« Movie Review Of The Day | Main | Che Guevara's Hair Auctioned Off » 28 Oct 2007 04:45 pm The Uni-Polar TrapAbsolute power corrupts, doesn't it? Frank Fukuyama analyzes the roots of America's foreign policy disarray:
I do think that one of the deeper differences between the traditional right and the neocons is that traditional conservatives are quite happy to see other great powers exert influence in various parts of the world; and are not adamant that the United States must control everything and police everywhere. That, in itself, reflects the more profound philosophical divide within conservatism: between those who value power over everything, and those that, in the end, are happy to let go and co-exist with other entities. Just as the neocons cannot tolerate foreign powers exercising influence in the world independently of the United States, so they are intolerant of divided power at home. Traditional conservatives are proud of the way the Founders divided and defused power in the Constitution and quite content to allow other great powers - Europe, Russia, China, for example - exercise influence in various parts of the globe. And the massive over-reach, domestically and abroad, of the Bush-Cheney protectorate has done a great deal to revive the tradition Fukuyama understands well. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e54f13e6f38834 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'The Uni-Polar Trap' |
