Danny聽De Gracia: Hawaii Needs To Talk About How Conservatism Has Become Toxic
At what point are Republicans saying things because they believe it, and what point are people saying things because they think it is expected of them?
October 16, 2023 · 7 min read
About the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views. You can reach him by email at dgracia@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .
At what point are Republicans saying things because they believe it, and what point are people saying things because they think it is expected of them?
A little over a decade ago, some local conservative and libertarian-supporting donors approached me and asked me to look at a new national organization that had just emerged at the time, .
Consisting of what were professed to be former and current law enforcement officers as well as military, the organization pledged to refuse to obey any unconstitutional orders given by a president or local leader.
Like so many contemporary conservative and libertarian groups, a recurring theme among them was an 鈥淚 will not comply!鈥 type attitude toward government.
I thought the idea, at face value, was absurd, because the whole point of wearing a uniform was to obey the orders of the officers and civilian leaders over them. If police and military are allowed to subjectively pick and choose what they feel are constitutional or unconstitutional orders, the entire system of law and order implodes on itself.
I was asked, at the time, if I would consider organizing local Filipinos and Native Hawaiians into creating what could possibly become a Hawaii chapter. I responded with a firm “hell no.”
You can鈥檛 encourage police officers and military to disobey orders. I told them I don鈥檛 want anything to do with this, and if you promote this in Hawaii, you鈥檙e going to legally imperil whoever joins this organization, which is the last thing you should want to do to your people.
I told them it was a dangerous and idiotic idea.
Over the years, I would listen to various things that organization and its members would say, and I found it intellectually disingenuous how they always seemed to selectively find everything a Democratic president did 鈥渦nconstitutional鈥 and everything a Republican president did, namely, Donald Trump, 鈥渃onstitutional.鈥
When military officers under Trump suggested they would not obey certain orders, many of these libertarians and conservatives who earlier asserted 鈥淚 will not comply鈥 suddenly became government loyalists, saying that refusing to obey Trump was 鈥渢reason.鈥
So disobeying Obama was 鈥減atriotic鈥 but disobeying Trump is 鈥渢reason?鈥 To me, that sounded more like fifth column partisan disruption and ideological brand marketing rather than actual patriotism or constitutional defense.
, when several Oath Keepers received prison sentences for their roles in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. Now, people on the legal hook all want to make it sound like they were deceived, they were sucked into an emotional flurry and didn鈥檛 mean to break the law.
Whatever. I told my friends and family that I knew from the beginning these guys were trouble, and I鈥檓 glad I called it right.
But the events of Jan. 6 should continue to be a wakeup call for all of us. The direction conservatism and some Republicans are going is extremely concerning for anyone who believes in constitutional values like limited government or patriotic concepts like service to country.
Before things start to get out of hand again heading into the next election, we need to have a serious talk about what鈥檚 wrong here.
If every conservative thought leader is pandering or posturing, people won鈥檛 know the truth.
I hate to reveal the secrets of the temple, but the conservative world is loaded with thought leaders and influencers who don鈥檛 actually like many of the political leaders they publicly idealize (or idolize) and don鈥檛 actually believe many of the things they advocate.
The intent is not to promote meaningful reform for these types, but rather, to sell many books, to collect donations, and to gain national prominence by attaching one鈥檚 name to an issue or an established political personality.
Worse yet? Evangelical pastors, particularly in the 鈥渃harismatic鈥 circles of American Christianity, have gone to the dark side by discovering how easy it is to get infusions of new followers and money simply by 鈥減rophesying鈥 that it is 鈥渢he will of God鈥 that people do something.
For anyone who understands social psychology, all this has a chilling effect. First, in ambiguous situations, people look to others to explain how they should feel. Second, conformity plays a significant role in forming opinions and turning behaviors into habits.
Said another way, if every conservative thought leader is pandering or posturing, people won鈥檛 know the truth and what began as a get-rich-quick scam by a few now becomes a doctrine that millions of people believe and demand their candidates adhere to.
At what point are Republicans or conservatives saying things because they believe it, and what point are people saying things because they think it is expected of them?
Which leads us to the next problem.
Our system of primary elections encourages hyperpartisanship and incompetent candidates.
In the halcyon past GenXers like me call the 20th century, people really didn鈥檛 care whether you were a Republican or a Democrat. Sure, they had their preferences, but people were less interested in who you were voting for and more interested in whether you were a kind husband, if you made money through honest methods, or if you showed attention to detail by keeping your lawn and exterior areas of your house neat.
Now, because we鈥檝e hyperpartisanized everything, someone can be a jerk, an opportunistic swindler, and offer no evidence of ever adding any value to the community, but now 鈥渂ecause鈥 they happen to say all the things the national party believes in, we must vote for them or else, the other guys will destroy America.
Then, when we put these people in office, they turn out to be incompetent, but we now have to claim everything they do is perfect, 鈥渂ecause鈥 again, if we don鈥檛 stick together, the other guys will destroy America. Really?
This is precisely why our communities are divided, why we鈥檙e always arguing over stupid things, and why everything has to be a culture war or religious crusade in politics now. This is toxic, and anyone who claims to be a Republican or a conservative should fear the hijacking of their movement into a reactionary cult-of-personality.
We have serious problems going into the next election. Both Democrats and Republicans need to be worried about these things, and we are going to need to work together in the next few months to keep Hawaii and America from going off a cliff.
What do we do? First, we need to emphasize individual character and personal motivations over partisanship and posturing in candidates and parties.
Second, we need to look for ways to reinvigorate our relationships, families, and communities. When people are personally empty and socially unfulfilled, they鈥檒l project their feelings on to messianic public figures and seek identity in these absurd ideological crusades. This is why 20th century conservatives used to say things like 鈥渢alk to your children, or the government will talk to them for you鈥 鈥 if your loyalty is to your family or neighbors, you won鈥檛 empower tyrants in the making.
We have a lot of work to do, and things are a mess right now in our political world. But the solution, as with many things, depends on us talking to each other, being courageously honest with each other, and when necessary, refusing to advance dangerous personalities or movements.
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ContributeAbout the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister. Opinions are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat’s views. You can reach him by email at dgracia@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .
Latest Comments (0)
So "some local conservative and libertarian-supporting donors" represent ALL CONSERVATIVES? You are just as bad if not worse.
Manawai · 1 year ago
Maybe we should be talking about the root cause of all the toxic partisanship on the left and right 芒聙聯 the fact that people on both sides are trying to use government to impose their agendas on all of society.Only libertarians, it seems, are willing to say, "I may not like what you're doing, but as long as it's not violating other people's rights by initiating force or fraud against them, I'm going to tolerate what you do, and not try to outlaw it." We could use a bit more of that spirit of tolerance these days.
Starchild · 1 year ago
There are unprincipled, unethical, traitorous people on both sides of the political spectrum. Anyone who denies that is putting political blinders on.Danny is entitled to his opinions. He can say whatever he wants. What I object to are commenters referring to him as some sort of non-partisan voice. That he offers a point-of-view that elevates over the fray. This commentary shows he's none of that. Not even close.
KalihiValleyHermit · 1 year ago
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