
From this moment, united and determined,
we will go forward together, dedicated to the
ultimate and undeniable greatness of the whole
man. Together we will win.
I accept your nomination with a deep
sense of humility. I accept, too, the
responsibility that goes with it, and I seek
your continued help and your continued guidance.
My fellow Republicans, our cause is too great
for any man to feel worthy of it. Our task would
be too great for any man, did he not have with
him the heart and the hands of this great
Republican Party, and I promise you tonight that
every fiber of my being is consecrated to our
cause; that nothing shall be lacking from the
struggle that can be brought to it by
enthusiasm, by devotion, and plain hard work. In
this world no person, no party can guarantee
anything, but what we can do and what we shall
do is to deserve victory, and victory will be
ours.
The good Lord raised this mighty Republic
to be a home for the brave and to flourish as
the land of the free-not to stagnate in the
swampland of collectivism, not to cringe before
the bully of communism.
Now, my fellow Americans, the tide has
been running against freedom. Our people have
followed false prophets. We must, and we shall,
return to proven ways-- not because they are
old, but because they are true. We must, and we
shall, set the tide running again in the cause
of freedom. And this party, with its every
action, every word, every breath, and every
heartbeat, has but a single resolve, and that is
freedom - freedom made orderly for this nation
by our constitutional government; freedom under
a government limited by laws of nature and of
nature's God; freedom - balanced so that liberty
lacking order will not become the slavery of the
prison cell; balanced so that liberty lacking
order will not become the license of the mob and
of the jungle.
Now, we Americans understand freedom. We
have earned it, we have lived for it, and we
have died for it. This Nation and its people are
freedom's model in a searching world. We can be
freedom's missionaries in a doubting world. But,
ladies and gentlemen, first we must renew
freedom's mission in our own hearts and in our
own homes.
During four futile years, the
administration which we shall replace has
distorted and lost that faith. It has talked and
talked and talked and talked the words of
freedom. Now, failures cement the wall of shame
in Berlin. Failures blot the sands of shame at
the Bay of Pigs. Failures mark the slow death of
freedom in Laos. Failures infest the jungles of
Vietnam. And failures haunt the houses of our
once great alliances and undermine the greatest
bulwark ever erected by free nations - the NATO
community. Failures proclaim lost leadership,
obscure purpose, weakening wills, and the risk
of inciting our sworn enemies to new aggressions
and to new excesses. Because of this
administration we are tonight a world divided -
we are a Nation becalmed. We have lost the brisk
pace of diversity and the genius of individual
creativity. We are plodding at a pace set by
centralized planning, red tape, rules without
responsibility, and regimentation without
recourse.
Rather than useful jobs in our country,
people have been offered bureaucratic "make
work," rather than moral leadership, they have
been given bread and circuses, spectacles, and,
yes, they have even been given scandals. Tonight
there is
violence in our streets, corruption in
our highest offices, aimlessness among our
youth, anxiety among our elders and there is a
virtual despair among the many who look beyond
material success for the inner meaning of their
lives. Where examples of morality should be set,
the opposite is seen. Small men, seeking great
wealth or power, have too often and too long
turned even the highest levels of public service
into mere personal opportunity.
Now, certainly, simple honesty is not too
much to demand of men in government. We find it
in most. Republicans demand it from everyone.
They demand it from everyone no matter how
exalted or protected his position might be. The
growing menace in our country tonight, to
personal safety, to life, to limb and property,
inhomes, in churches, on the playgrounds, and
places of business, particularly in our great
cities, is the mounting concern, or should be,
of every thoughtful citizen in the United
States.
Security from domestic violence, no less
than from foreign aggression, is the most
elementary and fundamental purpose of any
government, and a government that cannot fulfill
that purpose is one that cannot long command the
loyalty of its citizens. History shows us -
demonstrates that nothing - nothing prepares the
way for tyranny more than the failure of public
officials to keep the streets from bullies and
marauders.
Now, we Republicans see all this as more,
much more, than the rest: of mere political
differences or mere political mistakes. We see
this as the result of a fundamentally and
absolutely wrong view of man, his nature and his
destiny. Those who seek to live your lives for
you, to take your liberties in return for
relieving you of yours, those who elevate the
state and downgrade the citizen must see
ultimately a world in which earthly power can be
substituted for divine will, and this Nation was
founded upon the rejection of that notion and
upon the acceptance of God as the author of
freedom.
Those who seek absolute power, even
though they seek it to do what they regard as
good, are simply demanding the right to enforce
their own version of heaven on earth. And let me
remind you, they are the very ones who always
create the most hellish tyrannies. Absolute
power does corrupt, and those who seek it must
be suspect and must be opposed. Their mistaken
course stems from false notions of equality,
ladies and gentlemen. Equality, rightly
understood, as our founding fathers understood
it, leads to liberty and to the emancipation of
creative differences. Wrongly understood, as it
has been so tragically in our time, it leads
first to conformity and then to despotism.
Fellow Republicans, it is the cause of
Republicanism to resist concentrations of power,
private or public, which enforce such conformity
and inflict such despotism. It is the cause of
Republicanism to ensure that power remains in
the hands of the people. And, so help us God,
that is exactly what a Republican president will
do with the help of a Republican Congress.
It is further the cause of Republicanism
to restore a clear understanding of the tyranny
of man over man in the world at large. It is our
cause to dispel the foggy thinking which avoids
hard decisions in the illusion that a world of
conflict will somehow mysteriously resolve
itself into a world of harmony, if we just don't
rock the boat or irritate the forces of
aggression - and this is hogwash.
It is further the cause of Republicanism
to remind ourselves, and the world, that only
the strong can remain free, that only the strong
can keep the peace.
Now, I needn't remind you, or my fellow
Americans regardless of party, that Republicans
have shouldered this hard responsibility and
marched in this cause before. It was Republican
leadership under Dwight Eisenhower that kept the
peace, and passed along to this administration
the mightiest arsenal for defense the world has
ever known. And I needn't remind you that it was
the strength and the unbelievable will of the
Eisenhower years that kept the peace by using
our strength, by using it in the Formosa Straits
and in Lebanon and by showing it courageously at
all times.
It was during those Republican years that
the thrust of Communist imperialism was blunted.
It was during those years of Republican
leadership that this world moved closer, not to
war, but closer to peace, than at any other time
in the three decades just passed.
And I needn't remind you - but I will -
that it's been during Democratic years that our
strength to deter war has stood still, and even
gone into a planned decline. It has been during
Democratic years that we have weakly stumbled
into conflict, timidly refusing to draw our own
lines against aggression, deceitfully refusing
to tell even our people of our full
participation, and tragically, letting our
finest men die on battlefields (unmarked by
purpose, unmarked by pride or the prospect of
victory).
Yesterday it was Korea. Tonight it is
Vietnam. Make no bones of this. Don't try to
sweep this under the rug. We are at war in
Vietnam. And yet the President, who is
Commander-in-Chief of our forces, refuses to say
- refuses to say, mind you, whether or not the
objective over there is victory. And his
Secretary of Defense continues to mislead and
misinform the American
people, and enough of it has gone by.
And I needn't remind you, but I will; it
has been during Democratic years that a billion
persons were cast into Communist captivity and
their fate cynically sealed.
Today in our beloved country we have an
administration which seems eager to deal with
communism in every coin known - from gold to
wheat, from consulates to confidence, and even
human freedom itself.
The Republican cause demands that we
brand communism as a principal disturber of
peace in the world today. Indeed, we should
brand it as the only significant disturber of
the peace, and we must make clear that until its
goals of conquest are absolutely renounced and
its rejections with all nations tempered,
communism and the governments it now controls
are enemies of every man on earth who is or
wants to be free.
We here in America can keep the peace
only if we remain vigilant and only if we remain
strong. Only if we keep our eyes open and keep
our guard up can we prevent war. And I want to
make this abundantly clear - I don't intend to
let peace or freedom be torn from our grasp
because of lack of strength or lack of will -
and that I promise you Americans.
I believe that we must look beyond the
defense of freedom today to its extension
tomorrow. I believe that the communism
which boasts it will bury us will, instead, give
way to the forces of freedom. And I can see in
the distant and yet recognizable future the
outlines of a world worthy our dedication, our
every risk, our every effort, our every
sacrifice along the way. Yes, a world that will
redeem the suffering of those who will be
liberated from tyranny. I can see and I suggest
that all thoughtful men must contemplate the
flowering of an Atlantic civilization, the whole
world of Europe unified and free, trading openly
across its borders, communicating openly across
the world. This is a goal far, far more
meaningful than a moon shot.
It's a truly inspiring goal for all free
men to set for themselves during the latter half
of the twentieth century. I can also see - and
all free men must thrill to - the events of this
Atlantic civilization joined by its great ocean
highway to the United States. What a destiny,
what a destiny can be ours to stand as a great
central pillar linking Europe, the Americans and
the venerable and vital peoples and cultures of
the Pacific. I can see a day when all the
Americas, North and South, will be linked in a
mighty system, a system in which the errors and
misunderstandings of the past will be submerged
one by one in a rising tide of prosperity and
interdependence. We know that the
misunderstandings of centuries are not to be
wiped away in a day or wiped away in an hour.
But we pledge - we pledge that human sympathy -
what our neighbors to the South call that
attitude of "simpatico" - no less than
enlightened self'-interest will be our guide. I
can see this Atlantic civilization galvanizing
and guiding emergent nations everywhere.
I know this freedom is not the fruit of
every soil. I know that our own freedom was
achieved through centuries, by unremitting
efforts by brave and wise men. I know that the
road to freedom is a long and a challenging
road. I know also that some men may walk away
from it, that some men resist challenge,
accepting the false security of governmental
paternalism.
And I pledge that the America I envision
in the years ahead will extend its hand in
health, in teaching and in cultivation, so that
all new nations will be at least encouraged to
go our way, so that they will not wander down
the dark alleys of tyranny or to the dead-end
streets of collectivism. My fellow Republicans,
we do no man a service by hiding freedom's light
under a bushel of mistaken humility.
I seek an America proud of its past,
proud of its ways, proud of its dreams, and
determined actively to proclaim them. But our
example to the world must, like charity, begin
at home.
In our vision of a good and decent
future, free and peaceful, there must be room
for deliberation of the energy and talent of the
individual - otherwise our vision is blind at
the outset.
We must assure a society here which,
while never abandoning the needy or forsaking
the helpless, nurtures incentives and
opportunity for the creative and the productive.
We must know the whole good is the product of
many single contributions.
I cherish a day when our children once
again will restore as heroes the sort of men and
women who - unafraid and undaunted - pursue the
truth, strive to cure disease, subdue and make
fruitful our natural environment and produce the
inventive engines of production, science, and
technology.
This Nation, whose creative people have
enhanced this entire span of history, should
again thrive upon the greatness of all those
things which we, as individual citizens, can and
should do. During Republican years, this again
will be a nation of men and women, of families
proud of their role, jealous of their
responsibilities, unlimited in their aspirations
- a Nation where all who can will be
self-reliant.
We Republicans see in our constitutional
form of government the great framework which
assures the orderly but dynamic fulfillment of
the whole man, and we see the whole man as the
great reason for instituting orderly government
in the first place.
We see, in private property and in
economy based upon and fostering private
property, the one way to make government a
durable ally of the whole man, rather than his
determined enemy. We see in the sanctity of
private property the only durable foundation for
constitutional government in a free society. And
beyond that, we see, in cherished diversity of
ways, diversity of thoughts, of motives and
accomplishments. We do not seek to lead anyone's
life for him - we seek only to secure his rights
and to guarantee him opportunity to strive, with
government performing only those needed and
constitutionally sanctioned tasks which cannot
otherwise be performed.
We Republicans seek a government that
attends to its inherent responsibilities of
maintaining a stable monetary and fiscal
climate, encouraging a free and a competitive
economy and enforcing law and order. Thus do we
seek inventiveness, diversity, and creativity
within a stable order, for we Republicans define
government's role where needed at many, many
levels, preferably through the one
closest to the people involved.
Our towns and our cities, then our
counties, then our states, then our regional
contacts - and only then, the national
government. That, let me remind you, is the
ladder of liberty, built by decentralized power.
On it also we must have balance between the
branches of government at every level.
Balance, diversity, creativity - these
are the elements of Republican equation.
Republicans agree, Republicans agree heartily to
disagree on many, many of their applications,
but we have never disagreed on the basic
fundamental issues of why you and I are
Republicans.
This is a party, this Republican Party, a
Party for free men, not for blind followers, and
not for conformists.
Back in 1858 Abraham Lincoln said this of
the Republican party - and I quote him, because
he probably could have said it during the last
week or so: "It was composed of strained,
discordant, and even hostile elements" in 1858.
Yet all of these elements agreed on one
paramount objective: To arrest the progress of
slavery, and place it in the course of ultimate
extinction.
Today, as then, but more urgently and
more broadly than then, the task of preserving
and enlarging freedom at home and safeguarding
it from the forces of tyranny abroad is great
enough to challenge all our resources and to
require all our strength. Anyone who joins us in
all sincerity, we welcome. Those who do not care
for our cause, we don't expect to enter our
ranks in any case. And let our Republicanism, so
focused and so dedicated, not be made fuzzy and
futile by unthinking and stupid labels.
I would remind you that extremism in the
defense of liberty is no vice. And let me remind
you also that moderation in the pursuit of
justice is no virtue.
The beauty of the very system we
Republicans are pledged to restore and
revitalize, the beauty of this Federal system of
ours is in its reconciliation of diversity with
unity. We must not see malice in honest
differences of opinion, and no matter how great,
so long as they are not inconsistent with the
pledges we have given to each other in and
through our Constitution. Our Republican cause
is not to level out the world or make its people
conform in computer regimented sameness. Our
Republican cause is to free our people and light
the way for liberty throughout the world. Ours
is a very human cause for very humane goals.
This Party, its good people, and its
unquestionable devotion to freedom, will not
fulfill the purposes of this campaign which we
launch here now until our cause has won the day,
inspired the world, and shown the way to a
tomorrow worthy of all our yesteryears.
I repeat, I accept your nomination with
humbleness, with pride, and you and I are going
to fight for the goodness of our land.
Thank you."
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