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Ask
Auntie Pinko
March
7, 2002
Dear
Auntie Pinko
Pat Buchanan has a new book out, something about the death
of the west, and on his subsequent media appearances he explained
that our American way of life is being destroyed by Mexicans
and Islamic immigrants. Is Pat just nuts or does he really
have a valid point? What is the American way of life he refers
to and why do immigrants and multiculturalism threaten him
so?
Max,
Flagstaff, AZ
Dear Max,
"Conservative" comes from the root "conserve." Conservatives
have a valuable role in human society and in our culture-to
ensure that we conserve that which functions well and produces
desirable results. The positive side of this role is the testing
they provide for the changes or innovations in an evolving
society. They force us to prove that a change will produce
a greater good than the status quo.
And just as thoughtful liberals acknowledge the value of
the conservatives' role in our society, thoughtful conservatives
are fully aware that change is both inevitable and necessary
if we are to continue to survive and evolve in a world that
is changing and evolving. But they are equally well aware
of the price that change exacts, and they want to weigh that
price carefully against the cost of not changing.
It is the perceptions of those prices, and the values we
assign to them, that are at the root of most disagreements
between liberals and conservatives.
If you look at the pace of change throughout human history,
Max, it becomes very clear that after many centuries of a
steadily oscillating cycle of change and reaction and continued
change, the last two centuries have seen an exponential increase
in the pace of change. It should not surprise us, therefore,
that conservatives are reacting in proportion to the speed
and amplitude of the changes our society is undergoing.
Auntie Pinko has, on occasion, felt as though the control
of something vitally important was being wrested from me by
people or circumstances too complex for me to fully comprehend
and too powerful for me to significantly affect. It's not
a pleasant feeling, not a pleasant feeling at all.
I sometimes think that feeling is at the root of the more
extreme and irrational forms that conservatism seems to be
taking in contemporary America. Between the fear and the overwhelming
urge to control, conservatives have lost sight of the reality
that neither conservatives nor liberals can actually "control"
the course and pace of human events. The most we can do is
influence it.
So to answer you, Max, I would speculate that Mr. Buchanan
is one of those so focused on the fear of, and the obsession
to control, the frenetic course of modern history that he
has forgotten that influence can only happen in an environment
of constructively dynamic tension. He's obviously not
alone in that!
Immigrants, and multiculturalism, represent a change from
Mr. Buchanan's concept of the status quo. For more enlightenment,
I would suggest you pull up your favorite search engine and
enter the term "Father Coughlin." Mr. Buchanan is not a new
phenomenon in our body politic.
And thank you for asking Auntie Pinko!
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