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neoconservatism
(redirected from neo-conservatism)

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neoconservatism

U.S. political movement. It originated in the 1960s among conservatives and some liberals who were repelled by or disillusioned with what they viewed as the political and cultural trends of the time, including leftist political radicalism, lack of respect for authority and tradition, and hedonistic and immoral lifestyles. Neoconservatives generally advocate a free-market economy with minimum taxation and government economic regulation; strict limits on government-provided social-welfare programs; and a strong military supported by large defense budgets. Neoconservatives also believe that government policy should respect the importance of traditional institutions such as religion and the family. Unlike most conservatives of earlier generations, neoconservatives maintain that the United States should take an active role in world affairs, though they are generally suspicious of international institutions, such as the United Nations and the World Court, whose authority could intrude upon American sovereignty or limit the country's freedom to act in its own interests. See also conservatism.



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Bush and the emergence of the "post-rhetorical" presidency, presidential signing statements and the imperial presidency, Bush's legacy on social security, Bush's use of the tools of executive federalism, Bush's foreign policy as evangelical realism and not neo-conservatism, the philosophy of Bush's "Freedom Agenda," American foreign policy in the Persian Gulf, and overcoming the Bush Doctrine of the virtues of American primacy and the country's right to wage preemptive war.
Kristol himself would regard neo-conservatism as a job well done, a "generational phenomenon" that was "pretty much absorbed into a larger, more comprehensive conservatism.
But if Fighting Words: A Tale of How Liberals Created Neo-Conservatism is the best in post-Iraq War neoconservative apologetics, the movement is in far more trouble than the defeat of John McCain would suggest.
 
 
 
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