We're all left-wingers now
April 1st, 2007
Via the excellent blogs of Brad Spangler and Wally Conger, two great agorists in our Alliance of the Libertarian Left, comes a reaction by Glenn Greenwald to a recent David Brooks column. Brooks proclaims the Right's official abandonment of limited government and individual rights as motivating goals, preferring empire and an expanded, authoritarian state:
And now here is Brooks, very explicitly repudiating the Goldwater/Reagan template and admitting that this movement is devoted to large expansions of federal power -- justified in the name of "protecting" Americans -- all devoted to what that movement claims is promotion of some objective Good. The central tenets of the right wing movement in this country -- which has seized and now defines the term "conservative" -- are easy to see. They're right there in plain sight -- they want to expand government power in pursuit of mindless, bloodthirsty warmongering and empire-building abroad, and the accompanying liberty-infringement at home.
As a result, to be considered "liberal" or "leftist" now means, more than anything else, to oppose that agenda. All of the people now deemed to be on the "left" -- including many who have quite disparate views about the defining political disputes of the 1990s -- have been able to work together with great unity because all energies of those "on the left" have been devoted not to any affirmative policy-making (because they have had, and still have, no power to do that), but merely towards the goal of exposing the corruption and radicalism at the heart of this extremist right-wing movement and to push back -- impose some modest limits -- on what has been this radical movement's virtually unlimited ability to install a political framework that one does not even recognize as "American."
I had earlier wondered whether it was really necessary to identify this group as explicitly left; Brooks demonstrates the need for the kind of realignment that our name invites.
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