The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

    Many conservatives remain hypocritical, short-sighted

    There is a brand of political
    conservatism that is
    growing popular but is
    principally flawed and ethically
    and morally destitute. Identifying
    it is not necessarily easy, but it
    certainly looms as conservatives
    and the Republican Party are
    still trying to find themselves.
    It is a form of conservatism
    that, now that we are in an
    economic recession, has become
    primarily oriented toward reducing
    costs, besides which the only
    other important goal seems to
    be winning elections. And their
    form of reducing costs is not
    itself oriented toward the good
    of all. At best, it wants the most
    good for the most amount of
    people, even if the rest are left
    out.
    Perhaps its root cause is cynicism.
    It’s the type of political
    cynicism that could be seen when
    the guest speaker, Hawaii Gov.
    Linda Lingle, of the Republican
    National Committee’s winter
    meeting said to applause, “You
    can count on the Democratic
    majority in the House being
    toast this fall,” The New York
    Times reported.
    Who cares about the
    Democrats being toast when we’re
    in a recession and Republicans
    haven’t even found themselves
    yet? As Obama accurately said
    in his bipartisan meeting with
    Republicans, Americans don’t
    care about who has scored the
    most political points.
    But in the Republican Party
    and in some of their voting base
    of conservatives, the partisan
    cynicism reigns and can be heard
    every day sounding from the
    mouths of radio talk show hosts
    who “play the media” (Rush
    Limbaugh’s own words). These
    Republicans talk about the costs
    of health care reform but said
    nothing about costs for eight
    years when we were in a war
    in which we never should have
    been. They talk about conserving
    money and reducing costs
    and then turn around and bail
    out banks, all while opposing
    almost any bailout funds for
    everyday, hard-working people.
    In reality they don’t care about
    reducing costs. They care about
    reducing costs for people who
    are important.
    However, there is a group of
    people who have picked up on
    this and become pissed. They’re
    the infamous Tea Party. I say all
    the power to them for realizing
    that our representatives often fail
    to represent us.
    However, there is still a flaw
    in today’s brand of conservatism
    and the Tea Party. Because of
    the recession, this conservative
    movement has become narrow
    in scope. All it cares about is
    money. These conservatives do
    not even seem to care anymore
    about other worthy endeavors,
    like stopping abortion.
    The Republican Scott Brown,
    who is pro-abortion rights, filled
    the late Ted Kennedy’s Senate
    seat two weeks ago to large Tea
    Party support. Tea Party conservatives
    across
    the nation
    supported
    him so
    that health
    care reform
    would be
    stalled.
    Some thing
    just seems
    demented
    with any
    movement
    that would
    support the
    legality of killing human life in
    order to stall health care reform.
    Not only does today’s brand of
    conservatism oppose health care
    reform and ignore the abortion
    issue, it also has an obsession
    with using torture and keeping
    open a detention camp on the
    island of a country with which
    we’ve never
    even been
    able to get
    along.
    I am not
    trying to
    paint conservatives
    with a
    broad stroke,
    but the tendencies
    I’ve
    highlighted
    seem to
    be gaining
    steam. They
    are tendencies that characterize
    a branch of conservatism with a
    concern for money that is often
    unprincipled and an outlook
    that is amoral.
    Matt Watson is a graduate student majoring in Spanish. He can be contacted at [email protected].

    Leave a Comment
    Donate to The Reflector

    Your donation will support the student journalists of Mississippi State University. Your contribution will allow us to purchase equipment and cover our annual website hosting costs.

    More to Discover
    Donate to The Reflector

    Comments (0)

    All The Reflector Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Activate Search
    The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University
    Many conservatives remain hypocritical, short-sighted