The curious misadventures of the Manhattan Man-whore and the Capitalist Pig

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Where are Pat and Claudio?

July 18, 2005

And So It Begins…

Hilary Clinton has long begun her campaign for the presidency. She is now targeting New York City universities, as I have received this email from her office:

Dear [somebody],
My name is [somebody else] and I am an intern at Senator Hillary Clinton’s campaign office. The interns are interested in increasing college awareness about the upcoming Senatorial re-election in 2006. More specifically, we are looking to expand political visibility throughout the campus as well as raising money for the campaign. We are looking to sell Hillary t-shirts at a reduced college rate and to distribute information about the campaign. Please let us know who we could contact regarding this issue. Thank you for your help. The number at the office is 212-213-xxxx or you could email us at [email].

Grrr. Well fine, if Hilary’s peeps are beginning their assault on the college campuses, then I will do my part to counter it. I urge all of you to go and register to volunteer with the Ed Cox campaign. Also, I will try to bring Cox, Ognibene, and some other real Republicans to City College in the fall. I will keep y’all posted on that as it progresses.

Claudio

Ed Cox for New York Senate, 2006

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May 10, 2005

Christian Conservatism = Big Government?

Filed under: News and Views, Conservatism, Taxes, Religion, The Party — Claudio @ 3:15 pm

Not quite, argues Rich Lowry:

DERB MISSES IT [Rich Lowry ]
From reading Derb’s column today, you might get the impression that evangelicals and Catholics are somehow behind the drift toward “big-government conservatism.” This is misconception that has appeared elsewhere too, so it bears some scrutiny. Everyone forgets that the infusion of the religious right into politics, and the shift of evangelicals into the GOP column, partly accounted for Ronald Reagan’s victories in the 1980s. The pre-religious right Republican party was characterized by a go-along-to-get-along establishment that was perfectly happy to accommodate ever-bigger government. It was thankfully swept away by the religious “crazies” (and other new Republican voters). The trend continued with the role the religious right played in the 1994 Republican “revolution,” sweeping the Democrats from power and leading to a full-frontal assault on big government. What happened next is that congressional Republicans got trounced by Bill Clinton in the budget wars, chastening them forevermore. The GOP needed some sort of fresh approach and George Bush came up with “compassionate conservatism.” This was not something forced upon him by religious people. True, it was in some ways, especially rhetorically, pitched toward Catholic swing voters, who are not ideologically anti-statist. But it’s not as though Bush could have discarded them and built an anti-statist political majority with some other group of voters.

Today’s Republican party is more anti-regulation than, say, the GOP under President Bush’s father was. It is more anti-tax. It is too lax on spending–but we complained about spending growth under Bush’s father and even under Reagan. Finally, it is more willing to broach fundamental reforms of the welfare state. Now, through Social Security reform, Bush is actually proposing a creative way to significantly reduce government’s spending over time and ultimately its sway over our lives. If it sinks, it won’t be because of evangelicals and devout Catholics have risen up against it. It will be because of decidedly non-religious right Republicans such as Susan Collins and, well, Derb.
Posted at 03:00 PM

Being both a Christian conservative (Religious Right Represent!) and a paleoconservative (Shrink that Government Baby!) I find arguments that the two philosophies are incompatible to be a bit ludicrous. Indeed, Christian conservatives are less likely to care about spending or balanced budgets, but that is not evidence of a concerted effort to bring the GOP into some sort of “cut-taxes-and-spend” era.

I know I need to post more. Next Sunday I’m heading to Missouri for the Truman Scholarship orientation, and then I have a million finals before I leave for Europe.

And my laptop is broken.

Here is to hoping Pat and I can get our acts together and return to prior form!

Claudio

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