November 23, 2014

OUR REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT:

Obama, Our Modern John C. Calhoun (J. Christian Adams, November 20th, 2014, PJ Media)

One of the ideas that plunged America into the bloody Civil War was the belief that federal laws could be nullified by those who disagree with them. Senator John C. Calhoun of South Carolina was a chief proponent of the doctrine that Southern states could nullify federal laws if states disagreed with them. In announcing a lawless amnesty edict tonight, President Obama is our modern John C. Calhoun.

Elementary school civics class has taught the same thing for two hundred years: Congress makes the laws, the president enforces the laws, the judiciary interprets the laws. The reason this is so is because individual liberty thrives when government is hobbled by division of power. People live better lives when federal power is stymied.

When President Obama announces that he will be suspending laws to bless the illegal presence of millions of foreigners in the United States, he will have adopted the most basic philosophy of John C. Calhoun: some laws can be tossed aside because his ends justify the lawlessness.

Why Conservatives Still Share a Tent With Calhoun (SCOTT GALUPO • February 14, 2013, American Conservative)

Sam Tanenhaus has an important article in the New Republic on movement conservatism's entanglement with the ideological underpinnings of slavery. This is hardly a secret. Liberals have read coded racism into "states' rights" rhetoric for decades. But Tanenhaus is making a subtler point. Conservatives are not closet racists; rather, as evidenced by their talk of nullification and their flirtation with electoral college rigging, they have internalized the sectionalist dogma of Sen. John Calhoun in such a way that seals their demographic fate. Conservative Republicans risk becoming a "lost cause" party that's designed to "resist, ignore, or even overturn the will of the electoral majority," Tanenhaus writes.

Like I said, I think it's an important article. Conservatives should read, and grapple with, it. Still, it seems to me that Tanhenhaus's characterization of Calhoun as a "crank" (if a brilliant one) is reductive. Postwar conservative popularizers like Russell Kirk included him in their pantheon with appropriate reflection.

If your ends don't justify the means the issue is unimportant or you're wrong, as Calhoun was.



Posted by at November 23, 2014 7:59 AM
  

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