Are We All Liberals Now or Has Liberalism Ended?

liberalism
Who are we? Is liberalism finished? (See photo credit below)

For some reason, physicians love this line:

“I am socially liberal but fiscally conservative.”

It sounds moderate, prudential, even sophisticated.

Socially liberal” suggests individual choice about sex, marriage, and life in general. “Fiscally conservative” suggests spending restraint and market freedom.

Both statements come from the same philosophy. The first is social liberalism, the second economic liberalism.

In other words, “I am socially liberal but fiscally conservative,” is simply liberalism through and through.

What then do we mean by ‘liberalism’?

Liberalism

Liberal just means freedom. Most people like freedom, at least for themselves.

Libertarians make a whole political philosophy out of freedom: for example, Don’t Hurt People and Don’t Take Their Stuff – A Libertarian Manifesto.

Liberalism, on the other hand, means something more.

Francis Fukuyama is perhaps the most well-known expert on liberalism. At the end of the Cold War, he wrote, The End of History and the Last Man (1992).

Fukuyama predicted a future of liberalism without contest or equal. No more socialism, conservatism, or anything else. Nothing but liberalism forever and ever.

Given the lack of competition, Fukuyama did not need to define liberalism against its enemies. Everyone knew what he meant.

Anti-Liberalism

Fukuyama’s endless future lasted two decades. The liberal consensus is dead, and liberalism faces attack from all sides.

Patrick Deneen, political science professor, wrote an unexpected best-seller in 2019 called, Why Liberalism Failed. Even President Barak Obama offered a blurb for the back cover.

In 2020, Ross Douthat, of the New York Times, wrote best seller, A Decadent Society.

Paul Embrey, British trade unionist, offered a proletariat attack on liberalism: Despised — Why the Modern Left Loathes the Working Class (2021).

There are loads of books and articles with the same theme.

Fukuyama to the Rescue

This spring, Fukuyama published Liberalism and Its Discontents. (On my reading list. Here’s a book review by Steven B. Smith, Yale).

Fukuyama relies on John Gray, philosopher, for a definition of liberalism. Gray said liberalism has four main features. It is individualist, egalitarian, universalist (true for all), and melioristic (progresses towards an easier life).

Gray writes well and attacks everyone. One of his best books is Enlightenment’s Wake (2007), on the origins and failures of liberalism and conservatism.

Gray explains how liberalism is a child of the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment emphasized reason, progress, and universality. Liberalism leveraged Enlightenment ideas and promoted the four ideas mentioned above (individualism, egalitarianism, universalism, meliorism).

John Gray argues that the Enlightenment had multiple children. Karl Marx used Enlightenment thought but emphasized collectivism, the inevitability of historical progress, and universality.

Liberalism and Marxism are sibling rivals (a paradox to explore another time).

Consensus

In practice, liberalism is a thin philosophy. It leaves most things to individuals and works well when society shares a general consensus.

A social consensus includes agreement on the use and limits of things such as honesty, civility, public debate, evidence, and so on. Liberal societies last until people lose an awareness of, “You just shouldn’t do that.”

Both woke activists and revolutionary populists have abandoned social consensus. The big questions are up for debate again.

Why tell the truth?

Why listen to divergent opinion?

Why not punch someone in the face, if you think they are evil?

What’s wrong with doxing someone to help our side?

Why shouldn’t we aim to “own the Libs” or cancel the Right?

Thin philosophies do not answer these questions. They offer little content as a point of principle.

Internal Conflicts

Hegel said every civilization contains the seeds of its own destruction. Marx believed the idea made the collapse of capitalism inevitable.

As per Hegel, liberalism seems to contain the seeds of its own destruction. For example, freedom and equality cannot exist together without one trying to consume the other.

Or consider universality. Liberalism makes people think they can simply remove an illiberal regime and replace it with a liberal one.

If liberalism is true for us, it should also be true for Iraq and Afghanistan. We just kill Hussein and bin Laden, set up elections, and then watch a 1000 flowers bloom. (Note how liberalism innervates all western political parties.)

A thin philosophy cannot build a society from scratch. It assumes too much, promises even more, and delivers it all too slowly, if at all.

How Liberalism Fails

Liberalism works when it rests on a robust network of vibrant social institutions: voluntary associations, educational networks, families of all sorts, faith groups, cultural associations, and more.

However, liberalism remains silent on institutions themselves. Liberalism can steer a thriving civilization in the same way a child can steer a car on a clear day with a dry road. But liberalism cannot arrest decline or reverse decay any better than a toddler can correct oversteer in slush.

What’s worse, liberalism animates the destruction of the very institutions it needs to survive. It calls for emancipation from anything which might infringe on individual freedom.

Think of all the expectations in being part of a profession. Or consider all the involuntary obligations associated with having parents or siblings.

Liberalism finds involuntary obligations guilty until proven irrelevant by a new welfare program or medical therapy.

What Comes Next?

We cannot turn back time. Current struggles could last decades as we search for answers.

Why care about individuals?

Does society make individuals or do individuals make society?

Is equality an absolute or relative good?

What do we mean by progress?

Does reason have limits?

Can we ever be truly rational or are we tragically tied to sentiment, habit, and prejudice?

Asking big questions is itself a conservative endeavour. Philosophical conservatism wrestles endlessly with them.

Of course, many self-described liberals grapple with these questions too. However, the endless digging for answers, which most people do not need, makes these ‘liberals’ philosophically conservative. They feel unwelcome in the unquestioning masses of the modern liberal left.

Embrace Your Label

The outcome of rehashing big questions is unknown.

We might see another 70 years like the Soviet era.

Or maybe a second industrial revolution, this time electric.

Or perhaps a reactionary revolt will inspire us all to plant gardens, raise chickens, and study Cicero (I wish).

We cannot dispatch liberalism and conservatism in one post. But hopefully we have slain the sorry nonsense about being socially liberal and fiscally conservative. Just call yourself a liberal through and through.


“Politics is the moat, the walls, beyond which lie the barbarians. Fail to keep them at bay, and everything burns.”

Charles Krauthammer, Things That Matter

 

Photo credit: Pixabay Greyerbaby

6 thoughts on “Are We All Liberals Now or Has Liberalism Ended?”

  1. Doctors are one of the most “Liberal” and intolerant groups there is. You know it as well as I, Shawn, that our conservative viewpoints will set us in the crossfires on the MD Facebook pages! Tow the Socialist Left-Wing Agenda or face censure— and possibly even College grief. Freedom of Speech died a long time ago, sadly.

    1. Hey Jodie. Thanks for this.

      It sure feels like what you said is true. I guess I refuse to admit it. There is a loud group which dictates what everyone else is supposed to believe. And many docs line up to preach the party line. But I think there are many who still ask questions.

      Asking questions is a subversive, counter-cultural action. If docs know you won’t attack them, far more are willing to ask provocative questions than what appears to be the case on social media.

      I’m also stubbornly holding out hope that docs will find a deeper, more philosophical conservatism attractive. Too much of what passes for political conservatism is actually orthodoxy (of various faith traditions), Victorian social policy, or something else.

      Medicine cannot function without standards of practice, professionalism, and ancient expectations around the doctor-patient relationship. These and 1000 beside all make medicine fundamentally a conservative institution, in a philosophical sense. This is why I find it so odd that — to your point — so many docs are intolerant liberals.

      Thanks so much for taking time to read and comment. I hope to spend a few blogs trying to introduce a more thoughtful (true) conservatism to offset the nonsense we find in most legacy media these days.

      I hope you are well!

      Cheers

  2. Hi Shawn.

    Interesting that the Krauthammer quote refers to “barbarians”, a much-misused word derived from ancient Greek referring to people who did not speak the language and hence were thought to be “ba-babbling”. That reeks of intolerance in today’s day and age.

    “Classical Liberalism” from my (quaint) vantage point means small government and respect for the individual. Modern “liberal progressivism” is a long way away from espousing those ideals.

    1. Thanks for this, CB

      Excellent comment about the ancient Greek origin of ‘barbaros’ — ie. all non-Greek languages prevalent around ancient Greece.

      I suspect Krauthammer might have intended the Roman usage, namely, a person from an uncivilized nation, or from a nation without appreciation for literature?

      As in Orwell’s 1984, we must submit to a never-ending race of updates to Newspeak.

      Brilliant comment about classical liberalism vs liberal progressivism. They have become opposites on almost all policy issues.

      Thanks so much for reading and offering a comment!

      Cheers

  3. A good one, Shawn, keep going in this direction!
    Liberalism, as commonly practiced today, is just a tool to dismantle the “vibrant social institutions” preparing the ground for a profoundly illiberal world.
    At this point, it would be hard for me to embrace the ‘liberal’ label.
    I will stick with “conservative libertarian” until I can come up with one that properly and equally emphasizes all three pillars of a good society:
    Individual liberty, a robust civil society and a strictly minimal state.

    1. Well said, Zork. Well said indeed.

      I’m struggle with which label should serve as the adjective, but I’m right with you. I’ve been toying with libertarian conservative, but I’m not sure that gets it right either. I don’t find any label fits perfectly with an agrarian approach to life.

      Thanks so much for reading, commenting, and offering some encouragement!

      Cheers

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