Republican or Conservative, You Have to Choose
By David
Brooks
Opinion Columnist
The never-Trumpers are
having an interesting debate over the question, Is it time to leave the
Republican Party? George Will and Steve Schmidt say yes: The Trumpian rot is
all the way down. Bill Kristol says not so fast: Once Donald Trump falls, the
party could be brought back to health, and the fight has to be within the party
as well as without it.
My instinct is that we
can clarify this debate by returning to first principles. Everybody in the
conversation is conservative. Where do conservative loyalties lie? How can we
serve those loyalties in these circumstances?
Conservatism, as Roger
Scruton reminds us, was founded during the 18th-century Enlightenment. In
France, Britain and the American colonies, Enlightenment thinkers were throwing
off monarchic power and seeking to build an order based on reason and consent
of the governed. Society is best seen as a social contract, these Enlightenment
thinkers said. Free individuals get together and contract with one another to
create order.
Conservatives said we agree with
the general effort but think you’ve got human nature wrong. There never was
such a thing as an autonomous, free individual who could gather with others to
create order. Rather, individuals emerge out of families, communities, faiths,
neighborhoods and nations. The order comes first. Individual freedom is an
artifact of that order.
Read more at: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/25/opinion/trump-republican-party-conservative.html
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