Tag: conservatism

  • Why There Will Never Be A Successful “Third Party” In The US

    To date in human history, there have been precisely two ways in which a “third party” will rise to primacy over the existence of two “major parties.”

    The first is some variant of coup or war or insurrection.

    The second is when the more rightward of the two existing major parties continues driving to the right until it has become egregiously abusive of or hostile to the rights and liberties of the people they’re governing. Egregiously, you’ve got to push people past the breaking point and THEN wait for the stragglers to clue in to the point where you functionally only have ONE major party. That will inevitably be the party which has traditionally represented the leftward polarity. It will shift rightward over time in pursuit of preserving its power, losing sight of core principles one by one until a contingent within that party get fed up and start their own thing, splitting the one major party in two. (Sidebar: This process is sometimes referred to as the “Overton Window.” I eschew this terminology because a) it’s inaccurate, b) Overton was a rank plutocrat, c) the idea had been expressed long before he did it, and d) I’m not making more famous or adding credibility to some Mackinac Center oligarch whose reason for describing the window in the first place was to strategize how to move it rightward and normalize fascism without those being seduced into it being aware of their seduction.)

    The formerly right major party falls entirely into extremism and failure and internal power struggles, the formerly left major party slides into the more moderate right position the former other party started off occupying, and the new party rises to represent the left, becoming the new “second” party as the former right party declines into impotence and obsolescence.

    The last (and really only) time this has happened in the US was close to two hundred years ago when the Whigs lost their compass and devolved into internal bickering and contention over the question of slavery, and the Democrat-Republican party split in two with Dems on the right and Reps on the left (which frankly made no sense by the labeling; the right represents artistocracy and bourgeoisie which is republican i.e. government by elites, the left the proletariat which is democratic i.e. government by the people; this has been the case since the left-right nomenclature was coined hundreds of years ago) and eventually reversed polarity between the end of the Lincoln administration and WWI, with the polarity reversal finally completing in the “Dixiecrat” shift following WWII led by Strom Thurmond and representing the last holdouts of right-wing authoriarianism in the Democratic party at that time. Their primary complaints were FDR’s social programs which didn’t discriminate against people of color, and his antagonism toward racial discrimination as then exemplified by the “Jim Crow” laws of the south.

    That split finalized the polarity reversal in the parties that began slowly prior to WWI and ultimately culminated in Strom Thurmond trying to do exactly what I described above, but from the right – which will not and did not work. That split was the final act of the polarity shift and the Dems have represented the left – such as it is – ever since.

    (NB: I’ve somewhat flagged the idea that Mitt Romney switching parties would be one strong sign that this process is accelerating and the end of the GOP is in sight. He might not, but that would definitely be the two-minute warning. The center-right status quo contingent of the Dem party is right in line with his milquetoast, lukewarm, pro-capitalist politics. Truth is if the GOP hadn’t completely lost touch with reality Romney would likely be their best shot at unseating Biden, but at this point 3/4+ of the GOP hates Romney because he only sometimes bows down to the skidmark at the top of the party. There *might* be one or two other Republicans who might fit in there – and Liz Cheney won’t be one of them, all due appreciation to her integrity re: Jan 6 – but Romney’s the archetype.)

    It always happens that way, including the direction of ideological “flow” from left to right. The left wing party never slides off the edge of the spectrum into autocracy; they slide right until they’re the major right-wing party, and then start sliding off that end of the spectrum into rank autocracy as they try to preserve and increase power. Again, lacking some sort of hot conflict, that’s the only way a “third party” has ever risen to prominence over the two existing major parties in any system I’ve been able to find.

    There are a few “squishy” spots in there, and occasionally in multiparty systems like the UK you’ll see one of the two majors so entirely step on their johnsons that the people turn their backs and adhere to whichever party most closely aligns ideologically with the self-defeated, but a) that’s an extraordinary circumstance and b) even that scenario isn’t functionally different from what I described above, you just have a multiparty establishment from which to draw your rising left rather than the single left-wing party; basically you’ve just performed one step of the process in advance of the actual split.

    The alternative path tends to more or less follow the NSDAP template: being radically right-wing from the outset but pretending you’re a “socialist,” where “socialism” is defined as socialism for those cooperating with the group in power and waterless showers for everyone else. They will target that thirty-ish percent of the population that’s ALWAYS willing to sell everyone out to tyranny if they think it’ll benefit them, organize them, and then conduct propaganda and disinformation campaigns to provide plausible deniability to those who can be convinced to join the baddies, usually through appeals to nationalist, religious, and/or racial supremacy, or personal greed through promises of increased affluence after the “other” is eliminated from society.

    Then they start trying to take over other countries until the rest of the world gets fed up and destroys them, at which point a new government is constituted and the cycle begins anew.

    (In the unlikely but not entirely impossible event Trump gets re-elected next year, that’s our future.)

    This means the cycle of politics will tend to roll over parties every 100 or 200 years (and we’re about due), through one or the other processes described above.

    Not once in the history of the democratic process has an external group constituting itself as a third party, containing no appreciable trace of either of the existing two major parties, ever successfully won more than a handful of minor elections, and never once have any of those minor parties grown in power to present a serious challenge to the two main parties at the national level, anywhere. It works the same way in any democratic system – democratic republics or pure democracy, first-past-the-post or proportional representation or even ranked choice. Minor parties will do better in minor elections under certain systems like ranked choice; never once has one risen from outside the establishment to supplant one of the two parties that existed when the third party came to life. The ONLY time that happens is when it happens as I described it above.

    In this country the most successful “outsider” candidates have always been either entirely party-independent or tagged themselves with a party label long after they’d risen to some level of power on their individual merits, e.g. Ross Perot’s Reform Party.

    I can’t find a single example in the history of democracy – and I spent four years of a polisci minor looking for one – all the way back to its earliest forms in ancient Greece and Rome, in which a new party showed up and slowly built power on its own by providing an alternative to the two existing majors until it successfully supplanted one of them, without a civil war being involved. It’s a nice theory, but it just. doesn’t. happen.

    People – even those who think of themselves as “liberal” – are generally change-averse to an extreme outside of conditions that are absolutely intolerable to the broad majority of the electorate. They – we – would rather sell out to fascism and pretend we don’t know that’s what we’re doing until long after the damage is done, at which point we’ll work to preserve their social standing and approval by pretending to have been merely stupid as opposed to deliberately evil, than risk a radical shift into unknown territory.

    The greens, the libertarians, etc? Useless, and none of them will ever gain more than token representation in minor offices.

    The most successful third party in the US, the Libertarians™, managed to become the only third party in US history to have presidential ballot access in all states in two cycles – a process that took 220 years, has never come within even plausible wildcard hope of winning, and they couldn’t pull it off a third time.

    The only member of the Libertarian™ Party to serve in federal elective office *at. all.* is Justin Amash, and he changed parties AFTER being elected so that doesn’t even count for the purposes of this discussion.

    No matter how nobly motivated or “right” they may be, you will never see a third party rise to power in this country from outside the existing political establishment without catastrophic conflict (and no, you seething edgelord, you do not want catastrophic conflict). It will not happen, barring an extraordinary set of circumstances that can’t be predicted and can’t be created intentionally

    It also won’t happen by some magical coalescence of “the big middle.” The big middle is moderate and leans conservative(*) by nature; hoping for that to drive serious change is like hoping you can stop that troublesome noise in your engine by turning up the radio. The most successful attempt in this direction was Ross Perot, whose “party” was a retcon anyway, created to support his presidential candidacy rather than being an existing entity he “joined” and represented. He got about 20% of the vote and 0 electorals.

    * In spite of broad misconception on this point, “conservative” is not and has never been synonymous with “right wing.” While things tend to play out that way over time, “conservatism” politically is simply a preference for maintaining the status quo over introducing radical change. “Liberalism” politically is a preference for radical change over maintaining the status quo. Conservatism is not inherently “right,” and liberalism is not inherently “left.” In spite of how wrong it sounds if you’re stuck in the “con=right lib=left” thinking, Donald Trump was a far more liberal president than Barack Obama because he had zero respect for the status quo and radically altered many aspects of our government, at least temporarily. That is right-wing liberalism, not “conservatism.”

    The ONLY third party electoral vote in US history was a faithless elector in the Republican party who voted for the Libertarian candidate in I think 1972, rather than the pledged vote for Nixon/Agnew.

    If there were a strong progressive running from the left as part of some party that currently doesn’t exist – the Greens have bad branding and unflattering history, the libertarians aren’t in the least bit progressive, and there’s literally no other party that’s even laughably contending – in the next election and Joe Biden passed away in mid-September leaving only Trump+whoever, Harris with no running mate or one that had to be VERY hastily integrated and publicized and sold to the electorate, and that strong progressive on the ticket, there’s a slim but non-zero chance the progressive outsider would win…but the safe bet is Trump would take it because unlike the left, the right wing in this country knows how to march in formation and not make waves. Which, incidentally, I find disgusting, odious, and an insult to everything meritorious about our entire system, but my feelings about it don’t change the reality.

    By and large people will tend to vote for a comfortable and certain tyranny than an unknown and uncertain freedom. They just convince themselves the tyrants will only hurt people they don’t like. It’s the mentality of one acclimated to their own enslavement: sure it sucks being someone’s property but at least you eat once in a while. No guarantee of that out on your own.

    (NB: That last part is why most of us refuse to quit bad jobs or demand better pay and working conditions, too. We don’t dare risk losing an iota of whatever petty comfort we have, even if holding on to it is literally killing us. Plutocracy always plays the same parlor tricks, they just file off the serial numbers and add or subtract a little chrome trim from the body panels so people who aren’t paying attention get fooled into thinking it’s a whole new ride.)

    In the upcoming election, as things stand right now, there’s not a chance in hell of Biden being seriously challenged from the left because we don’t want to risk going back to Trump – that conservatism I mentioned earlier. Sanders won’t run this time; he knows it’ll be a waste to try to primary Biden and will only serve to make people mad at him for trying. If you want real progress for the next four years, Biden is (somewhat unfortunately) your best bet. Say what you will about Biden, but it is to his immense credit (and our best hope) that he’s repeatedly proven movable on matters of considered principle. Not as many of them or as often as I think he should, but certainly more so than that whatever skidmark – probably Trump – who ends up running against him, or anyone likely to rise as a serious candidate in the next twelve months.

    Stein blew her cred pandering to antivaxers; Williamson occasionally says something powerful and brilliant but it’s generally a rare sighting in a flood of new-age pseudo-spiritualism and badly misunderstood concepts like karma appropriated from other cultures.

    No other remotely serious suggestion even exists at this point. The progressive wing in general – the justice dems and squad folks – aren’t politically stupid, they know trying to primary Biden this round will be political self-immolation. AOC, Sanders, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar? They know the GOP is tottering on the edge of implosion and four years from now will likely be a MUCH more auspicious set of circumstances for the progressive wing of the Dems to break off into their own thing, and then that party and the Dems will spend the next couple of cycles finishing the job of ending the GOP (possibly conceding a presidential election along the way).

    We will almost certainly have nothing but a string of center-right moderate status quo DNC presidents until that new progressive wing gets off the ground, settles their hierarchy, and rallies behind a presidential candidate of their own to present a genuine and serious left-wing challenge to entrenched capitalist-oligarch-plutocratic power.

    That is where your “third party” is coming from, not some fantasy of all the disaffected and disenfranchised voters in the country suddenly finding enough common ground to mount an effective, well-organized, and cohesive challenge to the two major parties.

    If you’re serious about wanting a real left wing in this country, this is the context in which you’ll need to create it, and that means a whole bunch of us need to be working with and reaching out to those progressive leaders because the power core already has an army of astroturfing profiteers and clickbaiters on their payroll, and millions of easily manipulated rubes think that is the “left” in this country.

    And right now, sad as it is to say, they’re right. It’s the only meaningful left we’ve got because the real left is split between being pumped full of bias confirmation clickbait by grifters and arguing with each other over bad, useless ideas like dreaming for a third party deus ex machina to get us out of this mess.

    When the grass roots refuse to grow, you get astroturf, and right now that’s the only grass of any serious relevance in this country. Let’s stop hanging on to old, useless fantasies and start getting seriously organized from a position of reason, pragmatism, and integrity.

  • On States’ Rights and Moderate Conservatism

    What happens when you try to turn ownership of human beings into a “state’s right.”

    In this time of rapidly changing social conditions and a somewhat painful removal of our self-comforting delusions of morality, it’s time we start talking seriously about how we misuse words.

    One of the most abused and misused phrases in modern American conversation is “states’ rights.”  The civil war wasn’t about slavery, it was about “states’ rights.”  It was the War of Northern Aggression, how dare those Washington Bigshots tell us fine, genteel people how to live our lives.  Every time the Confederate Flag, or the civil war, or slavery is mentioned, at some point someone will try to cloak themselves in the ostensibly noble trappings of “defending states’ rights.”

    Advocates of this argument, however, never seem to want to discuss the marked tendency of “states’ rights” arguments to fall on the side of “let states oppress people however they want, and make sure the federal government doesn’t have the teeth to stop them,” since that was after all the original point?

    Why is it when people want to own other people, keep some people from attending public school, force women to be brood mares, declare certain types of consensual adult non-commercial sex illegal, or teach religious myths as science, it’s suddenly about “states’ rights?”

    I notice nobody was hollering about “States’ rights” when the PATRIOT act was passed.

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument about allowing abortions beyond the guidelines established at the federal level.

    Never heard anyone suggest that regulating social behavior under the glare of a deadly global pandemic was a “state’s right,” even though the feds have completely blown every single chance they had to work the bully pulpit and explain to people why it’s so important.

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    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument favoring gay marriage even though that’s precisely what that issue has come down to.

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument that states be allowed to demand that only science – rather than religious myths – be taught in public school science classes.

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument favoring strong social welfare programs.

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument favoring a higher minimum wage (although, again, that’s precisely what it’s come down to).

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument favoring strong environmental protection.

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument about abolishing the death penalty.

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument against media consolidation.

    Never heard anyone make a “states’ rights” argument supporting polygamy – indeed, for Utah to even *become* a state they had to explicitly outlaw that practice.

    Never heard anyone argue for a state’s right to refuse to privatize their prison systems. It’s been done – again, Utah for one – but nobody used that argument to rationalize it.

    Never heard anyone argue for a state’s right to forbid charter schools.

    Never heard anyone argue for a state’s right to do a whole lot of really good, positive things…just for a state’s right to screw average people in favor of profit for the elite.

    About the only positive states’ rights arguments I’ve ever heard in my life – a long life full of political awareness – have been in favor of legalizing cannabis.

    Meanwhile, where were the moderate conservative voices leading up to the Iraq war?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices in the gay marriage debate?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices in the cannabis legalization debate?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices curtailing the Texas board of education’s headlong rush into theocracy?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices calling for the US to catch up to the rest of the civilized world in terms of health care or education or criminal justice?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices opposing unjustified war-making?

    Where are moderate conservative voices favoring penal code reform, ending discriminatory law enforcement practices, ending employment discrimination and wage disparity, ending the enslavement and oppression that results from people not having access to health care?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices supporting arts education and public broadcasting?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices supporting organized labor?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices supporting a woman’s right to decide for herself whether to carry a pregnancy to term?

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    Where are the moderate conservative voices supporting the right of gay people to marry?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices supporting environmental regulation?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices opposing wealth disparity?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices opposing wage disparity based on gender and race?

    Where are the moderate conservative voices that recognize the vested interest of government in preventing parents from destroying the minds of their children with corporal punishment and religious indoctrination?

    Where are the moderate conservatives supporting OSHA and FEMA and the CDC and the Department of Education?  These are all well-established institutions; conservatives should be working to preserve and protect them, but it seems like all they’re interested in protecting is dog-whistle statues honoring bigots, claiming the Confederacy as their “heritage” in spite of the reality that most of the people making that claim had nothing to do with the Confederacy, nor did their forebears.

    Where are the moderate conservatives who can respect and address a topic at hand rather than flying off on a self-indulgent pity party about how unfair it is that they’re labeled as conservatives at all, yet failing to recognize that they’re openly admitting that being called conservative is an egregious insult these days?

    Even those conservatives who seem less obnoxious and more willing to take a principled stand on important issues in opposition to their home-field narrative aren’t particularly moderate – people like John McCain or Mitt Romney – aren’t really all that moderate; they’re just not frothing xenophobic whackjobs 24/7 so they look moderate in comparison to the mainstream right.

    We’d love to think the US Army had these confederate soldiers buried by black men just to piss off the bigots that were left alive, but it’s probably just another case of giving black people the job white people don’t want.

    The reality that these self-described moderate conservatives are overlooking is simply this:  conservatism as it is currently defined in this country can not be moderate and is not conservative.  There’s simply nothing moderate about imposing theocracy, creating or enforcing laws that define people as second-class citizens based on their sexuality, sanctioning murder under the guise of vengeance pretending to be justice, forcing women to carry the pregnancies caused by their rapists to term, prosecuting war for profit, spending half the GDP on the military, giving business and industry carte blanche to convert the republic into a feudal state, or indoctrinating children to be consumers first and citizens last.

    The last moderate conservative to actually win an election was Barack Obama…and of course, rather than being properly labeled as a moderate conservative – which he unquestionably is, ever major decision by his administration supports that and he’s defined himself that way more than once – he’s a “radical socialist liberal.”

    Maybe if this mass of moderate conservatives who only seem to have something to say when they want to complain about how conservatism has branded itself for the last thirty years would speak up about anything other than having their feelings hurt by generalities about the right wing, I’d have more sympathy.  Maybe if the “states’ rights” argument was ever used to justify doing the right thing, it would have more legitimacy.