You are hereBlogs / Krogenar's blog / PJ Nails It
PJ Nails It
P.J. O'Rourke's post-mortem on the election is not only hysterical, he raises some important points about social conservatism.
"[Conservatives] had nearly three decades to educate the electorate about freedom, responsibility, and the evils of collectivism, and we responded by creating a big-city-public-school-system of a learning environment.
Liberalism had been running wild in the nation since the Great Depression. At the end of the Carter administration we had it cornered in one of its dreadful low-income housing projects or smelly public parks or some such place, and we held the Taser gun in our hand, pointed it at the beast's swollen gut, and didn't pull the trigger. Liberalism wasn't zapped and rolled away on a gurney and confined somewhere until it expired from natural causes such as natural law or natural rights."
And yet, this passage of Rourke's gives me some hope -- we've now got a black man with the soul of Jimmy Carter, so maybe we'll get another chance to pull the trigger on the Left. O'Rourke doesn't blame the American Left for any of this, as you can't really hold people who insane accountable for their actions.
He's ranting, and it's a funny rant. My favorite passage is here, where P.J. sums up the different ways that conservatives and liberals view the free market:
Anyway, it's no use blaming Wall Street. Blaming Wall Street for being greedy is like scolding defensive linemen for being big and aggressive. The people on Wall Street never claimed to be public servants. They took no oath of office. They're in it for the money. We pay them to be in it for the money. We don't want our retirement accounts to get a 2 percent return. (Although that sounds pretty good at the moment.)
What will destroy our country and us is not the financial crisis but the fact that liberals think the free market is some kind of sect or cult, which conservatives have asked Americans to take on faith. That's not what the free market is. The free market is just a measurement, a device to tell us what people are willing to pay for any given thing at any given moment. The free market is a bathroom scale. You may hate what you see when you step on the scale. "Jeeze, 230 pounds!" But you can't pass a law making yourself weigh 185. Liberals think you can. And voters--all the voters, right up to the tippy-top corner office of Goldman Sachs--think so too.
- Krogenar's blog
- 69 reads
- Quote






Post new comment