Objectivism in life and thought

Rick Santorum: The Most Anti-Reagan Republican

Rick Santorum: The Most Anti-Reagan Republican

By Edward Hudgins

January 6, 2012 - With his virtual tie in the Iowa Caucuses, Rick Santorum is the final flavor-of-the-week conservative alternative to former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.

While it might be tough for voters to decide which Republican candidate best represents the principles of Ronald Reagan, it is easy to determine who is antithetical to the Gipper’s values: that opponent of liberty is Rick Santorum.

When Republicans leaned toward liberty

Conservative Republicans favor traditional values, seeing families and religion as essential to social order. In contrast to libertarians, they would sometimes allow government to interfere with lifestyle choices, especially sexual morality. But most conservatives, like libertarians, favor individual liberty and free markets, with government strictly limited in scope and power; they rightly fear that the state is the greatest threat to the traditions they value.

Thus Barry Goldwater, the 1964 GOP presidential candidate wrote, “The first thing… [a conservative] has learned about man is that each member of the species is a unique creature. Man’s most sacred possession is his individual soul.” The 1964 party platform stated that “Every person has the right to govern himself, to fix his own goals, and to make his own way with a minimum of governmental interference.”

When Reagan ran for president in 1980, the platform began with a section entitled “Free Individuals in a Free Society.” It read “It has long been a fundamental conviction of the Republican Party that government should foster in our society a climate of maximum individual liberty and freedom of choice. Properly informed, our people as individuals or acting through instruments of popular consultation can make the right decisions affecting personal or general welfare.”

Santorum the collectivist

Santorum fundamentally disagrees.

According to Santorum, “This whole idea of personal autonomy—I don’t think that most conservatives hold that point of view.” Specifically, “One of the criticisms I make is to what I refer to as more of a libertarianish right.”

Concerning libertarians—though he tends to confuse them with liberals—he says “They have this idea that people should be left alone, be able to do whatever they want to do. Government should keep our taxes down and keep our regulation low and that we shouldn’t get involved in the bedroom, we shouldn’t get involved in cultural issues, you know, people should do whatever they want.”

Santorum will have none of it. His book It Takes a Family was meant to be an answer to Hillary Clinton’s It Takes a Village. We see that his goal is not to move us away from government interference with families. Rather, it is to move the government away from protecting individual liberty.

Santorum argues that American liberals “say ‘it takes a village’ but really what their ideology is based around is the individual.” No Rick! A village is a collective, not an individual. Liberals favor majority votes in villages trumping the liberty of individuals. Libertarians favor individual choice.

Santorum continues “We understand that the basic unit of society is the family, that the individual needs to be nurtured and supported and molded and shaped through this family structure, through the real village, which is the church, the community organizations….”

Freedom as slavery

 Santorum’s campaign banners read “Faith, Family, and Freedom.” The inclusion of the last term is disingenuous. He would replace the “freedom to be left alone” with the Orwellian notion of “the freedom to attend to one’s duties—duties to God, to family, and to neighbors.” And if you don’t want to travel the path of self-sacrifice that he, our would-be ayatollah, prescribes, you will be, in the words of Rousseau, “forced to be free” by the government.

In his breathtaking distortion of history—he can’t be this ignorant—Santorum rejects the notion that the Founders endorsed the pursuit of individual happiness as a right the protection of which is the purpose of government. Does he have any clue who Thomas Jefferson was? Does he have any apprehension that “happiness,” along with “life” and “liberty” as listed in the Declaration, are attributes of individuals, not groups?

More Obama than Reagan

Santorum has more in common with Barack Obama than Ronald Reagan. He is a collectivist, only his collective is the family, not the village nor, as with Marx, society as a whole.

Traditional conservatives and most libertarians acknowledge the importance of families in a free, stable society. But they understand that the moral unit, the living, breathing entity that thinks and chooses and acts, and that has goals and aspirations, is the individual. They thus agree that in society with others individuals must seek values such as career and family based on mutual consent, respecting the rights of others.

Santorum might mouth support for free markets and limited government. But as a committed anti-individualist he is probably the Republican who would most endanger liberty. Those Republicans who favor what was the core value for Reagan and Goldwater had better understand what Santorum is all about before they enter the voting booth.

EXPLORE:
"The Need for a New Individualism"   Edward Hudgins, January-February 2005.

 

While it might be tough for

While it might be tough for voters to decide which Republican candidate best represents the principles of Ronald Reagan, it is easy to determine who is antithetical to the Gipper’s values. immediate annuity quotes

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neo-con

santorum's ex senate aide is baraba ladeen; barbara is spouse to michael ladeen; michael ladeen is chair at american enterprise institute; 70; and neo-con extraordinaire; see his wiki profile. santorum is a douchebag.

No to the Con's

Grouping together conservatives and libertarians is a huge mistake. Con's are the enemy!

What they want to control

Rand also wrote that liberals and conservatives respectively would allow freedom in arenas they consider least important. Thus liberals are economic determinists and thus want government to control the economy. Conservatives who see society moved by personal morality and lifestyles want to control those choices. Santorum did not write a book on "The Moral Importance of Economic Freedom." Rather, he wrote about why his vision of the family trumps individual liberty. That's the motivation that burns in him. --- Edward Hudgins

Pick Your Poison

This Republican primary field reminds me of a great Rand quote: “In any compromise between food and poison, it is only death that can win. In any compromise between good and evil, it is only evil that can profit.”

Disappointing

It is unusual that I comment on an article printed but I found this article shockingly disappointing. Mr. Huggins who typically is very thorough in his disections of topics, relied heavily on partial quotes and allusions vs. specific topics. Mr. Sanatorum is far from a favorite but I would prefer him or any of the other republicans vs. Obama. As for food or poison... Our options are between two poisons, I will choose the one that will provide a slower death so that I may find a cure. If I'm alive I have a chance.

vinctim's sanction

By voting for a lesser evil, one still votes for evil. Remember the "sanction of the victim" as the key to failing to keep one's liberty. One always can choose to vote for nobody, although as a card-carrying Republican i'll often vote for the libertarian candidate as a protest against the main candidates. (A Romney-Santorum ticket would be gut-wrenching to consider.) And this year we have a new option - ww.americanselect.org!!

Gary Johnson is FOOD!

Don't fall into self imposed, media fueled blindness. There's more than two choices out there.

Honest disagreement is not poison

Something else we learned from Ayn Rand, and Objectivism, is that reasonable people can, and often do, disagree. Ron Paul's stance on every issue may not be correct, but his principles -- limited, constitutional government, free markets, and individual rights -- most certainly are. While some may disagree with a particular position, his is a principled life and candidacy -- one both Ronald Reagan and Barry Goldwater would be proud to endorse.

Romney Vs. Santorum - Not an Honest Disagreement

I agree with your comment if Ron Paul remains in the race. As Ed points out, Santorum is the next anti-Romney challenger. If Romney vs. Santorum is the ultimate choice we face, I think the "pick your poison" metaphor is very applicable.

Agreed!

Agreed!