uziq wrote:
Jay wrote:
uziq wrote:
it's worrying that you think they are interchangeable.
It's worrying that you are still such a pedantic twit in your late 20s.
i'm sorry but it's not pedantic to state that there's a difference between a capitalist state having a public spending budget and socialism. go back to school. they even used the phrase "compassionate conservatism" ffs.
The neoconservative wold view stems from the teachings of Leo Strauss when he was at the University of Chicago. It's an amorphous collection of ideas whose goal is power. The welfare state is a means to an end as it allows the worker to continue working without wasting energy on worrying about getting hurt or old. You are correct in that it does not advocate state control over the means of production, but that is not out of the question either if it is in the State's interest.
Control over the means of production is asserted by other methods anyway. Regulatory agencies are used to direct entire industries to the point that they become quasi-state run entities like utilities. Only whatever profit the regulators allow remains in private hands. This is the Obamacare model.
Every position leads to centralized control over the country, and this is the other half of compassionate conservatism. They believe that battles over gay rights are disruptive because it undermines the family structure that stability stems from. They oppose abortion because a lowered birth rate weakens the state and undermines the welfare state. They're for drug control because drugs lower productivity. It's all very rational if you view it from the nationalistic perspective.
It's not an inherently immoral or evil philosophy, but it's one that allows evil people to do a lot of damage if they gained control. It is almost completely identical to American Progressivism, the difference being it tends to be more hawkish and kinder to business. Hence the common complaint that Republicans and Democrats are two sides of the same coin. They really are.