The "Southern Avenger" Jack Hunter is a conservative commentator (WTMA 1250 AM talk radio) and columnist (Charleston City Paper) living in Charleston, South Carolina. See his blog.
Taking the 'Neo' Out of 'Conservative'
By Jack Hunter
View all 33 articles by Jack Hunter
Published 02/04/10

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After Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity are the two most popular rightwing talk hosts in America, defining for millions the definition of the term "conservative." Lately, Beck has focused on attacking "progressivism," often stressing that the progressive foreign policy of President Woodrow Wilson, who wanted to "make the world safe for democracy," was identical to that of George W. Bush. Hannity takes a very different view, stating, "You can’t deny that George Bush was conservative on national security issues." Yet, Beck does deny this, quite regularly. Who’s right? Better yet, who’s "conservative?"

That depends on your definition. The notion of "making the world safe for democracy" is unquestionably a liberal or "progressive" sentiment, but it is also true that it has been standard foreign policy for the mainstream Right for sometime. Self-described conservatives have associated endless military intervention with American "toughness" and viewed those who questioned the government’s wisdom in waging war as "weak" or "anti-American." This has certainly been the view of Limbaugh and Hannity and for most of Bush’s eight years, it was also the view of Beck.

Yet the notion of America as the world’s policeman is not remotely conservative in the traditional sense, but "neoconservative," a term most mainstream right-wingers are either ignorant of, embarrassed of, or don’t use because the wholesale takeover of the conservative movement by the neocons has made using the "neo" prefix unnecessary.

Neoconservatives care about one thing—war (and where they can wage it). Says contributing editor to The Weekly Standard, neocon Max Boot: "Neoconservatives believe in using American might to promote American ideals abroad," a progressive, Wilsonian vision, if there ever was one. As for traditional conservative concerns like limited government, fiscal responsibility and constitutional fidelity, these are ideas neoconservatives will occasionally pay lip service to, so long as none of these principles interferes with their more important task of global military domination. It is no coincidence that George W. Bush—the first full-blown neoconservative presidential administration—did not limit government, was not fiscally responsible and shredded the Constitution, while still implementing the most radical foreign policy in American history. Writes conservative columnist George Will "The most magnificently misnamed neoconservatives are the most radical people in this town."

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Also by Jack Hunter :
Is the 'bin Laden Hunter' So Crazy?   07/08/10
Return of the Real Right?   07/01/10
Alvin Greene's Dumb Party   06/25/10
The Biggest Earmark: Empire   06/16/10
It's Time to Start Minding Our Own Business   06/12/10
View all 33 articles by Jack Hunter



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