Wholeheartedly Embracing Conservatism

The Townhall.com community—including nationally-recognized radio hosts, columnists, and bloggers, readers who maintain their own blogs, and our conservative partner groups—regularly examines the need for strengthened conservative principles, and this week was no exception.

Brian, who first started his reader blog in July 2006, posted his analysis of conservatism in California (“Does(R) Mean Anything Anymore?”) on Monday. After mentioning the universal health care concerns plaguing his state, he wrote:

This is the sad state of affairs that’s reached when conservative principles—once proudly enshrined in the self-definition of the Republican Party—are no longer even given lip service.

Townhall.com featured this post for most of the week and it caused quite a stir with our readers, who posted nearly 200 comments.

Another California reader posed a question to the Townhall.com community earlier this week, a question which many conservatives have asked time and time again: do we really need so much government? Mick wrote that “more and more of our freedoms are being taken away,” citing a new California law that bans the use of handheld phones while driving as an example. His comparison of the recommended hands-free earpieces to outlawed music headphones highlights the double standards of the government’s misplaced effort to regulate consumerism.

Last fall, Democrats tried to capitalize on the allure of conservative truths in their campaigns and, in some cases, succeeded. Dave recently cautioned his Townhall.com audience against accepting the Democrats’ continuing copy-cat rhetoric:

Don't get lulled into a sense of security that there are a growing number of ‘conservatives’ in the Democratic party. They are wolves in sheep's clothing….The conservative movement is growing, but in the electorate, not [in] the Progressive Democrats.

Dave is not alone in thinking that the Left is trying to hijack some conservative principles. Mike noted on his new rea