I've followed just above the radar horizon this growing little movement associated with one-time darling of the right David Frum known as the "No-Labels" movement. Essentially, this self-righteous group of folks (can a group be self-righteous? But I digress...) seeks to have the rest of us put aside our petty differences and join them on the rhetorical and political high ground. Presumably, once there, a promised-land of comity will underpin "the national conversation" and result in more enlightened discourse--and therefore--policy.
Here's a wonderful take-down of that Utopian (and perhaps deleterious) goal. The line I like the best:
The problem with the No Labels idea is that it amounts to defining "reasonableness" as something between center-leftism and centrism and then declaring everyone else out of bounds. That's not especially useful. For one thing, fringe ideas don't always stay in the fringe as societies evolve...
This really nails my criticism of these folks who espouse the "why can't we all just get along" way of politics. The "way" generally means "their way" and it usually consists of a small slice of the political spectrum that tends all the way from the center to left center. Who is the mythical God-head of this kind of thinking? Why, Jon Stewart, of course. It's what his entire show, his entire thing on the Mall, is about. We--the enlightened--will sit atop our mountain of comity, intelligence, bonhomie and consensus--while you unwashed rubes fight battles we find irrelevant to the "good" of the country. We gather in our salons to worship centrism, consensus, and non-judgment--all the while rendering withering judgments upon those who see politics more as a contact sport.
No thanks. I'll stick with my label. The Conservative Wahoo.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
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5 comments:
They are liberals who are embarrassed to be called Democrats.
In the Old North State they made judicial elections "nonpartisan". Translation? Too many Republican judges were being elected.
I think we've got something along the same lines here.
Center-left commentator E.J. Dionne had a similar complaint about the movement in his recent column at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/15/AR2010121505673.html.
Joe Scarborough made a great point on Meet the Press regarding this subject -- basically he said left and right ideologues like Rush, Keith and the provider of this blog don't have to govern, so they can comfortably "stick" to their label.
Sure good ideas come from the extremes, but history shows that if 70% of the elected government doesn't support these ideas, they will be corrected... in time. Balance is good for those who govern, perhaps not so good for those desiring higher ratings or increased readership...
I have some 20-something married friends who attended the reason/fear rally and said they felt as if the joke was on them. I kindly reminded them, "told ya so."
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