By Robert P. George
Sunday, November 02, 2025
A few days ago,I
posted a brief statementof what I, as a conservative, seek to conserve. The
first item on the list was what I regard as the foundational principle of all
sound morality: the profound, inherent, and equal dignity of each and every
member of the human family. Everything else I believe about ethics and politics
in one way or another stands upon or presupposes that principle. Any form of
“conservatism” (or “liberalism”) that denies it in principle or transgresses it
in practice is alien to me.
That is why I believe that the conservative movement,
though it can and should be a broad tent, simply cannot include or accommodate
white supremacists or racists of any type, antisemites, eugenicists, or others
whose ideologies are incompatible with belief in the inherent and equal dignity
of all. As a conservative, I say that there is no place for such people in our
movement.
So, while I understand and appreciate that politics is
about “adding and multiplying, not subtracting and dividing,” and though I
welcome conservatives representing a range of viewpoints on a wide swath of
issues, I will not — I cannot — accept the idea that we have “no enemies to the
right.” The white supremacists, the antisemites, the eugenicists, the bigots,
must not be welcomed into our movement or treated as normal or acceptable.
Is this a call for “cancellation”? No. It’s a reminder
that we conservatives stand for something — or should stand for something. We
have core principles that are not negotiable.
I am — notoriously, for some of my fellow conservatives —
committed to the principle of free speech for everybody, including people with
whom I profoundly disagree even on the most important issues, indeed, including
racists and other bigots. But defending their rights does not mean allying with
them, welcoming them into our movement, or treating them as representing
legitimate forms of conservatism.
I am also — again, notoriously, for some of my fellow
conservatives — willing to engage people with whom I deeply disagree, so long
as they are honest and are willing to do business in the proper currency of
intellectual discourse, a currency consisting of reasons, evidence, and
arguments. (It is pointless to engage bad faith actors, charlatans, and con
men.) But, again, engaging and forcefully arguing against people who deny the
inherent and equal dignity of all is one thing, welcoming them into the movement
or treating their ideas and ideologies as representing legitimate forms of
conservatism is something entirely different.
Let me be plain. American conservatism today faces a
challenge. That challenge comes from those who reject our commitment to
inherent and equal human dignity. They are seeking acceptance in the
conservative movement and its institutions, and they do so with the ultimate
objective of transforming them by undermining that commitment. They openly
preach white supremacy and the hatred of Jews, among other noxious ideas. They
no longer feel the need even to try to hide their bigotry.
It is incumbent upon those of us who maintain the “ancient faith” (to borrow a phrase from Lincoln) to make clear to friend and foe alike that we will not permit the integrity of our movement and its institutions to be compromised. We will not treat its foundational principle of inherent and equal human dignity as optional. On the contrary, we will insist on it, defending and advancing it with renewed dedication.
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