Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

What True Conservatism Really Is


Conservatism had been hijacked by big government, and uber religious Republicans. True conservatism rests in the principles of Classical Liberalism, and the only reason we don't call ourselves Liberals today, is the term was hijacked by FDR in the 1930's to promote his New Deal.

Here are the tenets of true Conservatism, or Classical Liberalism:

1. Individual autonomy

The basis of society is the individual. Humans are primarily motivated by self-interest.

2. Individual rights

If the individual is autonomous, then all individuals must be free and equal. This implies political equality, the protection of individual rights, respect for individual choices, and the use of reason in making decisions. "I am free and thus I rule myself." The key individual rights are freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom of worship, and the right to property.

3. Religious toleration

Individuals and the state must respect one's right to worship as one pleases. Implies a separation of church and state.

4. Popular sovereignty and consent

Government should be ruled by the people rather than by a monarch, a religious figure, or some other elite. Government's legitimacy rests on the consent of the governed..

5. Limited and representative government

The government's role in society and the scope of its power should be clearly defined. The purpose of government is to protect individual's life, liberty, and property. Further, in a society of autonomous individuals pursuing their own self-interests, government must represent the various interests of that society. This implies representative government, majority rule, constitutional government, and the rule of law.

6. Private property

Society should generally encourage the private accumulation of property rather than place restrictions on it. This implies an economy of free markets, equality of opportunity in the market, and competition. In sum, liberalism defends capitalism.

7. Universalism and progress

All people are fundamentally the same. Differences of culture, religion, race, gender, nationality, etc. are ultimately superficial. Overall, liberalism tends to interpret historically progressively: society, economy, technology are all advancing and elevating the human condition in the process.

These tenets are also the basics of Libertarianism. This is why we have the quote by Ronald Reagan "The Very Heart and Soul of Conservatism is Libertarianism." He said this because he understood that these beliefs, that were just stated, are Libertarian ideas, and true Conservatism rests on these principles.

Conservative for Change is about promoting these ideas as true Conservatism, and getting away from the hijacked meaning that the Republican Party has promoted the last 8 years.

Liberty for all, and Freedom for all.

Monday, May 18, 2009

An RNC Renaissance In The Making

By RON NEHRING

The national Republican counterattack will not begin in Washington. Like most successful movements in American politics, this one will begin in the states.
When the Republican National Committee meets outside Washington later this month, it will do so as an organization that has been retooled and reformed to aid and support this national counterattack, not hinder it.

In a few short weeks, Chairman Michael Steele has transformed the RNC and its staff from a group that had been trained to serve as an extension of a Republican White House to one that can serve as a partner to candidates, state party organizations and the National Republican Senatorial and Congressional committees.

This kind of transformation is rarely easy. People get accustomed to a particular way of operating, but clearly change was necessary for the party to adopt the right posture for an organization now seeking to regain, rather than merely preserve, power.

The most obvious contrast between old and new comes in how the RNC is working with state parties. A few weeks ago, I sat down with Chairman Steele and my colleagues from a dozen states for a roundtable meeting in which each state party showcased its progress, programs and challenges. It was an extraordinary session that differed sharply from past RNC events, which were, without exception, top-down affairs. Instead of merely relaying orders, this session, like others Steele has held in recent weeks, was intended to draw out new ideas and innovations and give states an opportunity to share best practices.

This is a major shift in the RNC’s orientation and culture. Past attempts to organize state party chairmen to exchange ideas and best practices were opposed by the “experts” in Washington. Now, such efforts are not merely tolerated but promoted as a necessary part of building a party that can successfully combat — and defeat — Barack Obama’s Democratic Party.

And it’s working.

The amount of communication taking place among America’s state Republican chairmen has exploded in recent weeks, producing tangible results. New approaches to coalition building in Florida and Ohio are being replicated and expanded in California. Meanwhile, California’s new technology initiative is being replicated in other states.

It’s been said that the Republicans’ style of running political parties is the same as the Democrats’ style of running government: top-down, centralized, bureaucratic and resistant to change. No longer. The RNC is moving ahead by promoting innovation in the states, sharing those ideas and developments, and utilizing the political equivalent of market forces to bring new ideas to Washington.

The latest national polling shows Republicans have been given an opportunity to advance. Americans who support Obama are doing so not because of any agreement over his left-leaning policies but, rather, because of his personality and style. Meanwhile, twice as many Americans are now concerned the government will do too much, rather than too little, in response to the current economic crisis.

To take advantage of the opportunity presented by the Democrats’ disconnect with Americans over policy, Republicans must concurrently deliver a credible alternative economic vision while building the campaign organization necessary to mobilize and persuade large numbers of voters. Some of the best ways to accomplish that are being developed right now, in the states. And this RNC will be an ally, not an adversary, in sharing those ideas as a new blueprint for national victory in 2010 is developed.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0509/22273.html#ixzz0Ft5sQoXE&B

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Why have blacks left the party of Martin Luther King Jr?


It was no freak chance that President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation and also happened to be the first Republican president. The Republican Party was founded as an abolitionist movement. It’s purpose from conception to present day was freedom and equality.

Notable black Republicans of the abolitionist movement (defined as the period of slavery through to the end of segregation) include Booker T. Washington, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Frederick Douglas, Harriet Tubman, and Sojourner Truth to name only a few.

History seems to have been forgotten by those who accuse the Republican Party of being racist, or not representing black America. In fact, the Republican Party was the party of black Americans until at least the late 1960’s.

Let’s look at civil rights milestones:

Emancipation Proclamation, 1865: Signed into law by Republican President Lincoln.

Foundation of Ku Klux Klan, 1865: Militant organization designed to protect the interests of white Americans by violence and intimidation of blacks, Republicans, and equal rights supporters. The KKK suppressed the black vote and Republican support through terrorist activities, helping to elect southern Democrats after the Civil War.

Civil Rights Act of 1866: Passed by Republican dominated Congress, but vetoed by Democrat President Andrew Johnson. The Congress overrode the presidential veto and it was signed into law.

Election of first black US Senator, 1870: Republican Senator Hiram Revels of Mississippi.

Election of first black US Congressman, 1870: Republican Congressman Joseph Rainey of South Carolina.

Civil Rights Act of 1871 (Ku Klux Klan Act): Signed into law by Republican President Grant to protect blacks from the KKK.

The nation’s first black governor, 1872: Republican Governor Pinckney Pinchback of Louisiana.

Mississippi Plan, 1875: Devised by the Democrat Party to control public offices held in the south through violence and intimidation.

Civil Rights Act of 1875: Proposed by Republican Senator Charles Sumner and Republican Congressman Benjamin Butler, and passed by Republican President Grant. It was overturned by the Supreme Court in 1883.

Jim Crow Laws, 1876-1965: Segregationist laws passed by Democrats on local and state levels in the southern states during Reconstruction. The last of the laws were finally overturned with the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Founding of the NAACP, 1909: Most of the founders were black Republicans.

Brown vs. Board of Education, 1953: Republican President Eisenhower’s Asst. Attorney General Paul Wilson argued against segregation while former Democrat presidential nominee John Davis argued in favor of segregation.

We finally get to something one Democrat did for blacks while the rest of the party opposed them:

Civil Rights Act of 1964: Signed into law under Democrat President Lyndon Johnson after attempts by Democrat Senators and Democrat Representatives to block its passage failed.

Voting Rights Act of 1965: Signed into law under Democrat President Lyndon Johnson.

Why do black Americans prefer the empty promises of the Democrat Party, when they actually believe all the principles of the Republican Party, like individual liberty, lower taxes, smaller government, and civil rights? The GOP does not divide and classify, making promises in exchange for votes to each demographic group. We offer equality across the board, policies that positively benefit all. The greatest Republican of the last century, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., did not support this type of segregation, but sought color-blind equality. The GOP never abandoned black America; liberal America abandoned the principles of MLK.


Author: Ann Miller