|
Ron
Paul’s Great Compromise of 2012
An Appeal to Social Conservatives
by
Craig White
Previously
by Craig White: Replies
to Neoconservative Objections
In the May
6 debate among Republican candidates in South Carolina, the moderator
got a good laugh when he put the following question to Ron Paul:
"Congressman
Paul, you say that the federal government should stay out of people’s
personal habits. You say marijuana, cocaine, even heroin, should
be legal if states want to permit it. You feel the same about prostitution
and gay marriage. Question, sir: why should social conservatives
in South Carolina vote for you for President?"
Before looking
at Paul’s answer, let’s consider where social conservatives stand
in their political battle. Most, but not all, are political conservatives
as well (although that term may be difficult to define). Since the
consciences of evangelical Christians were touched by legalized
abortion in the 1970s, in national politics, the politically conservative
majority of social conservatives have had one big target, one political
fortress they have stormed every four years: the presidency. Sometimes
they win, sometimes they lose, but every four years they take up
weapons and armor and go into battle. The war plan since the late
1970s has been: elect a conservative Republican president, who will
nominate conservative justices to the Supreme Court. Seeing that
Roe v. Wade is unconstitutional, the eventual conservative majority
on the Court will someday overturn Roe v. Wade. Win at the top,
and force the rest of the country to go along. At the same time,
perhaps paradoxically, many social conservatives have hoped for
what Ronald Reagan called for: a smaller federal government with
less of a role in American life.
Let’s be frank:
while there have been some social conservative successes in changing
people’s minds (more Americans now call themselves "pro-life,"
for example), and some little political victories here and there,
overall, the political strategy is just not working. From abortion
to gay marriage to federalism, it has been a long, slow, rolling
defeat for social conservatives. The justices nominated by Republican
presidents have been the greatest disappointment. Very few of these
have shown any sign of wanting to overturn Roe v. Wade. Even if
they had, judging by the last three decades, the American people
as a whole are not really interested in leaving a Republican in
the White House for long enough for the strategy to work. At the
rate we are going, 200 years from now there will not be a "conservative"
majority on the Court on abortion or other social issues – and if
there were at some point, there would be a new "liberal"
majority soon after, which would reverse it.
The old conservative
slogan of getting the government (meaning for most the federal government)
off people’s backs wasn’t even put into action by Ronald Reagan:
the government grew during his eight years. The idea was quietly
abandoned by the first George Bush, Reagan’s heir, who made it clear
that to him, more freedom and less government was not "kind
and gentle." The second George Bush even made "big government
conservatism" a thinkable slogan rather than an oxymoron.
After some
35 years of social conservative support for the Republican Party
on the federal level, we have a gigantic government, with an enormous
military and immense entitlement programs. That government is so
deep in debt that our national fiscal credibility was recently questioned
even by official rating agencies. (The debt crisis "fix"
has done nothing about that problem.) Our government shows no sign
of reversing Roe v. Wade on abortion or holding the line on traditional
marriage. Our currency is incredibly debased. For over 20 years
it has been impossible for poor or middle class people to actually
save money, since the interest rate offered doesn’t even keep up
with official inflation (and we continue to be taxed on interest,
as if it were "income" rather than an attempt to keep
up with government-produced shrinkage of the underlying currency
in our bank accounts and our pockets). Since the 1970s, real wages
have not risen. Manipulated low interest rates led to the now-burst
bubble in the only realistic hope for middle class people to stay
even with inflation, their housing. The economy and the tax system
appear to be rigged in favor of hedge fund managers and big bank
CEOs, who, when crisis strikes, get rescued and bonused-up while
the middle class gets foreclosed. In short, from a social or traditional
conservative point of view, the last few decades have been a scarcely-mitigated
disaster.
Yet can someone
like Ron Paul really hope for support from social conservatives?
After all, social conservatives have a reputation for favoring the
kind of approach Michelle Bachman signed up for recently in Iowa
with "The Marriage Vow." The basic idea in that pledge
is to defend Christian values and encourage Christian virtues through
legislation, or constitutional amendments, that will cover the entire
United States. To put it another way, they want to increase the
power of the Federal government, while Ron Paul wants to slash it.
The moderator in that debate got a good laugh because his question
resonated. Social conservatives, at least since the late 1970s,
are known for approaching the political battlefield the way Wellington
approached Napoleon at Waterloo: with the declared intention of
decisively defeating their enemies and sending them into exile.
Paul responded
to the question about marijuana, cocaine, heroin, etc. with an answer
that is unusual on the American political scene, but one based in
the very earliest American approach to politics: it’s about liberty.
"They will [support me] if they understand my defense of liberty
is the defense of their right to practice their religion and say
their prayers where they want and practice their life." We
have to "protect liberty across the board," without "inconsistency."
"If not, you’re going to end up with government that’s going
to tell us what we can eat, and drink, and whatever." To this,
he added another note that ought to appeal to social conservatives:
an appeal to personal responsibility. "How many people here
would use heroin if it was legal? I’ll bet nobody would put their
hand up. ‘Oh yeah, I need the government to take care of me. I don’t
want to use heroin, so I need these laws.’"
In his short,
time-pressured answer, Paul also hinted at but did not express what
is really the heart of his approach to politics in the United States.
That approach might appeal to social conservatives if they would
really consider it. First, responding to the words "federal
government" in the question, he used the phrase, "if I
leave it to the states, it’s going to be up to the states."
Packed into this handful of words is the fact that Ron Paul is a
consistent constitutionalist. Here is where Paul is unique: unlike
some maverick who grumbles like Ross Perot that we are "off
track" somehow, Paul is both a seasoned politician and a consistent
thinker and writer with a track record that goes back decades. When
he argues that we should go back to the Constitution, he has thought
that through even into the details, he means it, and he will talk
about it, third rails and all.
In
effect, Paul offers a deeply divided electorate a startling compromise:
a return to the U.S. Constitution. That compromise could win votes
of social conservatives and liberals alike, if he can persuade them
that the federal government cannot afford most of what it is doing,
and that returning to the Constitution would both save the country
from drowning in debt, and leave each state free to make its own
choices on most issues. That was, after all, the public aim of the
Founders.
The original
aim of the writers of the Constitution, written into the document
itself, was an amazingly restricted federal government. Article
I, Section 8 of the Constitution is a very short list of areas in
which the Congress is meant to be able to legislate – and the President’s
job is to execute the laws, which, again, cover a very few areas.
Arguing for the ratification of the Constitution in the Federalist
Papers, both James Madison and Alexander Hamilton insisted that
the State governments would do far more of the day-to-day work of
governing than the federal government, because the federal government’s
scope was so limited. Madison poured contempt, in Federalist Papers
no. 41, on those who claimed that the "general welfare"
clause meant that the legislative powers of the federal government
were unlimited, rather than confined to the skeletal list in Article
I, Section 8. His scathing attack on this idea begins, "No
stronger proof could be given of the distress under which these
writers labor for objections, than their stooping to such a misconstruction."
Both he and Hamilton assumed throughout the Federalist Papers that
the Constitution was written in plain English that normal educated
persons could understand, and that the job of the courts ("beyond
comparison the weakest" of the three branches of government,
wrote Hamilton in no. 78) would be simply to interpret it – not
to help it "evolve" to fit a people with evolving ideas
(that was the job of the people through the amendment process, not
the courts). They also insisted, again and again, that the proposed
federal government had limited, defined powers – and actually reading
that list in Article I, Section 8 explains how Hamilton could argue
with a straight face (in no. 84) that the proposed Constitution
would save the people of the United States money, by giving them
a cheaper government, considering the state and federal levels together,
than they had under the Articles of Confederation.
That shows
up the problem with the big strategy of the majority of social conservatives,
who expect a conservative president to appoint judges who will overturn
Roe v. Wade on constitutional grounds: what about the New Deal,
the Great Society, the War on Drugs, and the undeclared foreign
wars of the last 60 years? What about the vast body of Federal legislation
that has nothing to do with the short list in Article I, Section
8? What about the Patriot Act? None of these are any more constitutional
in terms of the clear original intent of the text and those who
ratified it than the basically unlimited abortion right proclaimed
in Roe v. Wade and subsequent decisions. (The moderator’s question
would have been unthinkable to social conservatives in 1788: no
one dreamed the federal government would ever get involved in such
issues, or would dare to do so without amending the Constitution.)
Social conservatives who want to eat their cake and have it too,
who think they can get Roe v. Wade overturned on constitutional
grounds, but leave the rest of these programs and activities untouched,
are either ignorant of the text and original understanding of the
Constitution, or deluding themselves, or indulging in rank hypocrisy.
If they are intelligent and know any history, it looks like the
latter.
The rest of
the conservative candidates, and almost all conservative leaders,
seem stuck with that "hypocrite" label regarding the Constitution.
In that document’s name, they thunder against programs they don’t
like, without revealing that they have no intention of dismantling
the unconstitutional programs (or stop getting into unconstitutional
undeclared wars) that they do like. They appear eager and willing
to share the "constitutional hypocrite" label with their
supporters. Paul, however, offers an escape from hypocrisy: a consistent
originalist approach to the Constitution (as amended, of course).
On those grounds, he would begin to put an end to the entire federal
welfare and entitlement apparatus, all of which are outside the
arena of the powers of Congress as listed in Article I, Section
8. Paul has stated that such programs must be brought to an end
completely, but in a gradual way, so as to minimize harm those who
have built their lives around them.
Note that this
is a far more specific, and sweeping, promise to cut government
than Ronald Reagan ever made, and that Paul has the credentials,
beyond any other conservative politician, to prove his sincerity
on this issue. For decades, he has not voted in favor of programs
he believes are unconstitutional (his yes votes are rare indeed).
He wants the states and churches and other voluntary organizations
to take up the slack, gradually, as the federal government lets
go, in anti-poverty efforts – using the money that would be left
in their pockets due to a Federalist Papers-sized federal government.
He wants individuals to save for their own retirement, and look
after their own families. That ought to warm the hearts of social
conservatives, and set those of small government conservatives on
fire. No other conservative politician is anywhere near this constitutional
consistency and credibility on the issue of a smaller federal government.
And by the way, on abortion, Paul is on the record calling for Congress
to exercise its power, granted in Article III, Section 2 of the
Constitution, to exclude the Supreme Court from appellate jurisdiction
on the issue, moving it right back to where it was in January 1973,
with the states.
Why would anyone
on the left, or middle-of-the-road independents, vote for such a
program? For two possible reasons: first, the other half of this
constitutional consistency concerns the power to declare war, which
the Constitution gives to Congress, not the President. As Tom Woods
points out, George
Washington and many subsequent American presidents understood that
they could order the armed forces to defend themselves or America’s
territory, but anything beyond that required them to go to Congress
for a declaration of war – that they had no power to start wars,
only to lead them after Congress started them. This is, in fact,
the only serious originalist approach to the text of the Constitution.
Whenever Democrats or Republicans have promised to end the wars
in recent years, they have forgotten the pledge when they got the
power. Left-wing or independent Americans who are tired of seeing
their armed forces involved in endless, undeclared wars, and tired
of seeing that no vote seems to change that, might just jump at
the chance to vote for someone who really would bring the troops
home, even if it meant they would have to shift efforts to have
government take care of poverty, or to sculpt society as they wish,
to the state level. One left-of-center
American who
has made that choice is Robin Koerner, who recently called for Democrats
who care about "peace and civil liberty" to become "Blue
Republicans" for a year and vote for Ron Paul.
Second, more
and more Americans, including many independents, appear to be realizing
that the government’s official commitments are far beyond its ability
to pay in today’s dollars (battered as those are compared to those
of even, say, ten years ago). Many of these same Americans realize
that the government has a tempting "stealth" escape: gradual
further debasement of our money will enable the government to pay
its commitments, in money with the same numbers and presidents’
faces, but with vastly reduced value. Creating digital dollars in
the trillions with nothing to back them is guaranteed in and
of itself to make everything in the world more expensive in dollar
terms, but the government can blame oil producers or other wicked
foreigners, or greedy corporations, for what it is doing itself.
Given the size of entitlements (along with the Pentagon budget),
the government’s clear inability to pay them, the Federal Reserve’s
full control over ex nihilo currency creation, and the average American’s
lack of economic sophistication, who can believe the government
is likely (or will want) to resist this sneaky escape from insolvency?
Independent voters who see these facts may decide that getting the
federal government out from under its crushing obligations honestly
is the only approach with a hope of avoiding economic catastrophe.
That leaves
one horsefly in the milk jug, from the social conservative point
of view: their enthusiasm for military action abroad clashes with
Paul’s "non-interventionism" pretty badly. Perhaps Paul’s
approach is impossible for them to swallow. There are several arguments
in favor of change that social conservatives might heed, however.
First, non-intervention is the original foreign policy of the United
States. This is the clear message of Washington’s farewell address.
It was restated in glowing words by our fifth president, John Quincy
Adams: "wherever the standard of freedom and independence has
been unfurled, there will [America’s] heart, her benedictions, and
her prayers be. But she goes not abroad in search of monsters to
destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence
of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own."
Adams continued that an America that used force to change the world
for the better would gradually lose her own virtues, gaining instead
"an imperial diadem, flashing in false and tarnished luster
the murky radiance of dominion and power." Adams, repeating
the wisdom of his parents’ generation, the Founders, believed in
American "exceptionalism" all right, but not in American
power to impose its ways on the world. Like the Founders, he also
didn’t believe exceptionalism was guaranteed to last, and impervious
to our actions. Even Dwight Eisenhower, hardly a lily-livered liberal,
warned Americans of the dangers of an uncontrolled military-industrial
complex. This is a current in American thought that was the mainstream
for centuries, and perhaps some social conservatives can bring themselves
to see it as such. Next, they might even read fellow social conservatives
such as Andrew Bacevich for a different perspective on what our
military forces are doing and achieving beyond our shores. According
to CIA expert Michael
Scheuer, the former head of the bin Ladin unit (and no pacifist!),
it is not true that "we're hated because of our freedoms…in
fact we're hated because of our actions in the Islamic world."
Attacks on a non-interventionist U.S. would likely shrink to the
level of attacks on, say, Switzerland. (If they hate us for our
freedom, why aren’t they attacking the Swiss?)
Social conservatives
might also consider my own exhaustive, non-partisan argument in
Iraq:
the Moral Reckoning that launching the U.S. war in Iraq
was unjust according to just war theory. A variety of well-known
religious conservatives, including Chuck Colson, Richard Land, George
Weigel, Robert George, and Fr. Richard John Neuhaus (RIP), all made
brief defenses of the justice of that war before it was launched
in 2003. However, there has been little or no serious acknowledgement
of the other side of the argument, at least by pro-war religious
conservatives. It is true that many of the opponents of the war
were "liberals" or even radicals in American terms – but
arguments deserve to be heard, no matter where they come from. In
the scholastic tradition of the high Middle Ages, no important thesis
was considered safely proven until it had been "chewed in the
jaws" of a rational disputation. Thomas Aquinas found the best
objections available to his own ideas, published them with his ideas,
and answered them. Surely the best traditions of social conservatives
include a careful look at opposing arguments, and an attempt to
answer them. So far, my arguments, far more extensive than any arguing
that the Iraq war was just, have not been addressed by those who
disagree with me. Some social conservative ought to do it – he or
she might even find that my arguments change minds.
But finally,
perhaps social conservatives will consider today’s situation in
the light of the Constitutional Convention of 1787. Under the Articles
of Confederation, taxes were not collected, the bills were not getting
paid, and the loose coalition of basically independent states was
not getting a lot of respect in the wider world. For a long list
of rather ordinary kinds of decisions, the votes of nine out of
thirteen states were necessary, and no amendment of the Articles
was possible without the states’ unanimous consent. The larger states,
like New York and Virginia, were fed up with their inability to
over-ride smaller states’ insistence on the status quo in everything
that worked in their favor, and wanted a legislature that reflected
the population of the states. Smaller states, on the other hand,
saw no reason to give up the "one state-one vote" situation.
Rhode Island, which was infamous for this approach, had even boycotted
the Convention for fear it had nothing to gain from any change.
Deadlock seemed cemented into place. When the Convention had come
to a standstill, the Great Compromise of 1787 was suggested by the
Connecticut delegation: the lower house of the new congress, with
certain powers, would provide delegates to each state based on its
population, but the upper house, with a different set of powers,
would provide equal representation for each state. When the situation
seemed impossible, everyone gave something up, and a compromise
provided a way forward.
Ron Paul offers
the country a unique compromise, a return to constitutional government.
The situation is perhaps even more deadlocked than that of 1787.
From the perspective of the Founders’ design, our federal government
is a flagrantly unconstitutional, bankrupt Leviathan, controlling
huge swathes of our lives, trying to control much of the world as
well, and spending our great great grandchildren’s notional money
to do it. Social conservatives are not changing American minds in
large numbers on domestic issues. On foreign policy, their affection
for maintaining and expanding military action abroad seems like
a major electoral handicap in light of the sweeping election victory
of Barack Obama, the only major candidate who had openly opposed
the Iraq war. For 2012, one more conservative candidate who offers
Americans even more government control over their lives, with more
toughness abroad and more national coercion on moral issues, is
unlikely even to win the Republican nomination (consider the "moderate"
Bushes and McCain). Such a candidate will be a hypocrite on the
Constitution – surely an important consideration. If he or she somehow
wins the nomination, and somehow wins the general election as well,
Americans are almost sure to divide their votes so as to frustrate
him or her with a Democratic congress. There are millions of non-theist
(or theist but pragmatic) Americans who strongly disagree with social
conservatives on what ought to be illegal. Thus, in the best business-as-usual
scenario social conservatives are likely to get, the nation would
also keep its "imperial diadem," with its "murky
radiance of dominion and power," if John Quincy Adams is to
be believed. At home, the moral issues stalemate would continue,
and the debt burden would go on growing.
Given this
choice, might social conservatives consider Ron Paul’s Great Compromise
of 2012, a return to constitutional government? Consider again the
details: a massive tax cut for all, the end of the death of the
dollar by a trillion cuts, and a return of real saving by ordinary
Americans. A gradual transfer of almost all the assumed, unconstitutional
powers and burdens of the federal government back to the states
and the people. A truly defensive "Defense Department."
(Under Paul, it might even get back its old, honest name of the
War Department.) Liberals would have to give up social engineering
on the national level. Due to democracy itself, liberals could work
in each state to make it whatever kind of left-leaning welfare state
they liked, but social conservatives could go on fighting them on
the state level, and could also work in conservative states for
whatever laws they liked. New York and California might end up with
gay marriage and easy abortion – not much of a change there. Texas
or South Carolina, though, might ban them both – a big change. Radicals
on the left and right would suffer an end to American attempts to
reshape the world – but realists would at least get an American
government that would not go broke. Might social conservatives decide
it sounds like 1787?
If they don’t,
it appears likely Paul will do better than last time around, perhaps
far better, but still fall short of the Republican nomination or
the presidency. In that case, the political status quo will almost
surely continue, with either a Republican or a Democratic nominal
head. We will continue to live under what Bacevich calls Washington
Rules, a phrase that could describe our domestic as well
as foreign policies. Social conservatives will get full-throated
pledges of allegiance from Republican candidates, "Tea Party"
and otherwise, but, based on decades of evidence…not much else.
And perhaps we will stumble down Status Quo Road for another decade
or two, the dollar’s decline will gradually halt, and tens of trillions
of dollars of misbegotten debt will gradually work themselves out
of our system (as in Japan?). Perhaps we will "grow our way
out" of our problems, perhaps with tax cuts! If so, we will
all forget about that foolish false prophet Ron Paul. But if investors
like Jim
Rogers, Marc
Faber, and Peter
Schiff, who predicted the current credit crisis, are right,
we will either shrink the welfare/warfare state, or it and its mountain
of debts will shrink our economy, soon.
Social conservatives
who have hitched your wagon to political conservatism in America:
You can’t get everything you might like, you really can’t. You are
not a majority in today’s America. If you insist on going for victory,
like Wellington at Waterloo, you will instead get the status quo
one more time: the independents, the leftists, and the middle-of-the-roaders
will throw their weight against you, and all together they outnumber
you by a mile. Standard political conservative candidates, if they
win, will throw war and some rhetoric in your direction, but not
domestic substance. But four more years of the status quo might
prove the final straw. Is it time for a new Great Compromise?
August
4, 2011
Craig
White [send him mail]
is the author of Iraq:
the Moral Reckoning and Peace
& War in Today's World. He has been a teacher and an American
diplomat (for 20 years), and is now a PhD student at the University
of Colorado Boulder. The opinions expressed above are entirely his
own.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
|