Can this marriage be saved?

Written by Mike on November 19th, 2008

So asks Hunter Baker via Red State. The marriage in question is the conservative coalition of libertarians and social conservatives that Yellow Jacket was discussing in his “It’s not soCons vs. fiscCons . . .” post and Benaiah hinted at with his “Open Hand vs. Closed Hand” analogy.

Hunter Baker’s full article can be viewed at the Acton Institute’s website.

Perhaps nowhere is the tension greater and more consequential than between the socially conservative elements of the group and devotees of libertarianism.

The two groups have little natural tendency to trust each other when not confronted by a common enemy as in the case of the Cold War. Libertarians simply want to minimize the role of government as much as possible. For them, questions of maintaining strong traditional family units and preserving sexual and/or bioethical mores fall into an unessential realm as far as government is concerned. The government, echoing the thought of John Locke, should primarily occupy itself with providing for physical safety of the person while allowing for the maximum freedom possible for pursuit of self-interest.

Social conservatives similarly view the government as having a primary mission of providing safety, but they also look to the law as a source of moral authority. Man-made law, for them, should seek to be in accord to some degree with divine and natural law. Rifts open wide when social conservatives pursue a public policy agenda designed to prevent divorce, encourage marriage over cohabitation, prevent new understandings of marriage from emerging (e.g. gay marriage or polygamous marriage), prevent avant garde developments in biological experimentation, and a variety of other issues outside (from the libertarian perspective) the true mandate of government that cannot seek to define the good, the right, and the beautiful for a community of individuals. To the degree social conservatives seek to achieve some kind of collective excellence along the lines suggested by Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas, libertarians see a mirror image of the threat posed by big-government leftists.

1 Comments so far ↓

  1. Nov
    19
    10:19
    AM
    Ryan

    I definitely fall into the libertarian camp on this one. The tactics of the social conservatives mirror the tactics of the left. Both seek to enforce some vision of morality on the populace.

    For the life of me, I do not understand why social conservatives would embrace government to impose their moral agenda on society. The best way for them to change society would be to live by example. Unless they can shift to living by example instead of pushing their agenda through government, this coalition will splinter.

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