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Name: Mytheos Holt
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Conscience of a Counter-revolutionary

In the past, I have made a great point of the fact that conservatism is intimately tied with tradition. It is no surprise, then, that many frustrated liberals turn to me in shock and inquire, with the dissonant notes of derision and disbelief permeating their voices, how a conservative can, properly speaking, stand against traditions which are liberal, such as the New Deal, the Fourteenth Amendment, the Civil Rights act, and so on, and so on.

This question, despite its obvious malice, raises a serious problem with the term "conservative", and its associated denotation - that one wishes to "conserve" something. Obviously, when it comes to traditions which ought not to have existed, conservatives do not mindlessly spring to the defense of such institutions, and nor should they, lest they become as mindlessly in favor of tradition as liberals are against it. And supposing all the traditions of a particular institution (such as Wesleyan University) are liberal, or have been for a great while? How can the conservative justify interrupting these traditions in the name of abstract ideals, if he distrusts abstractions and abhors the destruction of tradition?

The answer is that the term "conservative" is slightly misleading. I accept that the term has become a fixture of current political dialogue, and that the sense of "conservative" described by said dialogue is meaningful when applied to contemporary American "conservatives". However, I also believe that the term has become amorphous and blasphemed, to the point that we now make distinctions between "paleoconservatives", "neoconservatives", "libertarian conservatives" and "traditionalist conservatives", and all variety of other theoretical "conservatives" for whom the general label of the species will not suffice. This problem of nomenclature, trivial as it may seem, actually points to a problem with referring to oneself as a conservative - one can never be really sure what one means, or whether the label is actually fitting.

In this matter of definition, Rush Limbaugh has suggested that "anything which is not conservative is by definition liberal", but this definition is an invitation to Hell, since the term "conservative" is so disputed that nearly any idea could be considered liberal simply because a single spokesman of conservatism has disowned it. Moreover, the question of libertarianism has troubled many conservatives, with some claiming that it is merely a "chirping sect" which has nothing in common with conservatism, and some claiming that it is the essence of conservatism, at least in the American sense. These questions are nearly impossible to answer when the term "conservative" is so nebulously defined.

Of course, one could turn to the old idea of fusionism, but the current Presidency has so devastated that concept that it seems impossible to recover. For this reason, I intend to take the plunge of proposing a new label for "conservatives" such as myself, who use the term for convenience, but who feel that its meaning is so obscured that it has become nothing but a term of convenience. Speaking for myself, I am not sure what sort of conservative I am, but I am certain of one thing - I am a counter-revolutionary.

What, you ask, is a counter-revolutionary, and how may we know him? Who does he count as his brothers and sisters? What principles beat inexorably in his heart? What policy prescriptions linger in his mind? Is he merely a creature of the brain, or does the soul draw his attention as well? To what extent does tradition inform his thought?

To answer these questions, I intend to set out a few basic principles which guide the counter-revolutionary mind. It should be fairly obvious how they relate to the realm of the concrete. They are as follows:

1. The counter-revolutionary is a man of the Right, in the sense that his name implies - he stands to restore the greatness of what has gone before, though not by ignoring the lessons of what is. His soul makes its home in the stately old mansion of the past, and though he tirelessly seeks to repair the flaws of his spiritual home, he will always stand as a human shield in the face of the voracious wrecking ball that is revolution. The solution to past injustices is not to tear down the institutions that created them, but to reform those institutions organically.

2. The counter-revolutionary believes in the sovereignty of the individual soul, but not in its moral autonomy. He views the human animal as fundamentally flawed, and as capable of corruption and cruelty as it is of virtue and justice. He trusts the Laws of God, but not the Laws of the State, for one is born of immortal perfection, and the other is born of mortal fallibility. The counter-revolutionary believes that man must be convinced to be virtuous of his own free will, and that society may use all the forces it wishes to convince him, with the exception of force, which turns fear of God into fear of the jailhouse.

3. The counter-revolutionary defies centralized despotism in all its forms, and prefers that men who understand him be his masters, rather than the impersonal, abstract tentacles of a Leviathan state.

4. The counter-revolutionary believes that when equality is viewed as a political aim, it is a euphemism for conformity and mediocrity and that equality only exists in the eyes of God. He is an elitist, and believes in a natural hierarchy of humanity which reveals itself spontaneously, rather than through the determinations of central authorities. He believes that the division of wealth and virtue are self-fulfilling prophecies, but that the division of power is corrupted when democratized. He distrusts the barbarous multitude.

5. The counter-revolutionary believes that when efficiency is viewed as a political aim, it is a euphemism for brutality and indifference, as well as incorrectly used. He believes that men are most efficient when allowed to interpret their interests for themselves, or with the help of their voluntarily chosen communities.

6. The counter-revolutionary understands that all Law is based on a conception of morality, but he is also vigilant against Democratically-imposed Satanic visions and utopian delusions, which almost inevitably lead to immorality. He is eternally vigilant for perversions of the letter of the Law, and understands that legality is not equal with moral sanction. He trusts the Law to safeguard rights, and Godly communities to safeguard morality. He believes that the existence of vice is necessary to the existence of virtue, but also understands that all liberty must be ordered, lest it descend into anarchy and barbarism. As such, he believes that all choices are not morally equivalent, and that vice ought to be forcefully punished for the sake of maintaining order.

7. The counter-revolutionary believes in capitalism insofar as it leads to productivity and virtue. He sternly condemns those who make their living on licentiousness and frivolity, but is loath to stop them using the force of a Democratic state, for to do so is to invite them to oppress him if they ever hold power. He believes that capitalism is the least imperfect way to allow members of the natural aristocracy to gain ascendance.

8. The counter-revolutionary believes that man is gifted with the right to judge and exclude, and rejects any attempt to force the existence of associations. He believes that wisdom in choosing one's friends will ultimately lead to greater rewards than believing one has the wisdom to choose others' friends. He respects the right of communities to restrict their membership.

9. The counter-revolutionary believes that war is the health of the State, and that fighting needless battles saps the strength of the virtuous. He is loath to give up fights, but is also loath to enter them.

10. The counter-revolutionary believes that society is permeated with "noble lies", and is loath to expose them, lest their destruction lead to barbarism. He believes that pure reason is dangerous in the extreme, and that the regress is a logical black hole. He frowns upon all forms of indiscriminate "liberation", and does not believe that "social constructs" are inherently arbitrary and dangerous. Rather, he views them as the incomplete genius of providence, towards which new ideas can be added, but which ought never to be completely demolished.
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