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07 Oct 2008 09:55 am
The Pendulum Of Ideas
Or why conservatism overshot in the last few years:
When Thatcherites
first mooted privatisation it was derided as an impractical dream. But
early triumphs with airlines and telecommunications in Britain created
a vogue that spread round the world. That emboldened the privatisers to
take on new and harder challenges, such as the UK’s railways. But
failure there led to a backlash.
Similarly, when the conservative
era started, foreign military engagements were out of fashion in the
west.
But Britain’s Falklands war and the American invasion of Grenada
began to change this. During the 1990s, a series of successful military
interventions – the first Gulf war, Bosnia, Kosovo, Sierra Leone – made
Anglo-American political leaders much more relaxed about the use of
military force. Too relaxed. The horrors that have followed the
invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan will mean that the intellectual
pendulum will now swing in the opposite direction.
Which is a conservative lesson when you come to think about it
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