Opinion Against "Principled Loserdom"

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Article
Archive

I was in New Haven this past week for a couple of events at Yale, one of which was a William F. Buckley, Jr. Program debate for a primarily college-age audience on "common good conservatism." During the debate, I argued on behalf of the more "muscular," more forceful and less "liberal" approach to political economy and political gamesmanship frequently associated with the ascendant "New Right."

My interlocutor, the amiable lawyer and National Review writer Dan McLaughlin, offered a substantive defense of orthodox "Reaganism" and an attitudinal appeal for conservatives to remain the "grown-ups in the room." According to this logic, it is incumbent upon conservatives—actually, right-liberals—to act as righteous stewards of civic decency and defenders of the sacrosanct norms of liberal proceduralism, no matter how much our political foes have strayed.

To drive home the point, it was only a day after the Yale debate that McLaughlin and his National Review colleague Charles C.W. Cooke publicly criticized Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his fellow Sunshine State Republicans for acting this week to dissolve The Walt Disney Company's autonomous Reedy Creek Improvement District near Orlando—a move Republicans ushered through as just comeuppance for Disney's voluble opposition to Florida's recent Parental Rights in Education law. To spike the football in such a fashion, so goes the narrative, would be "indecent." To punish a high-profile enemy within the confines of the rule of law, making a woke corporate behemoth pay for its advocacy of the civilizational arson of corroded childhood sexual innocence, would be gratuitous and—egad!—"illiberal."

The problem with this logic is that it is, to its core, a loser. It was a political loser in the presidential general elections of 1992, 1996, 2008 and 2012, and it was a political loser in the 2016 Republican presidential primary, when Donald Trump—the most pro-"winning" rhetorician and the single candidate least besotted with liberal pieties—shocked the establishment and prevailed. And it is a substantive loser because the Right's vision of a more naturally ordered, just and solidaristic society will obviously be—indeed, has demonstrably been—hindered by unilaterally abandoning the playing field of moralistic legislation and statesmanship to the one-way cultural ratchet of progressivism.

Proponents of the status quo are analogous to the complacent coffee-sipping dog in the "this is fine" online meme, willfully oblivious to the cultural rot, fever pitch-level fractiousness and ruinous decadence engulfing American society like an inferno. At this increasingly late hour of our republic, what status quo defendants meekly offer is, to borrow a phrase from the Claremont Institute's Matthew J. Peterson, the "suicidal anti-politics of 'principled' loserdom."

To engage in such an "anti-politics," where genuine political statesmanship—what a younger George F. Will once called "statecraft as soulcraft"—is eschewed and the highest goods one can fight for in the public arena are sacrosanct liberal neutrality and supply-side tax cuts, is to habituate a culture of losing. Such is the fundamental nature of responding to left-wing culture warriors seeking to chemically castrate children with cheerful hand-waving about slashing the capital gains tax rate. It is to be part of a controlled opposition that cheerfully accepts inveterate losing, as long as the Washington uniparty still passes some neoliberal consensus policies that redound to ruling class interests. The "principled loserdom" mentality leads to what another Claremonster, Michael Anton, referred to in a famous 2016 essay as the "Washington Generals"—the exhibition basketball team known for once losing 2,495 games in a row. As Anton wrote, in this scenario, "your job is to show up and lose."

But "principled loserdom" is wrong. The American Founders were not content to fight against the British Crown and accept losing, so long as their lofty principles were followed along the way; on the contrary, they pledged their "lives...fortunes and...sacred honor" to the cause in the Declaration of Independence. Abraham Lincoln was not content, either, to fight to preserve Union and accept losing, so long as his high-minded principles were followed along the way; on the contrary, he was motivated by his great moral conviction, as espoused in his 1854 Peoria Speech, "that there can be no moral right in connection with one man's making a slave of another."

Substantive justice must always be conservatives' political lodestar. And if conservatives find themselves irrevocably hamstrung by a peculiar conception of the permissible means to achieve that end, at least over a reasonable duration of time, then it is time to change the means. "The Constitution is not a suicide pact," goes the famous paraphrase of Justice Robert Jackson's 1949 dissent in Terminiello v. City of Chicago. Neither, for that matter, is American civilization itself. And contra the coffee-sipping canine of online meme fame, things in America are not "fine."

Conservatives must start acting like they actually understand this, wielding whatever levers of power they are able to attain. Given the Left's successful Gramscian "march through the institutions" chokehold on all of the major institutions of civil society, that means using crass political power. It means, in other words, following the example of Florida Republicans and Disney.

But the long-term success of following the Florida playbook will depend, in part, on how quickly the "New Right" can excise "political loserdom."
 
Trump-era civic nationalism is on its way to being dead but even fewer people understand that one. We will go full extreme Nazi in the US. It simply requires the right circumstances. Trump was unelectable before someone like Obama. What's going on today and over the next 7 years opens the doors to a very right-wing response.
Okay, buddy. Even if the Right starts up a Night of Rage Nazi bullshit isn't going to be happening. Ethnic cleansing? Maybe. But nationalizing businesses and banning guns? No. And this is assuming the Left doesn't go Kristallnacht again and get BTFO'd.
They're just paranoid, mentally ill, delusions of persecution. It's jewish thinking whether they're jewish or not. They believe they should kidnap your children because you might teach those children to hate them, which could lead to their genocide. It has very little to do with what the Right is doing. Like that tweet talks about the Right allying with tech billionaires. That has not happened even once. Elon Musk is somewhere on the left. He wants to put chips in people's brains. That's not playing on the same team as "small government". He gets all his money from big government contracts! So people on the left (and to a large degree on the right) can't even figure out which side the major players are on. A lot of lefties are so delusional they believe the media is in the right's pocket.
The big players are not on the side of the common man. They are on their own side. Remember that, because if you get your Right wing response every elite will need to be scrutinized to see if their loyalty is to the country or the global economy. Even Trump, but I doubt his loyalty would be found wanting.
But of course their behavior is eventually going to provoke the reaction they fear. They will make nationwide persecutions necessary because they are coming for our children and they are bragging about it and they won't apologize or stop, ever. This Disney shit is just a tiptoe towards what they eventually want - State ownership of your children from birth. But first they need to brainwash the children into thinking their parents are evil. Then they'll gladly march into the state institutions to become loyal ZOGslaves.
Oh, it's already starting. Parents are getting pissed off and they're starting to lose their grip. We both agree they won't go quietly into the night. But here's the thing, it's far more effective to take power then just ignore them. Let them spout their drivel and scream until they're blue in the face. Let them have their resources. Destroying their influence would create a living Hell for those people. Of course, I admit that's much harder than just Deus Vulting them but it's more beneficial in the long run.
 
Matt Walsh is more anti-Trump than Rachel Maddow is, and it's weird.
It’s not all that weird given he’s a basic bitch establishment Republican that wants the party back to focusing on god more than domestic policy. He’s had to watch his party turn from acting holier than thou to caring about the poor.

Makes him seethe as it means his old talking points don’t earn him the same ass pats, which is why he now latches onto trannies for dear life as it’s at least something he can agree with the right about hating.
 
I tried reading this but I didn't open my third eye hard enough for the words to make sense
TL;DR: To translate from Politician to English: "Do you want winning, or no mean tweets? Because plenty of Republicans want to win, and keep winning, and anyone who doesn't will be left behind, either by them or the Democrats."

That said I'm surprised as fuck Newsweek of all places published something this dramatic.
 
Back
Top Bottom