ideology

Obama and Alinsky

Posted by E!! on September 25, 2008
2008 Elections, Barack Obama, Socialism / 1 Comment

Great IBD op-ed on Obama’s under-the-radar socialism and how he came by these methods and beliefs.  If you have any doubts about Obama’s formative ideology, please do yourself (and all of us) a favor and read it.

Moonbattery also reminds us of the intro to Saul Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals.  If that doesn’t chill your spine, I don’t know what would.

 

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Quoth Russell Kirk

Posted by E!! on August 28, 2008
Conservative / No Comments

Whenever some Postmodern New Conservative annoys me with their “Down With the Establishment” and “Up With Me” rhetoric, I turn to one of the greats, like Kirk, or WFB, or Hayek, or Freidman, or Burke, or John Adams.  Here’s Kirk on Conservatism:

 

“Being neither a religion nor an ideology, the body of opinion termed conservatism possesses no Holy Writ and no Das Kapital to provide dogmata. So far as it is possible to determine what conservatives believe, the first principles of the conservative persuasion are derived from what leading conservative writers and public men have professed during the past two centuries…

 

“Perhaps it would be well, most of the time, to use this word “conservative” as an adjective chiefly. For there exists no Model Conservative, and conservatism is the negation of ideology: it is a state of mind, a type of character, a way of looking at the civil social order.

 

“The attitude we call conservatism is sustained by a body of sentiments, rather than by a system of ideological dogmata. It is almost true that a conservative may be defined as a person who thinks himself such. The conservative movement or body of opinion can accommodate a considerable diversity of views on a good many subjects, there being no Test Act or Thirty-Nine Articles of the conservative creed.

 

In essence, the conservative person is simply one who finds the permanent things more pleasing than Chaos and Old Night. (Yet conservatives know, with Burke, that healthy “change is the means of our preservation.”) A people’s historic continuity of experience, says the conservative, offers a guide to policy far better than the abstract designs of coffee-house philosophers…”

 

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