Over the Rainbow 
Slavoj Žižek on populist conservatism
In Kansas and other states in the American heartland, economic class conflict (poor farmers and blue-collar workers versus lawyers, bankers, large companies) has been transposed into an opposition between honest, hard-working, Christian Americans on the one hand, and decadent latte-drinking liberals who drive foreign cars, mock patriotism and advocate abortion and homosexuality on the other: so Thomas Frank argues in What’s the Matter with America? The main economic interest of populist conservatism is to get rid of the strong state, which taxes the population in order to finance regulatory interventions, and to introduce an economic programme whose slogan might be ‘less tax, fewer regulations’. From the standard perspective which holds that economic agency is based on the rational pursuit of self-interest, the inconsistency of this stance is obvious: populist conservatives are literally voting themselves into economic ruin. Less taxation and increased deregulation means more freedom for the corporations that are driving impoverished farmers out of business; less state intervention means less federal help for small farmers, and so on. In the eyes of the evangelical populists, however, the state is an alien power and, together with the UN, an agent of the Antichrist: it relieves the Christian believer of the responsibility of stewardship, and thus undermines the need for individual morality that makes each of us the architect of our own salvation.
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Slavoj Žižek is a dialectical-materialist philosopher and psychoanalyst. He also co-directs the International Centre for Humanities at Birkbeck College. The Parallax View appeared last year.
Other articles by this contributor:
Are we in a war? Do we have an enemy? · Love Thy Neighbour
Nobody has to be vile · The Philanthropic Enemy
Bring me my Philips Mental Jacket · Improve Your Performance!
Lenin Shot at Finland Station · Counterfactuality and the conservative historian
Resistance Is Surrender · What to Do about Capitalism
The Two Totalitarianisms · Stalin applauded too
Attempts to Escape the Logic of Capitalism · Václav Havel
‘You May!’ · the post-modern superego