On Post-Liberalism
In light of recent events, the right must take stock after a difficult period and put together a clear platform that will appeal to people, while also defending our ability to live out good, healthy and virtuous lives.
In America, people describe the left as liberals and the right as conservatives, but in practice nearly everyone is a liberal. There are left-wing and right-wing versions of liberalism. Each side cares greatly about freedom above all, but emphasizes freedom in different ways. Right liberals care about freedom to keep what one earns, the freedom to defend one’s self with firearms, and the like. Left liberals care about freedom to live however one wants, freedom from severe poverty, and such.
We on the right should abandon our reflexive liberalism. Freedom is good, but it is only one good among many.
When our views are suppressed on social media, we shrug and say “oh it’s okay, it was a private company.”
When people are deplatformed and lose their jobs for merely expressing a political opinion, we think first of the right of a business to be free to fire employees, rather than the right of a person to be able to earn a living.
When drag queen story hour comes to the local library, you can find right wingers championing viewpoint neutrality and even claiming it is right and just that drag queens interact with children at the library.
The signature legislative achievement of the Trump years was a corporate tax cut. Lower corporate taxes, we are told, are a big win for the free market (or Woke Corporate America, depending on your point of view).
Freedom is a good, but it is one good among many. Moreover, the freedom that is advertised today is often a bastardized one, the idea that freedom is the ability to do whatever we want, rather than freedom to life a good life, free even from slavery to vices. Some pretend that a man would be more free if the state would stand aside and allow him to become a slave to dangerous addictive drugs. Others insist a woman is only free if she has the right to condemn her own children to death before they leave the womb.
Being reflexively liberal has led people on the right to say and advocate harshness against the poor and the needy, to defend rampant student loan usury, which has trapped people in paying off large loans when they should be forming households and families.
Now this does not mean we need to agree with Democrats on all fiscal issues. While we can support a higher minimum wage, a $15 minimum wage applied across the country, even in low wage rural areas, and despite the advent of labor saving robotics in the service sector, may be unwise. Having the government control all of health care through the tax system may be less efficient (and come with more side effects if the government mismanages health care) than creating a true safety net with public hospitals and clinics. At the same time, we don’t have to pretend that a desperate woman agreeing to work for $4/hr is a contract freely entered into, or that the government has no role to play in health care, as we watch pharmaceutical prices skyrocket or people suffer for want of adequate care.
The post-liberal can acknowledge that liberalism has some advantages. Despite recent events, politically liberal nations tend to produce greater political stability and economically liberal nations tend to produce great wealth, which while it does not make for a healthy society on its own, certainly offers great advantages relative to a poor society. Yet we also see that liberalism tends to result in anti-social outcomes. Civil society has been weakening over the past few generations. We see ever increasing degeneracy, and healthy family formation has been in long decline, devastated by the sexual revolution and no fault divorce.
Let’s not make an idol of freedom. Let freedom - true freedom - take its place with duty, responsibility, family, solidarity, and virtue.












