The most feared word in the English language are "I'm from the government and I'm here to help."
Liberals Celebrate 'Decline of Conservatism'
By Nathan Burchfiel
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
June 19, 2007
Washington (CNSNews.com) - Liberals who gathered for the fifth
annual Take Back America conference in Washington, D.C., on Monday
declared conservatism to be in decline -- even "on the way out," in the
words of some movement leaders.
"Despite a decade ... of
domination by the far right agenda in Congress and the media and the
political arena, they have been unable to bring the American people
along," Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation
of America, said during a panel discussion on conservative politics.
"Conservatism
in America is on the way out," she said, adding that "progressives are
finally on the offense and we're not playing defense anymore."
The discussion, billed as "The War of Ideas: How Conservatism Has Failed," opened with the screening of a videoshot
by Max Blumenthal, a writer for The Nation, who went to the annual
Conservative Political Action Conference in March to confront and
embarrass conservatives.
In the video, Blumenthal asks columnist
Michelle Malkin, author of "In Defense of Internment," to sign a
photograph of a Japanese-American internment camp (she refused on the
grounds that Blumenthal is not engaging in "honest debate"); and he
asks Ann Coulter why, as a proponent of "the sanctity of marriage,"
she's never been married herself. Coulter laughed and thanked
Blumenthal for respecting her privacy.)
The video, which
declared that the conservative movement is "in crisis," drew laughs and
gasps from the liberal Take Back America crowd.
Conservatism's
problem is deeper than controversial speakers and divisions within the
movement, argued Rick Perlstein, a senior fellow at the Campaign for
America's Future (CAF), which sponsors Take Back America.
"Conservatism
will always fail," Perlstein said, adding that the ideology's problems
stem from its main tenet of smaller government.
"People who
confess their contempt for government cannot be trusted to govern," he
said. "When you start breaking down the institutions of government and
trifling with them, then you make it harder to govern efficiently."
Perlstein
said conservatism "is a movement about nothing, and I don't think it
can succeed, and I implore the American people to turn their backs on
it."
Connie Rice, a civil rights attorney who is also Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice's second cousin, implored activists not be
content with the "decline" of conservatism. "We need to take this
country back and put it back on the right track," she said. "But do not
fool yourselves -- talking to ourselves is not going to do it."
"We
ought to be able to step up with a platform and philosophy," Rice said.
"We need to understand why we don't appeal to Americans."
Richards
pointed to the conference as evidence of the rise of progressive
influence in politics. "Who's the biggest conference at this hotel?"
she asked, "It's the Take Back America conference!"
The
conference is being held at the Washington Hilton, where in 1981 John
Hinckley, Jr. failed in his attempt to assassinate conservative
Republican President Ronald Reagan.
CPAC, the long-running
conservative counterpart to Take Back America, drew a reported 6,300
activists this year to its March conference, held at the Omni Shoreham
hotel in Washington. CAF co-director Robert Borosage announced Monday
that Take Back America had "nearly 3,000" attendees.
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