Come together
Social and economic conservatives must find common ground and fight for the future of our children
The past couple of months, economic conservatives have aggressively opposed President Obama's agenda to radically expand government, financed by deficits that run into the trillions. If social conservatives want to protect America's families and social values, they must join with their fiscally conservative cousins to oppose President Obama and reverse America's culture of debt.
America was built on individual opportunity. This is the core of the economic conservative agenda. The family unit is the core building block of American society. This is the heart of the social conservative agenda.
There is a key overlap here that many conservatives-and even their leaders-overlook. Living within your means and managing your finances to avoid long-term debt is part of building strong families, providing for your children, and teaching them to provide for themselves.
I recently attended a speech at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) given by Charles Murray, in which he said that the only four human institutions characterized by deep personal satisfaction are family, community, vocation, and faith. Murray argues that the goal of social policy is to ensure that these institutions are robust and vital.
Many people have heard of Adam Smith's most famous book, The Wealth of Nations, which helped lay the foundation for free market systems and classical economics. Fewer people have heard of another of Adam Smith's books, The Theory of Moral Sentiments. He argues that humans possess a moral sense that causes us to approve certain actions while condemning others. The grandfather of modern economics believed that a sense of morality was necessary for a society to flourish.
Both economic and social conservatives need to grasp the common ground here. Strong families are essential to strong economies, and financial management is a key family value.
Recently, America has been moving from a culture of ownership to a culture of debt. People went from wanting to own their home and car and have enough for retirement to making monthly payments on everything they consume while relying on someone else (the government) to pay all the bills when they get older.
As others have said, the president's agenda would bury our children and even our grandchildren under a mountain range of debt. President Obama is saddling people who have not yet even been born with debt incurred by spending wealth that has not yet even been created.
One of the most alarming aspects of this situation is that few people are talking about what these policies are doing to our children's worldview. If left unchecked, these policies will cause a generational paradigm shift.
These policies are a Trojan horse creating not only a mentality of government reliance, but also a mindset where a lifestyle of permanent debt is acceptable. Not long ago, someone paying massive interest to finance things they couldn't afford was looked upon as irresponsible, and their behavior shameful.
Now, instead of debt being an unfortunate necessity for massive purchases like a house, everything is being financed by interest-bearing debt. If you can't afford something, don't save up until you have the money, just put it on a credit card and pay 12 percent or 20 percent interest for years. This interest can double the sticker price, cutting in half people's purchasing power and plunging them ever-deeper into debt.
For purchases like a house, many are leveraging themselves out as far as the bank will allow, rather than exercise self-restraint. A person who can responsibly afford payments on a $200,000 house is now more likely to get a $400,000 house, put other expenses on a credit card, and barely make the minimum payments. It's the people engaging in such behavior who got swamped when the housing bubble burst.
Being able to responsibly steward your resources, live within your means, and plan for the future is a family value. Proverbs says, "The borrower is a slave to the lender." Those who claim the Bible (or some other text) as a guiding authority have plenty of scriptural admonition to work toward being financially self-sufficient.
Many social and economic conservatives don't work together because some of their leaders don't like each other. Many economic conservatives don't care for the religiosity of many social leaders and treat them with the same disdain that liberals do. Many social conservatives are turned off by the moral failings and personal choices of some economic leaders and don't feel comfortable partnering with them. The few who are leaders in both camps are frustrated in their efforts to bridge this divide.
Both groups need to get past these differences and work together. It's not about economic leaders professing false conversions or social leaders abandoning their standards. It's about recognizing common interests and fighting for their children.
Politicians rail that their constituents demand government to be run like their family budget, living within their means. But that's exactly the problem that causes runaway government spending. Too many families are not living within their means; they're living in never-ending debt. And as they get comfortable with this debt and convey the message to their kids that such debt is OK, they don't protest enough when the government incurs the same kind of long-term debt.
With liberal Democrats controlling Congress and the White House, conservatives cannot afford internal conflicts. As Benjamin Franklin said during the American Revolution, "We must, indeed, all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately." Ken Blackwell is a senior fellow with the Family Research Council.
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