The re-election of Barack Obama honestly stunned many conservatives. They could understand some people being confused enough to vote for Obama four years ago, but as they watched his actions during his first term, they were certain that most people saw the same danger they saw.
Now those conservatives are left confused and scared of what’s next. Mostly, though, many of the conservatives I know are trying to figure out what went wrong. How is it that what was so plain to them wasn’t plain to a majority in the country?
Deep down, most people believe that other reasonable and intelligent people are like them. It makes sense on some level. If you assume that you’re intelligent, informed and reasonable, you assume that similar people would come to similar conclusions. And if they don’t come to similar conclusions, well, they’re not very bright. Or they’re ill-informed. Or biased. Or unreasonable. Somehow, there’s something wrong with them.
Conservatives have believed that they were in the majority for years. Even during the tumultuous ’60s, Richard Nixon told conservatives that they were the “silent majority.” In the ’70s, the Rev. Jerry Falwell founded the Moral Majority to become a political force for social conservatives. In both of these names, you see the assumption that the majority are obviously “with us.”
Why am I shocked that a friend’s happy news makes me feel envy?
How much can human heart take when inner winter lasts forever?
Words I wrote as idealistic teen suggest I’m still the same inside
How much of what we do is driven by our unconscious social scripts?
People who invoke ‘fairness’ generally just mean, ‘Do things my way — or else’
Town’s new fine for public profanity points to problem of ‘public’ spaces
I’m still the kid who might burn your clubhouse if you cross me
‘Conservative’ and ‘liberal’ should refer to temperament, not politics
Well-meaning parents stifle kids by trying to make their decisions