OpEd Contributor

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“Brain-dead conservatives:” Are conservative elitists brain-dead?

By: Lori Roman
OpEd Contributor
October 4, 2009

In today’s Washington Post, Steven F. Hayward of the American Enterprise Institute ponders whether conservatism is brain-dead.  He maintains that the conservative movement “has been thrown off balance, with the populists dominating and the intellectuals retreating and struggling to come up with new ideas.” 
 
He fears that talk radio hosts have supplanted the scholarly types on the right, although he nods approvingly at Michael Medved, a Yale man, and William Bennett, a Harvard man with a PhD.
 
While I give due deference to Hayward and his PhD, I suggest that he is asking the wrong question. The question is not whether conservatism is brain-dead; it is whether conservative elitists are brain dead. 
 
I’ve been in meetings where conservative elitists bemoan the fact that they must tolerate the “regular folks” like Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck.
 
They look down their noses at principled, articulate job applicants because they don’t have the correct pedigree—an Ivy League education or the family or money connections to make up for the lack of one.
 
By behaving in this manner and, frankly, by writing editorials insulting average Americans not fond of reading Hayek on weekends, the elitists in the conservative ranks may entertain themselves splendidly at cocktail parties, but they are doing little to bring liberty to people thirsty for it.
 
There is a difference between being an elitist and being an intellectual. Of course, the movement can always use more intellectuals.  We need fewer elitists. Milton Friedman is a perfect example of an intellectual who was not an elitist. 
 
The most effective intellectual is one able to absorb the complexities of economics, ethics and political science and create understandable and appealing fare for all citizens.
 
Conservative elitists will be clutching their chests when I dare list these names together, but Milton Friedman (Free to Choose), Henry Hazlitt (Economics in One Lesson), Friedrich Hayek (Road to Serfdom), and Thomas Paine (Common Sense) have a lot in common with Limbaugh and Beck.
 
They made complex issues easy to understand in order to promote the concepts of liberty to the greatest number of people. I introduced Dr. Friedman in what I believe was his last televised speech. His brilliance was brighter because of his plain-spoken manner.
 
I also marched on Washington a few weeks ago with more than one million people who don’t read white papers from think tanks, but they know when elitists are demeaning their values, diminishing their freedoms and stealing their money.
 
Hayward says that the tea party movement is “unfocused, lacking the connection to a concrete ideology that characterized the tax revolt of the 1970s, which was joined at the hip with insurgent supply-side economics.” 
 
 Splendid! This movement is not relying on intellectuals with new ideas. It is relying on regular freedom-loving Americans with some old ideas--hard work, individualism, faith, private charity, liberty, limited government and that stodgy old thing that elitists sometimes forget to mention—the Constitution.
 
Conservative “intellectuals” should be careful not to sound like then-presidential candidate Barack Obama when he criticized folks in small towns. Perhaps they should spend more time trying to sound like Ronald Reagan, who gave us these words in 1976:

“I’m convinced that today the majority of Americans want what those first Americans wanted:  A better life for themselves and their children; a minimum of government authority. Very simply, they want to be left alone in peace and safety to take care of the family by earning an honest dollar and putting away some savings.  This may not sound too exciting, but there is something magnificent about it.”
 
Lori Roman is founder of RegularFolksUnited.com, the bully pulpit for regular folks.
 
 



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

ladybug

Oct 4, 2009

As I hear and read derogatory comments about the tea parties I'm really sorry I didn't seek one out in my area. I just can't believe the rhetoric about the people who attended and wish I'd seen who was there for myself. The overheated commentaries aren't having the effect they probably want from me.

 

Greg Ransom

Oct 4, 2009

The Glenn Beck's and the Rush Limbaugh's DO read Hayek on the weekends. It's a fact. And they recommed Hayek to their audience. And we know their audience is readin books -- Hayek's The Road to Serfdom has been in the Amazon top 700 for 9 months now.

My experience it's the Washington "conservative" elite who are the ones who've never read Hayek -- they would never have supported Bush's depression causing policies if they had.

True truth is you are more likely to have read Hayek as a member of Beck or Limbaugh's adience than as a graduate of the Ivy league or as a beneficiary of a trust fund.

There is less brain death than Hayward images
-- and more brain death than he imagines. It's simply distributed differently than Hayward knows.

 

jack

Oct 4, 2009

Rush Limbaugh has a more unified, consistent political philosophy than John McCain or Colin Powell.

What does Colin Powell believe? Anyone?

But he doesn't have principles so he's not offensive.

 

UrbanRevival

Oct 4, 2009

Bravo Lori - you nailed it right on the head. On the left's side, Dr. Lamont Hill is proof positive that a PhD can can be had by anybody - pretty much a dime a dozen.

I'm and adult student and haven't graduated college (yet). But I've read everyone of the books you listed above and don't miss a day without Beck or Limbaugh. And Milton.....among the very best America has to offer - not just a brillant mind - but a humble heart as well. What better way to repay God's gifts.

Thank you for telling them!!

 

Jamal

Oct 4, 2009

Wow, great column.

I would add that perhaps elitism has become an apologist for statism. Elites may accept the idea of elites exercising more power at the state level. At least Friedman seemed to think so in that unfortunate, but telling, recent Op-Ed.

 

Aquaviva

Oct 4, 2009

Fabulous editorial. Spot on every point. The Friedman example (intellectual, not elitist) is brilliant and a debate stopper b/c every conservative will know exactly what you mean by that.

 

evergreen78

Oct 4, 2009

Ivy League education aside, every story I've read or heard about the March on DC has mentioned the fact that there was NO litter left at the end, as compared to Pres. Obama's inauguration event, which had 100 tons or some ridiculous number. No, we Tea Partiers may not have gone to Harvard, but we understand words like "respect" and "integrity." We understand that "fair" doesn't necessarily mean "equal" and that freedom isn't free. Seems to me like that a lot of these "smart" people don't have much SENSE.

 

Oldflyer

Oct 4, 2009

Excellent.

 

David Kyle

Oct 4, 2009

Many intellectuals lack common sense, and without a lick of common sense most can't do mundane things like run a government properly. That goes for the left and the right.

 

Mike O

Oct 5, 2009

Some of us are old enough to remember when Reagan was being dismissed as an intellectual lightweight and dangerous firebrand. The Haywards of the world accomplish little in real political terms by pontification; the Palins and the Limbaughs activate the base.
The Tea Partiers can win the day; the Washington elitist conservatives cannot.

 

tracycoyle

Oct 5, 2009

Couldn't agree more. The problem with 'conservative pundits/elitist' is they have been in the Beltway so long, they have a contact leftism. They may call themselves conservatives, but they want 'their' brand of gov controlled conservatism - if such a thing were possible.

 

David

Oct 5, 2009

In his article, Steven F. Hayward also said:

'The left is enraged with Beck’s scandal-mongering over Van Jones and ACORN, but they have no idea that he poses a much bigger threat than that. If more conservative talkers took up the theme of challenging liberalism’s bedrock assumptions the way Beck does from time to time, liberals would have to defend their problematic premises more often.

Beck, for one, is revealing that despite the demands of filling hours of airtime every day, it is possible to engage in some real thought. He just might be helping restore the equilibrium between the elite and populist sides of conservatism.’

 

Dare

Oct 5, 2009

We are not brain dead; but perhaps out numbered as more than 80% of the media is far left. The chances of recovering are looking gloom with only the hopes that people will open their eyes and realize they don't want a socialist government and vote out the DEMS. We need more conservative talkers on network television.

 

Mad Monica

Oct 5, 2009

Isn't it interesting that this feller REALLY likes two of the republicans that were in love with John McCain? Remember? The John McCain that HAD to be our candidate because he was the ONLY one who could beat Obama? Riiiiiiight.

 

Mad Monica

Oct 5, 2009

Dare, there ain't NOTHING gloomy about the comeback that is brewing for CONSERVATIVES. Neocons, now they've got some problems. But true conservatives are ready and willing to fight back finally and to me, that's a GOOD thing.

 

Paul A'Barge

Oct 5, 2009

Here is the motoon Hayward: "http://www.aei.org/scholar/28"

 

Jack

Oct 5, 2009

Outstanding. There was nothing terribly intellectual about a group of citizens dressing up as indians and dumping tea into Boston Harbor and yet the message still resonates centuries later.

 

Tennwriter

Oct 5, 2009

The comment about supply side tax logic being joined at the hip to tax revolt is telling, but for the opposite side than Hayward imagines. If some bright fellow at a college were to come up with an elegantly simple argument for freedom, and lower taxes, and market based health reform, it would be swept up and on the lips of millions of conservatives by months end. Rather like the supply side argument was. Its a defect in the bright boys that is the problem.

Its also a point that the masses of conservatism have some ideas that the bright boys could not even imagine. Out here in the little people are some very, very bright people themselves, and also reasonably smart guys with one really clever idea. So even if we don't have the bright boys to get on their job, we'll make do. We don't NEED them. We can USE their help.

 

Down with elitists

Oct 5, 2009

People like Hayward are proof of the corruption of Washington DC. These effete intellectuals subsist on charitable contributions and hobnob with politicians and bureaucrats. We, the people, should rise up and sack DC. Down with those wearing Italian shoes, English suits, French shirts, and Italian ties. Burn all the books, even the conservative ones! Yahoos of America, it is time to reclaim our country. It is time to take back the conservative movement from the eggheads who have hijacked it, and the rich people who have only used us in order to fatten their wallets.

 

J Bennett

Oct 5, 2009

Might I suggest Thomas Sowell as yet another intellectual who is not an elitist. A brilliant man and a worthy successor to Milton Friedman.

 

Geo

Oct 5, 2009

The problem I see is that Limbaugh, Beck, etc... are elitists, not itellectuals and they sell themselves as ordinary people like you and me. Well you and me ain't got millions or dollars. The morons that listen to them usually don't listen to any other opposing views and are very ill-informed of the real issues because those they listen to twist the truth until it is no longer the truth. They are contributing in a very large way to the dumbing of America. Rush Limbaugh couldn't even make it through college and his listeners consider him intellectual? Come on, get real!

 

Postpartisan

Oct 5, 2009

Contrary to the op-ed writer's claim, Beck and Limbaugh are superficial reductionists. They don't make "complex issues easy to understand". They perpetuate their own ideological memes and stick their fingers in their ears whenever something doesn't gibe with their narrow worldview. You don't have to know anything about the issues being discussed if you simply latch onto what little you understand. Any preteen can resist complexity in favor of blissful ignorance, and it unfortunately what most of us do. The issues of the day require more perspective than AM talk radio is willing to offer.

 

Kiernan

Oct 5, 2009

Thank you for expressing what I feel! I am Ivy-League educated, well-read, and have always loved listening to Rush. I took part in the Tea Parties, one of the greatest thrills in my life. I respect Hayward, but these "elites" need some humble pie; they play, or should play, a supporting role in the Conservative movement. And, as some have commented here, if one actually took the time to listen to the Rush Limbaugh's and Glenn Beck's, it would be obvious that both host and audience are much smarter than the elites on both sides give them credit for.

 

Jay

Oct 5, 2009

Among people I've worked with personally, I've routinely noticed that those who were really good at their jobs, the real geniuses, were consistently humble people, always willing to try to explain things to others without ridiculing them for being less intelligent. I've known plenty of arrogant snobs, but they were always people who weren't really all that smart. Above average, usually, but never geniuses. I don't doubt that there are some people out there who are brilliant and who make sure they let everyone else know it, but I've never met one of them. Hey, I'm a genius and I'm very humble! :-)

 

Glenn

Oct 5, 2009

I thought it was interesting that the Post article made literally no mention of Mark Levin or of "Liberty and Tyranny", which achieved #1 status on the NY Times and Post lists (and sold 1 million copies), unlike a lot of those other books. And he did it all without a review or barely a mention in those newspapers. It is interesting that he has flown under the wire for so long. While one can argue Mark can be pretty nasty and angry on the air (and has a grating voice), he is quite a thoughtful and intelligent writer.

 


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