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Principles Of Government

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  • Home
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  • Characteristics of Government
    • INTRODUCTION
    • SOCIALISM
    • COMPETITION
    • DEMOCRACY AND VOTING
    • SOCIAL POLICIES EFFECTS ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
    • GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM AND THE MODERN LEFT
    • EVOLVING IDEOLOGIES
    • DEMOCRACIES AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
  • Principles of Government
    • INTRODUCTION
    • CITIZENSHIP
    • BELIEF SYSTEM
    • GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
    • FISCAL POLICIES
    • SOCIAL POLICIES
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Principles of Government

The Road to Revolution a

By Rod Dreher - September/October issue

Copyright ©2020 The American Conservative

Principles of Government · March 1, 2023 ·

By Rod Dreher – Longer article – In 1951, six years after the end of World War II, the political philosopher Hannah Arendt published The Origins of Totalitarianism, in an attempt to understand how such radical ideologies of both left and right had seized the minds of so many in the 20th century. Arendt’s book used to be a staple in college history and political theory courses. With the end of the Cold War 30 years behind us, who today talks about totalitarianism? Almost no one—and if they do, it’s about Nazism, not communism. Unsurprisingly, young Americans suffer from profound ignorance of what communism was, and is. The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, a nonprofit educational and research organization established by the U.S. Congress, carries out an annual survey of Americans to determine their attitudes toward communism, socialism, and Marxism in general. In 2019, the survey found that a startling number of Americans of the post-Cold War generations have favorable views of left-wing radicalism, and only 57 percent of Millennials believe that the Declaration of Independence offers a better guarantee of “freedom and equality” than The Communist Manifesto. Read More

Filed Under: (B) Culture, Character and Ideology, Articles, Education, Culture, Ideology, Featured Content

Council on Foreign Relations – Independent

Principles of Government · August 19, 2023 ·

The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an independent, nonpartisan membership organization, think tank, and publisher dedicated to being a resource for its members, government officials, business executives, journalists, educators and students, civic and religious leaders, and other interested citizens in order to help them better understand the world and the foreign policy choices facing the United States and other countries. Founded in 1921, CFR takes no institutional positions on matters of policy. Our goal is to start a conversation in this country about the need for Americans to better understand the world. Website – cfr.org Read More

Filed Under: Major Think Tanks

The Plot To Change America

Principles of Government · August 28, 2023 ·

By Mike Gonzalez – Introduction –  The political purpose of identity politics is to divide the country into groups as a strategy to change America completely. Identity politics sees people’s beliefs and interests as determined by their membership in specific groups, particularly sex, race, sexual orientation, and disability status. It is an enemy of reason and Enlightenment values. Identity politics and critical theory are intended to transform America from a culture that values the work ethic and responsible individualism to one that directs distribution of group privileges, as individual natural rights are discarded in the rush to collectivism. Gonzalez defines identity politics as, the deliberate creation of pan-ethnic and other identity groups with the idea that members of these groups should get compensatory justice and adopt the culture of victimhood that this encourages. The book’s purpose is to explain how and why the elements of identity politics came together, who was behind the ideology’s rise, and what we can do about it. The book explains the rise of identity politics, the doctrines and philosophies behind it, and its threat to American liberties. Our government has created ethnic and sexual categories whose members have been instilled with resentments against the country and its system and given real financial benefits for nursing those grievances. Insisting on group grievances thereby perpetuates the identity groups. If we stop this vicious cycle by cutting off the funding we can free ourselves from the grip of identity politics. The book traces the origins of identity politics to the late 1960s and 70s when the white establishment panicked over the black riots. They offered temporary racial benefits to pacify the groups supplying the rioters. They accepted leftist activists claim that there was an analogy between the suffering of Blacks and the experience of Mexican Americans, Chinese, Puerto Rican, Japanese, and other specified groups. The analogy was later extended to women as a group. Activists sought to move the country away from its limited government traditions and toward the centralized state planning drawn from Kantian, Hegelian, and Marxian worldviews. The book’s goal is to change how the nation thinks about identity politics and identity groups by exposing the actors and the theories behind it. The first four chapters of Part I describe how the main ethnic and sexual categories were created. In Part II, Chapters 5, 6 and 7 explain the ideological basis for such category creation; Chapter 8 concludes the book by offering policy corrections and practical political solutions for ending identity politics. To this end, the book seeks to help us understand identity politics genesis and purpose. A particularly dangerous component of identity politics is the coercive diversity to which we must pay lip service. Our children were traditionally taught that all Americans regardless of origin are united in a common cause. The new diversity is its opposite. The intent of identity politics is to divide America into semiautonomous, formal, and cohesive subgroups that have distinct outlooks, aspirations, privileges, and rights. “Social justice” requires the redistribution of resources to members of identity groups. When diversity of race becomes the lodestar, diversity of views is banned. An example is the suppression of speech that the gatekeepers of identity politics label “hate speech”. The speed which identity politics has become acceptable is bewildering. Identity as a member of one of these groups confers a claim to victimhood, which has been elevated above individual accomplishment.  Self-image and self-esteem are powerful motivators affecting our chances of success or failure. Identity politics instills self-doubt and encourages you to nurse grievances. Those who go around in search of racial or sexual slights are setting themselves up for a lifetime of self-inflicted grief – they are trading in self-reliance, self-respect, and success. If ever there was a Faustian bargain this is it. We are living in this victimhood culture today. The goal of social justice warriors is not equality but their new definition of equity – equal outcomes, the reverse of equal opportunity. In academia, critical theory seeks to replace Western culture by a full frontal attack on the Enlightenment tradition of liberal democracy. Since it relies on the creation of groups and giving people incentives to adhere to them – the ability to claim oppression is the key to the bank – eliminating group making’s subsidies can rid us of identity politics.. Identity politics is a not grassroots movement. It is an elite project. Pan-ethnic umbrella groups, such as Hispanics and Asians, were created by political activists, intellectuals, philanthropists, and their allies in the bureaucracy. Philanthropy had a tremendous amount to do with creation of identity politics, particularly the Ford Foundation’s grants. Fostering resentment is an effective bonding agent of solidarity for forming groups into voting blocs. Terms such as “minority”, “person of color”, and “privilege”, were introduced to promote the sense of grievance and resentment that is the lifeblood of identity politics. Mexican Americans began to be consolidated into a voting block by Saul Alinsky. His groups trained the Hispanic activists who used Ford Foundation money to fund the ethnic special interest organization La Raza and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF). The intellectual leaders of identity politics saw philanthropy as a powerful tool to advance their agenda, especially with the Ford Foundation. The creation of an Asian identity group was spearheaded by Chinese-American and Japanese American Marxists indoctrinated by the Black Panther movement. Feminists in the 1960s were also influenced by the work of early Marxists.  In 1974, the Census Bureau created the first National Advisory Committee On Race. Gonzales explains the role of the Census Bureau’s National Advisory Committee in the establishment of identity politics, and the way radical organizations have used them to insinuate themselves into the policymaking process. The idea was to first force Americans to divide themselves into ethnic groups through the Census and other means, and then imbue them with grievances, and tempt them to identify with such groups in perpetuity through a system of entitlements like affirmative action, set-asides in… Read More

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Ideology and Culture

Unintended Consequences

Principles of Government · August 25, 2023 ·

By Edward Conard – The world of economics is deeply divided and inherently political. Advocates for stronger incentives for risk taking and those for income redistribution each work backward from their conclusions to find a set of indisputable beliefs on which to build their arguments. The economy is so complex that it is impossible to definitively isolate the effect of any one factor. This book attempts to explain how the economy works, why the U.S. has outperformed its high wage rivals, what caused the financial crisis, and what improvements might better protect our economy without damaging its growth Read More

Filed Under: Book Reviews

Preventing Suicide by Higher Education A

By Arthur Milikh - Summer 2021 Issue

Copyright @ National Affairs, Inc., and the American Enterprise Institute

Principles of Government · August 25, 2023 ·

By Arthur Milikh – Summer 2021 Issue, National Affairs – From the birth of the modern conservative movement, dissidents concerned with civic and liberal education have tried almost everything to reshape America’s universities: … This article outlines the many grave problems of American higher education (with suggestions about how to correct them) and explains how its domination by the left is changing our culture, our politics, and our society in ways that threaten our future…  Read More

This article outlines the many grave problems of American higher education (with suggestions about how to correct theem) and explains how its domination by the left is changing our culture, our politics, and our society in ways that threaten our future

Filed Under: (A) Culture, Character and Ideology, (A) Education, Articles, Education, Culture, Ideology

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Characteristics of Government

  • INTRODUCTION
  • SOCIALISM
  • COMPETITION
  • DEMOCRACY AND VOTING
  • SOCIAL POLICIES EFFECTS ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
  • GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM AND THE MODERN LEFT
  • EVOLVING IDEOLOGIES
  • DEMOCRACIES AND NATIONAL DEFENSE

Principles of Government

  • INTRODUCTION
  • CITIZENSHIP
  • BELIEF SYSTEM
  • GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
  • FISCAL POLICIES
  • SOCIAL POLICIES
  • FREE MARKETS AND REGULATION
  • SOUND MONEY
  • THE RULE OF LAW
  • DEFENSE AND FOREIGN POLICY
  • Conservation and Environment

Voting

  • Introduction

Resources

  • Featured Articles
  • ARTICLES
  • BOOK REVIEWS
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  • Print Resources
* All material on this site is for educational purposes only.

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Characteristics of Government

  • INTRODUCTION
  • SOCIALISM
  • COMPETITION
  • DEMOCRACY AND VOTING
  • SOCIAL POLICIES EFFECTS ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
  • GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM AND THE MODERN LEFT
  • EVOLVING IDEOLOGIES
  • DEMOCRACIES AND NATIONAL DEFENSE

Principles of Good Government

  • INTRODUCTION
  • CITIZENSHIP
  • BELIEF SYSTEM
  • GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
  • FISCAL POLICIES
  • SOCIAL POLICIES
  • FREE MARKETS AND REGULATION
  • SOUND MONEY
  • THE RULE OF LAW
  • DEFENSE AND FOREIGN POLICY
  • Conservation and Environment

Resources

  • Featured Articles
  • ARTICLES
  • BOOK REVIEWS
  • Books
  • MAJOR THINK TANKS
  • CIVIC EDUCATION WEB RESOURCES
  • Important Conservative Organizations
  • Conservative American Colleges and Universities
  • Print Resources

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