Thursday, March 4, 2010

The Wal-Mart Hippies - David Brooks

CHICAGO - APRIL 15: Nancy Thorner, dressed as...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

.... both the New Left and the Tea Party movement are radically anticonservative. Conservatism is built on the idea of original sin — on the assumption of human fallibility and uncertainty. To remedy our fallen condition, conservatives believe in civilization — in social structures, permanent institutions and just authorities, which embody the accumulated wisdom of the ages and structure individual longings.

That idea was rejected in the 1960s by people who put their faith in unrestrained passion and zealotry. The New Left then, like the Tea Partiers now, had a legitimate point about the failure of the ruling class. But they ruined it through their own imprudence, self-righteousness and naïve radicalism. The Tea Partiers will not take over the G.O.P., but it seems as though the ’60s political style will always be with us — first on the left, now the right.


via www.nytimes.com


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1 comments:

  1. I could not agree more vigorously, I would recommend Edmund Burke’s Reflections on the French Revolution to anyone “tempted” by the Tea Party Movement.

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