| Political
Culture in America: Conservative Primacy in Today’s
World
Kenneth Lee
Conservatives are now becoming
more and more prevalent in United State’s
political culture. The entrenched leftist bureaucrats
are being replaced with conservatives. The Supreme
Court has a solid conservative block in the majority.
President Bush’s administration is hindering
on the brink of becoming a theocratically run
administration. The airwaves are being inundated
with conservative radio talk shows and are poised
to take over television media. Although political
activism once was mainly a leftist weapon, it
is now being used by right winged interest groups.
United State’s political
structure is based on constituency. If a politician
doesn’t have an interest to protect, than
the politician doesn’t have financial backing.
Thus, most policies that are debated and passed
are for the constituents. To win, factions or
political parties develop to stream-line interests,
which lead to divergent ideologies. Democrats
are leftist and often idealistic. Most democrats
believe they have a moral duty to protect rights
of all individuals, protect the environment, and
create a more just world. Conversely, the Republican
Party is often a loose coalition of self-interested
groups, ranging from Corporate America to the
Religious right. The Republican Party is often
associated with family values, religious orthodoxy,
pro-business, and often for an isolated political
and economic climate.
In
the past, religion and politics didn’t mix,
and especially during the fifties, religion didn’t
have a place in politics. At the start of the
Civil Rights Movement, White Baptist pastors looked
down on the intermingling of politics and religion.
Reverend Jerry Falwell preached the follies of
Dr. Martin Luther King’s participation in
the political arena. To Jerry Falwell, religion
was too holy for the shortcomings of politics.
In spite of white religious outcry, Black ministers
marched, protested, and spoke out against segregation
to their parish.
During the Counter-culture revolution,
several social breakthroughs came about: the birth-control
pill, the drug counter-culture, the global threat
of communism, and the rise of feminism. As the
youth generation started to tear down the old
social traditions of conformity and piety, the
white ministers entered the political realm. In
turn, an alignment formed in the Republican Party.
Fundamental Christians started to donate, form
leagues, protest against the "immoral"
legislation, and rally for a more traditional
society. Jerry Falwell, repudiating his claims,
spoke out against Roe vs. Wade, and the religious
right has not unaligned themselves with the Republican
Party since.
Subsequently, Conservatives
were gaining momentum with the help of the religious
right. Fundamental Christians were now in the
offensive against the Democratic Party, assuming
the party culpability for the immoral mess America
was in. This crystallization of constituents got
Nixon elected. And in the 1980’s, another
wave of social revolution became apparent. Gay
Rights began to gain momentum. United States was
fighting stagflation by undermining industry’s
autonomy, and the Porn industry was becoming more
profitable and bigger. Under Reagan’s administration,
Pro-business and the Religious right got what
they wanted. The government started to deregulate
public industries, cut income tax by 25%, and
allow industries greater latitude. To satisfy
the Religious right, the Justice Department was
prosecuting the porn industry and undermined gay
right’s activists.
During Clinton’s administration,
the Republican held House prevented Clinton from
passing any legislation promised in his platform,
including Hillary Clinton’s Health care
program. After the widely popular Clinton administration,
a bitter fight was waged for the presidential
office. Al Gore, with Hollywood’s support,
had a comparable war chest to George W. Bush,
with right-winged Christian “breakfast clubs”.
However, something unprecedented happened. The
conservative controlled United State’s Supreme
Court superceded Florida’s Supreme Court’s
legitimacy and elected the president for Florida.
Now, there is a strong structural
alignment of all three branches of government.
Not surprisingly, Republican activists, Anti-abortion
activists, religious activists, and Business lobbies
are steam rolling in legislation, which benefits
their own interests. This political alignment
that took fifty years to form, and will not disintegrate
until their agendas are completed, especially
the Fundamental Christians. More alarming is the
willingness of the American public to support
a theocrat such as Bush, who asks for everyone’s
prayer. At the zenith of Republican power in America,
the conservatives are chipping away our secular
state and imposing religiously based legislation.
Kenneth Lee is a student
at Santa Monica College. |