David Brooks writes:
America was built by materialistic and sometimes
superficial strivers. It was built by pioneers who voluntarily subjected
themselves to stone-age conditions on the frontier fired by dreams of riches.
It was built by immigrants who crammed themselves into hellish tenements
because they thought it would lead, for their children, to big houses, big cars
and big lives. America has always been
defined by this ferocious commercial energy, this zealotry for
self-transformation, which leads its citizens to vacation less, work longer,
consume more and invent more.
Many Americans, and many
foreign observers, are ambivalent about or offended by this driving material
ambition. Read “The Great Gatsby.” Read D.H. Lawrence on Benjamin Franklin.But today’s Republican Party
unabashedly celebrates this ambition and definition of success. Speaker after
speaker at the convention in Tampa, Fla., celebrated the striver, who started
small, struggled hard, looked within and became wealthy. Speaker after speaker
argued that this ideal of success is under assault by Democrats who look down
on strivers, who undermine self-reliance with government dependency, who
smother ambition under regulations. Republicans promised to get
government out of the way. Reduce the burden of debt. Offer Americans an open
field and a fair chance to let their ambition run.
If you believe, as I do,
that American institutions are hitting a creaky middle age, then you have a lot
of time for this argument. If you believe that there has been a hardening of
the national arteries caused by a labyrinthine tax code, an unsustainable
Medicare program and a suicidal addiction to deficits, then you appreciate this
streamlining agenda, even if you don’t buy into the whole Ayn Rand-influenced
gospel of wealth. On the one hand, you see the
Republicans taking the initiative, offering rejuvenating reform. On the other
hand, you see an exhausted Democratic Party, which says: We don’t have an
agenda, but we really don’t like theirs. Given these options, the choice is
pretty clear.
But there is a flaw in the
vision the Republicans offered in Tampa. It is contained in its rampant
hyperindividualism. Speaker after speaker celebrated the solitary and heroic
individual. There was almost no talk of community and compassionate
conservatism. There was certainly no conservatism as Edmund Burke understood
it, in which individuals are embedded in webs of customs, traditions, habits
and governing institutions. Today’s Republicans strongly
believe that individuals determine their own fates. In a Pew Research Center poll, for example, 57
percent of Republicans believe people are poor because they don’t work hard.
Only 28 percent believe people are poor because of circumstances beyond their
control. These Republicans believe that if only government gets out of the way,
then people’s innate qualities will enable them to flourish.
But there’s a problem. I see
what the G.O.P. is offering the engineering major from Purdue or the business
major from Arizona State. The party is offering skilled people the freedom to
run their race. I don’t see what the party is offering the waitress with two
kids, or the warehouse worker whose wages have stagnated for a decade, or the
factory worker whose skills are now obsolete. The fact is our destinies
are shaped by social forces much more than the current G.O.P. is willing to
admit. The skills that enable people to flourish are not innate but constructed
by circumstances. Government does not always
undermine initiative. Some government programs, like the G.I. Bill, inflame
ambition. Others depress it. What matters is not whether a program is public or
private but its effect on character. Today’s Republicans, who see every
government program as a step on the road to serfdom, are often blind to that.
They celebrate the race to success but don’t know how to give everyone access
to that race.
The wisest speech departed
from the prevailing story line. It was delivered by Condoleezza Rice. It echoed
an older, less libertarian conservatism, which harkens back to Washington,
Tocqueville and Lincoln. The powerful words in her speech were not “I” and “me”
— the heroic individual. They were “we” and “us” — citizens who emerge out of
and exist as participants in a great national project. Rice celebrated material
striving but also larger national goals — the long national struggle to extend
benefits and mobilize all human potential. She subtly emphasized how our
individual destinies are dependent upon the social fabric and upon public
institutions like schools, just laws and our mission in the world. She put less
emphasis on commerce and more on citizenship.
Today’s Republican Party may
be able to perform useful tasks with its current hyperindividualistic
mentality. But its commercial soul is too narrow. It won’t be a worthy
governing party until it treads the course Lincoln trod: starting with
individual ambition but ascending to a larger vision and creating a national
environment that arouses ambition and nurtures success.
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