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What Next for Young Conservatives? A View from the Post-Reagan
Generation
By Kevin Pritchett Much has been made of the apathy the American
people have this year: about the economy, about the current crop of
presidential candidates, even about the very future of America-and
the world. A sweeping prospect of our co untry would show an
America whose collective soul is tor- tured and aimless. This is
quite a change from less than a half-decade ago, when all was aglow
and the Gipper was in the Oval Office. People my age have sharp
memories of our past three Presidents, though mention Ford or
Nixon, and we have to pull out our encyclopedias. We grew up in
times of malaise and misery, then recovery and prosperity, now
apathy and depression. There was a distinct change in this country
when Jimmy Carter left office and Rona l d Reagan became President.
There was in this Age of Reagan safety and security, passion and
purpose, idealism and principle. Then, as if we were asleep, the
dream shattered, and beyond the glass was the emptiness many of us
now feel. What happened? Why ar e we adrift, without moorings and
with desperation? How can we reach home port, and how can young
conservatives in the post-Reagan era pilot our ship of state. in
the right direction? It's important to realize that the 1980s were
not just about prosperity o r economic good times. Yes, the great
gospel of getting along, the rush to succeed and, on a national
scale, the perpetua- tion of a strong vibrant economy were totems
of the day. Crippling Pragmatism. What separates today from the
halcyon days of Reagan, I think, are the loss of conviction, the
loss of belief, and the loss of wonder. Where is the conviction? A
crip- pling pragmatism pervades the land. The wild rush to
compromise, in our daffy lives and in our government, has watered
down our conviction to live decent lives and, to have decent
govern- ment. We are paralyzed at home and abroad, because there is
no force left to push us to prosecute our goals and policies.
Because of the lack of conviction, we now hand out condoms to kids;
we are afraid to te l l them that sex outside of marriage is wrong.
Because of a lack of conviction, we stopped right outside of
Baghdad, for we were afraid of fully prosecuting the war against
Iraq. Because of a lack of conviction, accolade upon accolade is
bestowed upon one w ho does nothing; one can be- come a hero by
standing still. Why else is Mikhail Gorbachev, swept away by forces
he could not control, worshipped by the press, and Ronald Reagan,
the man who actively caused the end of the Cold War, still
denigrated? Why el s e did the current administration let the
economy slide to the depths it is in now, and call doing nothing an
economic policy? At least during the Reagan years, there was
sincere conviction. Now, mediation, trade-offs, compromises are the
order of the day. From the days of antiquity to the present, we
have seen that compromise, whether personal, national, or
international, has been a course for catastrophe.
K evin Pritchett is a correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. He
spoke at The Heritage Foundation on February 12, 1992, in a lecture
series observing Black History Month. ISSN 02724 155. 01992 by The
Heritage Foundation.
But the extreme of conviction-radicalism-at the same time must
be avo ided. Radicalism has never saved a soul, a people, or a
country. The loss of conviction should not drive conserva- -right
camps or free-for-all libertine philosophies. ...tives into far
Since this is Black History Month, I should point out the most
obviou s manifestation of radi- calism in the black community, and
that is Afro-centrism. Black Americans have strong .:.convictions
about what to do for our people. No doubt the American Dream is
still deferred for Many black Americans, and it seems that we do n
o t know how to gain- opportunity for them. Racist Outlook. As a
solution, some blacks have turned away from the teachings and
inspira- tion of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and to romanticize
Africa and have begun to breed a racist i outlook, an African-Ame r
ican kin to the world view of the Ku Klux Klan. Afro-centricity is
blindness, insect vision in which one sees a small sliver of the
world, a grain of sand, and tries to glean the rest of reality from
this minuscule viewpoint. It will not help black Americ a . Hatred
and the revisionism of history-for example, some Afro-centrists say
Africans flew to work in the morning on gliders and discovered
quantum physics millennia before Einstein -will not give us
self-esteem. We should not replace the old lie our live s were
based upon- What we were inferior, that we were only fit to be
slaves-by the new He of Afro-centricity. Where is the belief? Very
few people actually believe anything anymore. Beliefs are passe;
people just have opinions or have positions, and very f ew today
take that leap and totally em- brace any idea or creed. Who in this
room remembers Earth Day? In 1990, this event was played up to
nauseous pro- portions. I was at Dartmouth then, editing The
Dartmouth Review, and it was just awful. People actual l y would
not wash for a week to save water, and they would carry the week's
trash in plas- tic bags over their shoulders. This was not pleasant
to the nose. There were magazine covers, television shows,
newspaper articles about Earth Day and how it heralde d a new day
of idealism for the nation's young. The nineties are the sixties
again, said pundits. But who remembered Earth Day last year? Who
will remember it this year.? Earth Day is typi- cal of how many
people view the world today-to many, all is fad an d fashion. The
newest rage is tricked up in importance and given a blessing by
columnists and television commentators, and it becomes a new
religion overnight. 4- Empty Churches. Old-time religions, which
have none or very few supporters in the media, have lost out. Many
churches echo in their emptiness. God is hardly ever mentioned in
everyday discourse, and He is, unfortunately, banned in our
schools. I do not care if they try to use this in some confirmation
hearing someday, but I agree with Justice Thom a sl When they took
prayer out of the schbols, the schools went to hell. Black
Americans, it seems more than anyone else in this country, have
forgotten about our reli- giously grounded heritage. Most of us no
longer take umbrage at sin, and this is the one problem that has
caused many problems: drugs, premarital births, loss of a work
ethic. It seems that there is no such thing as heresy and no such
thing as sin. The Reagan Revolution was essentially based on.
beliefs: the belief that man is free, and that m an should be free
to labor, to enjoy the fruits of that labor, to raise his family,
and to serve his God. Whenever there is an age where there is a
lack of belief, there is always the danger of fanati- cism.
Fanaticism has many manifestations, from powerf ul cults that
brainwash, kill, and destroy to the dangemus campus fanaticism of
political correctness. In all its forms, fanaticism replaces God
with some little god, whose powers are coercion, destruction, and
malice.
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Finally, where is the wonder? The country has been shackled by
the economic gloom; people are watching their pocketbooks more than
events around them. We conservatives have been bogged down with
theory, policy, mandates, and legislative initiatives, and have not
been fully aware of the i m plications of the new age we are
entering. This new age can potentially be the most fruitful in
human history, or it can be the last gasp of humanity. The outcome
depends on us. We have not stopped to fully think and wonder and
experience awe at peoples a r ound the world losing their communist
chains and throwing off the yoke that has crushed nations. We are
caught up in our own problems. The loss of wonder has made us
forget that we young ones, more so than any previous genera- tion,
are citizens of the wo r ld and beneficiaries or victims of what
happens around the globe. The loss of wonder also has spawned those
who do not dare to look out into the world, and experi- ence a
sense of awe at the fact that the human spirit, undaunted by
totalitarian political s ystems, has triumphed over
totalitarianism. A loss of wonder has instilled a turtle fear into
those who call for isolationism: They would rather pull back into
their shells than nurture and celebrate the human spirit abroad.
Sophocles wrote in his Antigon e , "Numberless are the world's
wonders, but none more wonderful than man." This could not be more
true as we look at the brave souls who braved decades of Communism.
The loss of awe has bent our heads to the ground, and very few
people even look up and out on a starry night, and wonder about
what is out there in the heavens, and when we shall get there.
While we strain our eyes and our minds with budget deficits, tax
cuts, Medicaid reimbursements, "and ruble stabilization funds; we
are blocked from daydream i ng about out there, and our ears are
fortified against that ancient call to explore, to roam, to quest.
We send our mechanical minions -Voyager, Magellan, Galileo,
Hubble-but little thought is given to when we ourselves shall go.
Grand Age. Despite our sm a ll but wondrous achievements, some
celebrated "thinkers" be- cause of the loss of wonder have
proclaimed our time the end of history, a "sad time" in which the
human spirit is dead, a boring day in which everyone is either an
accountant of meaningless- ne s s or a historian of glories past
and glories never to be reenacted. These sad sacks should be pitied
more than criticized. Ronald Reagan knew that we were actually
nearing the beginning of a grand age. He pro- claimed it was
morning in America-we recently have forgotten to pull up the shades
and gaze outside our own little world and into the glorious day of
freedom that the whole world is experi- encing.' We young
conservatives of the post-Reagan age should all do that-look around
the world, see what is go i ng on. The cure of the lack of
conviction, the loss of belief and the loss of wonder is new
romanticism, a new exultation in the possibilities that are before
us. Through President Reagan we have reached this precipice,
looking over a valley of peace, pro s perity, and the full at-
tainment of what humanity should be. America is looking for the
vision thing. And only the young, untouched by the trappings of
pragmatism and still able to daydream, can give this country a
vision. As a great man said once, "Fact s are stubborn things." The
fact is, this country is adrift be- cause it is without a defining
vision. What do we stand for? The young, inspired by this country's
traditions and history and imbued with a sense of purpose, can turn
the country"s sails to th e right wind, the breeze that will carry
all of us to a new and better day.
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