Conservatives, to simplify the label, are primarily
concerned with sustaining values such as family, belief in God and respect for
authority which are believed to underpin a healthy society.
Libertarians, on the other hand, focus on the primacy of
the individual: protect his right to be free of governmental
restraint.
In popular terminology, proponents of both political
philosophies are on the Right. And, in
reality, proponents rarely hold exclusively one perspective but, rather,
believe in a combination of the two.
(Rand Paul, for one, is a likely exception.)
Take me, for example.
While in college, I was a fervent libertarian. My right to do what I wanted (but not harming
anyone by so doing) was my guiding principle.
I was an individualist.
But, with age and maturity, I came to appreciate that man
is very much a social animal. Without
society and its wise traditions and sanctioned virtues, he will not long
survive. This was hardly a unique
realization on my part. It was put more
poetically by John Donne in the 17th century who noted “that no man
is an island entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of
the main… Any man’s death diminishes me for I am involved with mankind”.
And so I came to recognize that preserving -- in modern
day America, restoring -- a healthy society and culture is also a political
objective. We have responsibilities,
too.
After all, what rights will survive if our free society
collapses?
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