
Why the Right Should be Boring Again
From the 1920s to 2016, one of the strongest factions of the right has always been the boring “small government conservative.” With notable exceptions, like an idealistic vision for world peace backed by US military supremacy, the party primarily stayed constant in their role as the adults in the room to push back against unrealistic Democratic social goals. Trump changed all this with a few subtle shifts in perspective that led to massive changes. His goals were in direct disagreement with liberal social and economic policies, yet he and his followers approached the world from a different direction than the Democrats yet with shockingly similar perspectives. The desire to limit the government was all but forgotten whenever a more present desire could be fulfilled by federal action. Years of low tax evangelism were replaced with support of tariffs. The Maga mind demands instant repair for failing industries and cities rather than time and slow institutional change. Voters saw that the boring Republicans of the past were opportunists, and decided to vote in extremely active opportunists which accelerated rather than reversed the course of national decline. While the boring right of the past was deeply flawed, their understanding of the federal government as a constrained protector of rights is far better than the current popular vision of it as a force to right all wrongs in the world.
The Trumpian mindset and the modern Democratic mindset are both derived primarily from emotion. They both grow positive emotions into their most egregious form. The Trump voter expands the desire for self preservation to be the center of their political philosophy, while the liberal uses a misguided sense of responsibility to fix the whole world’s issues all at once. Both desires in moderation are objectively good, but the possession of one and idolization of the other leads to things as destructive as dissolving police forces and destroying national trade through tariffs. The people let their emotion lead in a fundamentally new way in 2016, and no election will ever be the same. The conservative of the past did not die, but they were forced to rebrand for a world that prized emotion above all else. Even those who were strong and principled people in the past have become little more than anti-woke propagandists. Rand Paul, and a few others have held to the same principles they espoused before the Trump era, but most have sensed the shifting desires of the American people and done whatever they need to stay in office.…