Understanding the Conservative Movement
Sectors of the U.S. Right Active in the Year 2011
from
http://www.publiceye.org/research/chart_of_sectors.html
There is much overlap and sectors are not mutually exclusive.
Methodologies range from cautious moderation, to militant activism, to insurgency, to violence.
Right-wing populist, apocalyptic, and conspiracist styles can be found in several sectors.
Forms of oppression—racism, xenophobia, sexism, heterosexism,
antisemitism, Islamophobia, Arabophobia, nativism, ableism, etc.—vary in each sector.
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I. "Conservative Right"
Secular Right
Secular Conservatism (Generic) —
Share to some degree basic conservative, “Free Market,”& “Judeo-Christian traditional values,” but not categorized
here as part of another sector.
Corporate Internationalism (Neoliberals) —
Nations should control the flow of people across borders, but not the flow of goods, capital, and profit. Called the
“Rockefeller Republicans” in the 1960s. Supports globalization on behalf of transnational corporate interests.
Business Nationalism—
Multinational corporations erode national sovereignty; nations should enforce borders for people, but also for goods,
capital, and profit through trade restrictions. Enlists grassroots allies from Patriot Movement. Anti-Globalists. Generally
protectionist and isolationist.
Economic Libertarianism—
The state disrupts the perfect harmony of the free market system. Modern democracy is essentially congruent with
capitalism. Small government.
National Security Militarism—
Support US military supremacy and unilateral use of force to protect perceived US national security interests around
the world. A major component of Cold War anti-communism, now updated and in shaky alliance with
Neoconservatives.
Neoconservatism—
The egalitarian social liberation movements of the 1960s and 1970s undermined the national consensus. Intellectual
oligarchies and political institutions preserve democracy from mob rule. The United States has the right to intervene
with military force to protect its perceived interests anywhere in the world. Suspicious of Islam, sometimes
Islamophobic.
Religious Right
Religious Conservatism—Play by the rules of a pluralist civil society. Mostly Christians, with handful of conservative
Jews, Muslims, Hindus and other people of faith. Moral traditionalists. Cultural and social conservatives. Sometimes
critical of Christian Right.
II. “Hard Right”
Christian Nationalism (Christian Right: Soft Dominionists)—
Biblicallydefined immorality and sin breed chaos and anarchy. America’s greatness as God’s chosen land has undermined by liberal secular humanists, feminists, and homosexuals. Purists want litmus tests for issues of
abortion, tolerance of gays and lesbians, and prayer in schools. Often a form of Right-Wing Populism.
Christian Theocracy (Christian Right: Hard Dominionists)—
Christian men are ordained by God to run society. Eurocentric version of Christianity based on early Calvinism.
Intrinsically Christian ethnocentric, treating non-Christians as second-class citizens, and therefore implicitly
antisemitic. Includes Christian Reconstructionism and other theocratic theologies. Elitist.
Xenophobic Right
Patriot Movement (Forms of Right-Wing Populism: Tea Parties, Town Hall Protests, Armed Citizens Militias)—
Parasitic liberal elites control the government, media, and banks. Blames societal problems on scapegoats below
them on the socio-economic ladder who are portrayed as lazy, sinful, or subversive. Fears government plans tyranny
to enforce collectivism and globalism, perhaps as part of a One World Government or New World Order. Americanist.
Often supports Business Nationalism due to its isolationist emphasis. Anti-Globalist, yet supports unilateralist
national security militarism.
Paleoconservatism—
Ultra-conservatives and reactionaries. Natural financial oligarchies preserve the republic against democratic mob
rule. Usually nativist (White Nationalism), sometimes antisemitic or Christian nationalist. Elitist emphasis similar the intellectual conservative revolution wing of European New Right. Often libertarian.
White Nationalism (White Racial Nationalists)—
Alien cultures make democracy impossible. Cultural Supremacists argue different races can adopt the dominant
(White) culture; Biological Racists argue the immutable integrity of culture, race, and nation. Segregationists want
distinct enclaves, Separatists want distinct nations. Americanist. “tribalist” emphasis echoes racial-nationalist the European New Right. Often a form of Right-Wing Populism.
Ultra Right (Sometimes called Far Right or Extreme Right)—
Militant forms of insurgent revolutionary right ideology and separatist ethnocentric nationalism. Reject pluralist
democracy for an organic oligarchy that unites the homogeneous Volkish nation. Conspiracist views of power are
overwhelmingly antisemitic. Home to overt neofascists and neonazis. Ku Klux Klan, Christian Identity, Creativity
Movement , National Socialist Movement, National Alliance. Often uses Right-Wing Populist rhetoric.
http://www.publiceye.org/research/chart_of_sectors.html
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