Difference between revisions of "Conservatism/US"
(→Conservative and Fundamentalist Groups: all these guys are Americans, I'm pretty sure...) |
m (Conservatism in the US moved to US conservatism: decided this should be the naming convention) |
Revision as of 21:44, 30 March 2007
Overview
The Heritage Foundation [W], an American conservative think-tank, states a belief "in individual liberty, free enterprise, limited government, a strong national defense, and traditional American values. We want an America that is safe and secure; where choices (in education, health care and retirement) abound; where taxes are fair, flat, and comprehensible; where everybody has the opportunity to go as far as their talents will take them; where government concentrates on its core functions, recognizes its limits and shows favor to none. ... we believe the values and ideas that motivated our Founding Fathers are worth conserving." This would seem to be a reasonable definition of the best attributes of American conservatism.
A cornerstone of American Conservative philosophy is personal responsibility – the idea that each individual is solely responsible for his/her own well-being; government exists solely to ensure that the rules are enforced, which includes protection from hostile external forces.
American Conservatives seem to be generally against "big government": "The government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take away everything you have." -- attributed to Gerald Ford [1]
During the presidential administration of George W. Bush, the use of the term "Neocons" has re-emerged to describe a certain offshoot of conservatism whose adherents are outwardly conservative but in practice somewhat (sometimes completely) at odds with some of conservatism's basic tenets; see Bush Neoconservative.
Politics
The majority of conservatives in the United States are aligned with the Republican Party, although a significant minority adhere more to the positions of the Libertarian Party.
Related Articles
Conservative and Fundamentalist Groups
- Conservative
- Conservapedia: "pro-American, pro-Christian" alternative to Wikipedia
- The Heritage Foundation
- John Locke Foundation (North Carolina)
- Interestingly, the writings of John Locke himself "had an enormous influence on the development of liberalism", notably the idea of "religious toleration", according to Wikipedia
- Patriot Post "The Conservative Journal of Record"
- American Conservative: skeptical Conservatism
- Redstate: "conservative news and community"
- Conservative Christian
- Bob Jones University (Greenville, SC)
- Council of Conservative Citizens (MO) (Wikipedia)
- Liberty University - e.g. Dress Code for Women
- American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property
- Patriarchy.org (VA): "addressing the issues and legalism of patriarchy with the liberating truth of Jesus Christ"; apparently started in reaction against an excessively conservative/legalistic "patriarchy movement"
- Parody Sites
- Landover Baptist Church "Where the Worthwhile Worship"
- Betty Bowers "America's Best Christian"
Well-Known Conservative Proponents
- Buckley, William F. Jr. "the godfather of modern American conservatism"
- Coulter, Ann [2]
- Goldwater, Barry: would be considered a moderate today
- Horowitz, David: neocon writer, activist and commentator
- D'Souza, Dinesh: argues "that conservatives here and traditional moderate Muslims are up against the same far-left enemy."
- Kirk, Russell: "the father of modern conservatism"
- Limbaugh, Rush
- Malkin, Michelle
- O'Reilly, Bill: "against harmful, radical social changes and those causing them, i.e., the ACLU, activist judges, and secular humanists."
- Pournelle, Jerry "slightly to the right of Genghis Khan"... but doesn't seem to be rabid, unlike many others
- Will, George F.
Links
Reference
- Wikipedia: Conservatism in North America