A libertarian comment on the definition of neoconservative:
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Essence
A Political Label to Remember
by George F. Smith
Political labels are difficult to grasp because they're almost never clearly defined. For example, here's how dictionary.com defines neoconservative: "An intellectual and political movement in favor of political, economic, and social conservatism that arose in opposition to the perceived liberalism of the 1960s: 'The neo-conservatism of the 1980s is a replay of the New Conservatism of the 1950s, which was itself a replay of the New Era philosophy of the 1920s' (Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.)."
What does that tell you about a neoconservative's convictions? Would he or she support free trade? Abolition of the income tax? The government's war on terrorism? Are they simply disillusioned liberals who turned to conservatism?
We might expect the neoconservative.com web site to clear up the matter of who they are. Neoconservatism, they tell us, "is committed to cultural traditionalism, democratic capitalism, and a foreign policy promoting freedom and American interests around the world." [1] Their explanation includes two terms dripping with warmth and vagueness -- cultural traditionalism and "democratic" capitalism -- and an explicit contradiction -- promoting freedom and America's interests.
Perhaps we should step back a little and ask: What is a conservative? Is it someone "favoring traditional views and values" who tends "to oppose change," as dictionary.com says? Do conservatives also support that great ideal of "democratic" capitalism, or is that a monopoly of neoconservatives? We need to know differentiating essentials, and no one seems able to provide them.
"When labels confuse rather than clarify, they should be dropped," writes Mark Skousen, who concluded that "the political spectrum has become a rhetorical version of Abbott and Costello's 'Who's on first?' routine." [2]"