Long before the alt-right there was something very different – the New Right. It began as a reaction against the triumphant statism of the post-war era; gathered intellectual momentum in the 1960s and 70s; and culminated in the Reagan and Thatcher revolutions of the 1980s.
After that came an era of compromise – not least with the continuing dependency of every developed democratic nation on a large-scale, redistributive state.
Nevertheless, some New Right old believers still cling-on to ancient certainties. For instance, in an article about transport policy for ConservativeHome, John Redwood opens up with the most New Right thing anyone has ever said about anything:
“Traffic lights are so un-Conservative. They are part of the top-down, government knows best model of bossing us about.”
Those three-eyed totalitarian monsters! How dare they tell us not to proceed into the path of an on-coming stream of traffic!
I would argue that traffic lights are not just conservative, but symbolic of conservatism. Indeed, they enact the quintessentially conservative balance between freedom and order.
Even more importantly, they are reflective of the dignity of the individual. They enable a frail old lady to stop a ten ton truck at a road crossing – because her right to do so does not depend on her physical strength or her economic value, but on her infinite worth as a human being. (I wonder if Ayn Rand ever contemplated the meaning of the traffic light).
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