Paul Ryan’s “Unusual Ideology”

Charles Cooke dismantles Ezra Klein’s latest pretense at pragmatism:

Tellingly, Klein refers to “Ryan’s unusual ideology.” Unusual? Does Klein mean to suggest that not spending trillions that we don’t have is “unusual”? Does he mean that how America has worked for most of its history — and pretty well, thank you — is “unusual” now that it’s 2013? That notions of community doing things that government should not are “unusual”? I wonder. And what should we make of that “ideology” word? This dismissal is particularly telling, not because Ryan isn’t ideological — he is — but because so is Ezra Klein. So is everyone. Anyone who privileges one value over another (liberty over security, or growth over redistribution, for example) is an ideologue. Anybody who believes in any individual right whatsoever is an ideologue. Anyone who believes in any form of equality is an ideologue. Klein’s reaction betrays an arrogant, rotten worldview — widely shared among his ilk. Are we really expected to buy that doing the opposite of Ryan’s plan isn’t “ideological”? That there’s no ideology behind the status quo? That there’s nothing but reason behind what Klein and his acolytes wish would happen? That Klein’s desired path for America is based on pure analysis?

This conceit of the Left should be based at every opportunity. If there was a non-ideological pragmatic candidate in the last election, it sure wasn’t Barack Obama. Mitt Romney filled that bill much more, which was one of his problems, in fact.

7 thoughts on “Paul Ryan’s “Unusual Ideology””

  1. He’s using the classical Marxist definition of ideology, which refers solely to the contents of the false consciousness which interferes with a proper grasp of the party line.

  2. Does [Ezra Klein] mean that how America has worked for most of its history — and pretty well, thank you — is “unusual” now that it’s 2013?

    Ezra Klein is a professional solipsist who thinks history began the day he got his most recent college degree; nothing that went before matters because his personal paradigm changed and the universe with it.

  3. Sadly, Klein may be right. In the Age of Obama, believing in individual liberty with any great consisitency might well indeed be considered “unusual.”

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