|
|
||
|
Conservatism in the United States - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
||
|
It can't decide what message to convey to the American people or how to convey it. And even its once- reliable allies in the big media aren't as influential in promoting the party and its agenda as they were in the past.
|
||
|
The American Conservative - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
||
|
The Decline and Fall of American Conservatism ... Myron Magnet, a leading theorist of compassionate conservatism, describes it as representing an “epochal paradigm shift” in American political thinking. It amounts, he writes, “to a sweeping rejection of liberal orthodoxy about how to help the poor.”9 Why reject...
|
||
|
Edmund Burke, who Berkowitz misunderstands and, therefore, wrongly cites for his proposition, supported the American Revolution (while rejecting the French Revolution). The American Revolution can hardly be described as a moderate reaction to England's usurpations. ... But prudence alone does not explain Burke or conservatism,
|
||
|
After the Reagan years, Republican Revolution of 1994, retreat of the gun-control hordes after Al Gore's 2000 defeat and George W. Bush's two successful presidential runs, many thought conservatism was carrying the day. ... About Us | Contact | Privacy Policy © American Thinker 2009...
|
||
|
The central idea of The Conservative Mind, upon which American conservatism is essentially based, is ordered liberty. It is a blending of the sometimes contending requirements of the community and the individual, of individual freedom and individual responsibility, of limited government and unlimited markets.
|
Copyright © 2010, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.