posted on Nov, 8 2010 @ 01:01 AM
It has come to my attention over the past several years that there is some confusion as to what conservatism is. Generally speaking, I apply the
definition of what it is to conserve to the concept of conservatism. To conserve is to moderate the use of something, usually with the goal of
maximizing efficiency (to conserve a natural resource is not to deny use of it, but to use only what is necessary).
Thus, when I refer to myself as a political conservative, I would mean that I believe the government should be utilized only when and where necessary,
as though it were a limited resource or the use of it somehow damaged us. Put simply - this is a belief in small government with minimal regulation
and involvement in the personal lives of people.
I believe this is very similar to how a number of Conservatives (broad term) view things. However, I have noticed a strange trend - and that is to
bring religiously motivated legislation in under the banner of "conservatism." While I do not want to get particularly bogged down in the details
and arguments of either - the two largest "conservative values" guilty of this would be the anti-abortion and the anti-gay-marriage issue.
I'll be honest, I'm a fan of neither. But, I don't really understand where it is a "conservative" value. Even applied to religion - to apply
religion only when and where necessary would be synonymous with the term "conservative." Trying to apply religious idioms to government legislation
seems like a rather liberal use of religion (liberal meaning to freely apply without restraint).
Even more concerning is how this "religiously conservative" value system is directly conflicting with politically conservative principles. A
political conservative wishes to keep government out of our daily lives. Why, then, should we allow ourselves to legislate personal morality in the
form of banning medical procedures (abortions) and financial/legal unions (marriages - as they are seen by the State)?
If conservatives got their way and successfully shrank the government while also banning same-sex marriages and abortion - the precedent to extend the
government into our daily lives has already been established. If the government can force you to bear a child once impregnated, why should a court
find it unconstitutional or unreasonable to permit similar laws that also place the government laws at the dinner table?
I don't want this to turn into a bash liberals, bash conservatives, bash religion, etc. I'm a Christian - I have my own personal morals and ethics
that I share with many other Christians. I am also a political conservative. I am just concerned at how it seems many people are confusing religious
ideology with conservatism, and also wondering - to an extent - how this came to be (how it is rationalized).
I am curious as to how others come to their rationale, how they see that some religious views belong in a conservative government, how they disagree,
or how they see a liberal government working - just please refrain from getting distracted with the typical conservative/liberal/religious bashing.
We have plenty of other threads to do that in.