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Maneuver warfare, often controversial and requiring operational and
tactical innovation, poses perhaps the most important doctrinal
questions currently facing the conventional military forces of the
U.S. Its purpose is to defeat the enemy by disrupting the
opponent's ability to react, rather than by physical destruction of
forces. This book develop
Maneuver warfare, often controversial and requiring operational and
tactical innovation, poses perhaps the most important doctrinal
questions currently facing the conventional military forces of the
U.S. Its purpose is to defeat the enemy by disrupting the
opponent's ability to react, rather than by physical destruction of
forces. This book develops and explains the theory of maneuver
warfare and offers specific tactical, operational, and
organizational recommendations for improving ground combat forces.
The authors translate concepts--too often vaguely stated by
manuever warfare advocates--into concrete doctrine. Although the
book uses the Marine Corps as a model, the concepts, tactics, and
doctrine discussed apply to any ground combat force.
Since November's election, conservative columnists have filled the
op-ed pages with calls for a new conservative agenda. In The Next
Conservatism, two of the conservative movement's best-known
thinkers, Paul M. Weyrich and William S. Lind, offer exactly that.
More, they offer a new kind of conservative agenda, one that
reaches far beyond politics to grapple with the sources of our
nation's cultural decay. The Next Conservatism recognizes that
culture is more powerful than politics. Nevertheless, it offers an
engaging menu of political reforms, all under the rubric of
"Restore the Republic!" No enthusiasts of Imperial America at home
or abroad, Weyrich and Lind seek limited government, jealous
guardianship of civil liberties, and a Washington liberated from
the power of the New Class, the interests that feed off our
nation's decay. To these frequent conservative themes, Weyrich and
Lind offer something new: a warning of a general crisis of
legitimacy of the state itself, which can lead to a Hobbesian state
of anarchy. How might we save the state while avoiding the jaws of
Leviathan? The Next Conservatism offers innovative ways to thread
that needle. Meanwhile, what of America's culture? Did its decay
over the past half-century "just happen"? Weyrich and Lind argue
no; rather, much of our degradation was deliberate, the work of the
poisonous ideology of cultural Marxism, aka "Political
Correctness." The Next Conservatism takes the reader on a
fascinating historical tour of the origins of Political Correctness
in the infamous Frankfurt School, a gathering of heretical Marxists
whose goal from the outset was the destruction of Western culture.
Weyrich and Lind then proceed to "deconstruct" the left's program
for America, debunking Feminism, "racism," and environmentalism
along the way. Reflecting the thought of Russell Kirk, The Next
Conservatism condemns ideologies left and right, calling instead
for a return to traditional ways of living, ways that reflect
wisdom accumulated generation by generation. Only thus, they argue,
can conservatives win a culture war many regard as hopelessly lost.
Old ways, in turn, lead to a Next Conservatism appropriate for hard
times. Virtue, Weyrich and Lind offer, is to be found in modest
living, not conspicuous consumption. The Next Conservative agenda
rejects environmentalism but includes conservation, the return of
the family farm, New Urbanism and the revival of such 'oldies but
goodies" as streetcars and passenger trains. A new theme,
Retroculture, sums up a conservatism that recognizes that what
worked in the past can work again today, and in the future as well.
Our ancestors were no fools, the authors suggest, and "Back to the
Future!" can serve as a powerful conservative rallying cry. Having
laid the political and cultural groundwork, The Next Conservatism
then turns to conservative governance. In foreign policy, the
authors call for minimizing foreign entanglements, though with a
strong national defense and a military reform to adapt to face
Fourth Generation warfare rather than the Second Generation America
adheres to. For the economy, the authors call for repairing and
expanding our national infrastructure, sound money, and protecting
American industry, seeing labor as a potential ally. In both
national security and economic security, the authors insist that
good governance include moral security; drawing from the New
Urbanism, they offer a "moral transect" that allows everyone to do
what he wants, but not always where he wants. The public square,
they suggest, should be safe for families. Respecting the careful
limits on government power a restored republic would embody, The
Next Conservatism calls for redeeming America not through
legislation but through a new conservative movement. Unlike the old
movement, the next conservative movement would be a league of
people who pledged to live their lives by the old rules. While
conservatives would remain engaged in politics, they would rely on
a vastly more powerful force of example, the examples of lives
lived well in traditional ways. This next conservative movement
would appeal far beyond the ranks of political conservatives, to
all Americans who know that something has gone tragically wrong in
the life of our nation. The Next Conservatism offers a vision of
vast sweep, far beyond anything coming out of Washington. At a time
when most Americans find life growing more difficult, it proposes a
path to a new America that is also the old America, the good,
comfortable America we had and have lost.
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