‘Free to lose’ isn’t good philosophy for the right wing BY MARK STEYN

If Milton Friedman had to die, then a week after the defeat of a Republican Congress that had apparently forgotten every lesson Friedman taught in Free To Choose is eerily apt timing. As it happens, had ill health not intervened, Professor Friedman would have been disembarking round about now from a National Review post-election cruise with yours truly and various other pundits and commentators.

Instead, we were obliged to sail without him, and in the days that followed I found myself wondering what the great man would have made of the most salient feature of our deliberations: On the one hand, there are those conservatives for whom the war trumps everything and peripheral piffle like “No Child Left Behind” can be argued over when the jihad’s been seen off. On the other, there are those conservatives for whom the war is peripheral and, insofar as it exists, it doesn’t begin to mitigate the abandonment of Friedmanite principles on public spending, education and much else. There is a huge gulf between these two forces, to the point where the War Party and the Small Government Party seem as mutually hostile as the Sunni and Shia on their worst days. If the Republicans can’t reunite these two wings before 2008, they’ll lose again and keep on losing.

Take, for example……

More from Chicago Sun-Times

Technorati Tags , , , ,    
Social Networking:
  • del.icio.us
  • digg
  • Furl
  • NewsVine
  • TailRank
  • YahooMyWeb

Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.