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No
More Political Labels, Please
By
Mark Skousen
A rose is a rose is a rose. But a conservative is a libertarian
is a liberal. When labels confuse rather than clarify, they
should be dropped.
RESOLVED: That we use political labels as little as possible
when describing
people's ideologies. When somebody asks me, "Are you
a liberal? Conservative? Libertarian? I answer, "What's
the issue?" Categorizing someone's ideas as either "liberal"
or "conservative" is often used to avoid real thinking
about actual issues.
I refrain from referring to political positions as either
"left" and "right" in my writing. I generally
use the word "liberal" to describe a person's spending
habits, as in the case of a "liberal" spender--one
who is generous or possibly overly lavish. I also occasionally
refer to a person who is open-minded and tolerant of other
people's views as being "liberal" minded. "Conservative"
on the other hand, seems best used in the context of investing--I
call a person who is prudent and moderate in his choice of
investments a "conservative investor" (as opposed
to "speculative")--though it also seems reasonable
to describe one who wants to conserve time-honored values
as a "conservative." Not surprisingly, I like to
be called "liberal" or "conservative"
depending on the issue, the action or the mind-set. I dislike
being called either if it is a method for throwing me into
a convenient ideological box.
The three main reasons why labels are best avoided in political
discussions are: (1) Labels are often an inaccurate description
of a person's or group's views. (2) Labels often become pejorative
terms used in character assassination (3) Labels put people
into political boxes and keep them there, preventing individuals
from objectively considering alternative opinions and changing
their minds.
Obsolescence, Left and Right
The terms "left" and "right" came
into use after the French revolution. In the French National
Assembly, the "liberals" sat to the left of the
president's chair, the "moderates" in the center,
and the "conservatives" to the right. Those on the
left were designated "liberals" and "radicals"
because they wanted to make major reforms in politics and
the economy. Their opponents on the right became "conservatives"
and "reactionaries" because they were aristocratic
nationalists who wanted to return to the status quo of the
ancien regime. Those in the center were the "moderates"
who were looking for a compromise. This political spectrum
has often been used in describing the signers of our Declaration
of Independence. Still, though Thomas Jefferson has often
been called a classical liberal, calling him a left-winger
seems out of place.
This dichotomy may have made sense during the American and
the French revolutions. But once the principles of freedom
and constitutional law were established (in America, at least),
the "liberals" gradually became "conservatives"
by defending the new status quo of liberty and limited government.
Turnabout being fair play, in the 20th century the collectivists
who pushed to eliminate economic freedom and expand the role
of the state became the "liberals" or "progressives."
Having adopted the favorable titles of "progressive,"
"modern" and "advanced," they scorned
the opposition as "right-wing" and "reactionary."
Thus, in the twisted world of political labeling; what the
19th century liberals supported--free enterprise capitalism
and laissez faire government--the 20th-century liberals opposed
by pushing for big government and interventionism in the marketplace.
Label confusion has reigned ever since, and the political
spectrum has become a rhetorical version of Abbott and Costello's
"Who's on first?" routine. The 19th century liberal
ideals became the policies of some (but by no means all) 20th
century conservatives.
Marxists, Communists and other international collectivists
became the "radical left," while the Fascists of
the 1930s in Italy and Nazi Germany were designated "right
wingers" simply because they opposed the "Reds."
But the only difference in their politics was nationalism
vs. internationalism. The fascists were every bit as collectivist
as Stalin.
Believers in economic and political liberty had a hard time
dealing with label stereotypes in the 1950s. They opposed
the New Deal and wanted a return to laissez faire, so they
were dubbed "reactionary conservatives." Because
they were ardent "anti-Communists," they were linked
closely with the Fascists and Nazi-era "rightists."
Many conservatives responded by saying they were "old
fashioned liberals," but this didn't mean anything to
anyone in the torrent of nebulous labels.
Growing up in the 1950s and 1960s, I resented these and other
pejorative labels. It was nearly impossible to convince anyone
of the virtues of free enterprise capitalism, laissez faire
government, and opposition to communism if my views were always
called "reactionary," "old fashioned'
and "Neanderthal." The conservatives responded in
kind by calling the New Deal liberals "radicals,"
"pseudo progressives' and "communist sympathizers."
Only the "moderates" sounded "responsible,"
and depending on their position on an issue, they usually
got hit by traffic going both ways. There was a lot of bad
blood, and very little sharing of ideas. Conservatives refused
to read John Kenneth Galbraith and The Washington Post, and
liberals eschewed Milton Friedman and National Review.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the labels became more
complex and less enlightening as the political stereotypes
began to crack. We now witness dictatorships of the left and
the right, market economies of the left and right, revolutions
of the left and right, and totalitarianisms of the left and
right. We have socialist left-wing parties privatizing public
services, and conservative rightwing governments imposing
tariffs and higher taxes. We have extreme liberal Democrats
supporting deregulation of the airlines and decontrol of natural
gas. We have the nation's most liberal newspaper, The New
York Times, coming out against the minimum wage. We have a
right-wing anarchocapitalist endorsing radical left-wing land
reform in Latin America and legalization of drugs in the United
States.
In the Middle East we have right-wing Christians killing left-wing
terrorists. Soviet opponents of perestroika and glasnost are
called "conservatives" by the American press, as
are South African racists. Political analysts are having a
devil of a time labeling an old "liberal" publication,
The New Republic, because its views are no longer predictable.
Politicians are now starting to run as individuals and not
as members of a political party. And what's this about conservative
lobbyists joining hands with liberal lobbyists to fight IMF
funding? None of this makes sense if we insist on dividing
the world into the standard left-right divisions.
But, alas, instead of scrapping the entire phony nomenclature,
everyone seems to be making up more labels. There's the New
Right and the Old Right, the Southern Conservative Democrats
and the Northern Liberal Democrats, the Neo-Conservatives
and the Paleo-Libertarians, the Post-Keynesians, the Neo-Marxists,
and the Neo-Liberals. The list goes on and on, growing
like topsy and confusing everyone except the most stalwart
who spend all day reading everything from every point on the
political compass.
Fortunately, some editors and publishers have recently recognized
the misleading and counterproductive nature of labeling and
have largely discarded it. Reason magazine is one example.
Eschewing ad hominem political tags, Reason analyzes issues
on their own merits, not based on who espouses them.
For the Scrap-Heap of History
It's time to make a change in our political lexicon. The
national press and the political analysts need to stop using
the outdated and misleading leftwing liberal/right-wing conservative
dichotomy. When someone's philosophy is labeled and compartmentalized,
thinking stops and name-calling begins. Once an economist
is labeled a Marxist, only the Marxists listen. When a political
analyst writes a column called "On the Right," no
one except the "right-wing" faithful reads it. Dividing
ideology into camps on two sides of the political spectrum
tends to elevate both sides to an equal status, as if both
policies hold equal sway and are equally justifiable. Then
the moderates whisper, "Perhaps we should compromise!"
We are left with the erroneous impression that "the extreme
left is just as bad as the extreme right." Categorizing
philosophies leads toward political nihilism and away from
the desire to find the truth.
In short, it is high time that political pundits and the national
media put away their cold-war mentality and endorse a new
standard where each person stands on individual merit and
not in some political box. Left and right, liberal and conservative,
radical and reactionary--all are words of the past that divide
people. I say scrap them. When adjectives are absolutely necessary,
let's at least try to be more specific. Use adjectives and
nouns that are meaningful, accurate and unbiased. If we don't,
the war of political ideas will be decided on the basis of
an axiom of my colleague, Larry Abraham: "Those who control
the adjectives win."
LIBERTY
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