Acting Locally
by Paul M. Weyrich
For many years, one of the left’s slogans has been, “Think Globally, Act
Locally.” I think the next conservatism needs to answer this with a new
slogan of our own: Think Locally, Act Locally.
Think Globally, Act Locally reflects the left’s centuries-old belief in “one
world.” Just as the Jacobins of the French Revolution wanted, everyone in
the world should be forced to abandon their old traditions and fit one
“globalist” model, based on some ideology. Today, we even see some people
who call themselves conservatives (neo or otherwise) promoting globalism.
Sorry, but that is not what the word “conservative” has meant.
On the contrary, conservatives have always supported local variation. We
value local cultures, traditions and ways of life, based on what has grown
up in a specific place over time. We want Maine to be Maine and the Deep
South to remain the Deep South, rather than every place becoming California.
To conservatives, a homogenized world is a danger, not a promise.
Here again we see the power of culture. Many of the forces promoting
globalism are not political but cultural. Television is one of the most
powerful. How can old, local ways survive when children grow up in front of
the television, which reduces everything to a single, uniform (and low)
common denominator?
The “world economy” works to the same end. Local producers reflect local
traditions, but when they are driven out of business by cheap imports,
everything local is lost.
The next conservatism needs to help Americans see the value of what is local
and traditional. Much of that is not political, but real conservatism has
never just been about politics. Conservatism is not an ideology, it is a way
of life. That way of life needs to be grounded in local traditions and in
preserving and, where necessary, restoring those traditions.
At the same time, politics plays an important role here. The next
conservatism needs to revive an important conservative truth that has to
some extent been lost, even among conservatives: subsidiarity. Subsidiarity
says that decisions should be made at the lowest possible level. As much as
possible should be decided at the local level. Only when the local level
clearly cannot cope should state governments get involved. And federal
involvement should be rare, because it is dangerous. Decisions made in
Washington often run roughshod over local needs, traditions and realities.
The public schools offer a sad example. Have America’s schools gotten better
since state governments and the federal government have given them more and
more directives? No, they have gotten worse.
The next conservatism could take one powerful action that would do much to
restore subsidiarity. It should put an end to all unfunded mandates, on both
the state and federal levels. Today, state governments and the federal
government lay more and more requirements on local schools, local
governments, local transit systems and so on, but they do not provide any
funds to meet those requirements. The things local people know are more
important go without funding because the local level has no choice but to
give these mandates money. They are required by law to do so.
Of course, it is easy for state and federal lawmakers to please this or that
interest group by creating a new mandate in law. It would not be so easy if
they had to pay for those mandates themselves. A rule of “No unfunded
mandates” would move many decisions away from state and federal governments
and back to the local level, where they belong. It would also reduce the
power of government generally, which conservatives have always seen as a
good thing.
“Think Locally, Act Locally” goes well beyond putting an end to unfunded
government mandates (on industry as well as on local government, I would
add). Again, as conservatives, we should never think that we can stop with
politics: we must always look at the culture, too. But I do believe the next
conservatism could do our country a great deal of good by laying down a new
commandment: Thou shalt decree no unfunded mandates. I suspect the Founding
Fathers would agree with us heartily on that point.
Paul M. Weyrich is the Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Foundation.
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