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(EM531)
December 21, 2009

In Brief:

  • Do conservatives lack compassion?
  • This common accusation belies the facts.
  • Author Peter Schweizer argues that insofar as labels go, conservatives give more to charity than liberals.
  • Regardless of how we peg ourselves in some less-than-perfect ideological description. No ideology has a monopoly on compassion.

 



Compassion Has No Ideological Litmus Test

 

In the mythological view of some self-described progressives, compassion is a market long ago cornered by themselves. I was reminded of this self-flattering view recently when Rafe Mair, a former British Columbia talk show host waxed eloquently on his conversion from “Red Tory” conservatism to one who campaigned for New Democrats in BC’s last election.
 
“The right has no soul, “ wrote Mair in his online column, who then described his voyage from right to left. It included accusations that conservatives don’t care about the mentally ill, the poor, and that any help for the disadvantaged is mere show. Naturally, Mair slagged the Fraser Institute, presuming (I guess) he knows their individual hearts and charitable donations.
 
What to make of this? Well, as someone who might be described as conservative, I take no offense. For one thing, I have a passing familiarity with Mair and it was positive. Back when I was the BC director for the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, Mair regularly interviewed me on a variety of issues; Rafe even provided an endorsement for the back cover of my first book.
 
But back to the accusation in general. It’s off-base and for a number of reasons.
 
We all use labels. They’re useful for shorthand explanations but are not comprehensive. For example, I’m in favour of moderate tax levels – that makes me a conservative; but I’m in favour of immigration, so according to traditional ideological categories, I’m a liberal; I oppose corporate welfare which makes me (and the Fraser Institute and Frontier Centre for which I’ve written on the topic) a socialist akin to David Lewis, the 1970s-era federal NDP leader who popularized the term; lastly, I think governments must justify their interference in our lives because that orientation on the part of citizens helps keep concentrated and possibly abusive power on the defensive—which makes me a libertarian. Add it all together and good luck with a succinct label.
 
So ideological tags don’t capture nuances. But insofar as the self-described left (their description, not mine) wants to play the game of “Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who in the land is the most compassionate of all?—oh look, I am!”  the evidence doesn’t support the narcissism.
 
Anecdotally, I don’t buy the exclusionary claim on compassion.  I had an aunt, now deceased, who spent 30 years running an orphanage and a school in Colombia. A Winnipeg friend just switched from general practice to psychiatric care because she loves helping people. A colleague at an online journal, University of British Columbia law professor Benjamin Perrin, is one of the world’s foremost experts on human and sex trafficking and is devoted to wiping it out. Another friend just moved to Cambodia to help children. What is their common descriptor, other than their compassion? They’re all self-described conservatives.
 
More empirically though, last year, American author Peter Schweizer in his book Makers and Takers, asserted that compared with conservatives, liberals are more self-centered, less charitable, more prone to envy and less hard-working. In contrast to liberals, conservatives valued truth more and were less prone to cheat or lie; contrary to popular bias, conservatives were also more knowledgeable, happy, content and even hugged their kids more.
 
Schweizer’s claims were based on tax records, scholarly research, polling data and private archives. He theorized liberal belief in compassion as “their turf” derives from the notion more interventionist government is proof of compassion; this led not only to the delusion of a liberal monopoly on compassion, and a possible mistake about the proper means to desirable good ends, it led liberals to too often “outsource” their compassion instead of practicing that virtue themselves.  
 
Schweizer’s conclusions are based on averages and even if correct miss individual exceptional behaviour. And it goes both ways. There are conservatives who are nasty; I’ve met a few. But then I know of a few hypocritical environmentalists, liberals who hate children and a couple of mean socialists.
 
A few bad apples or someone’s bad day doesn’t indict the rest of us, regardless of how we peg ourselves in some less-than-perfect ideological description. No ideology has a monopoly on compassion.
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Author's Picture Mark Milke, Director of Research

also lectures in Political Science at the University of Calgary where he received his doctorate. He is the author of three books on Canadian politics, including the 2006 A Nation of Serfs? How Canada’s Political Culture Corrupts Canadian Values from John Wiley & Sons. He is a former director (first in Alberta and then British Columbia) with the Canadian Taxpayers Federation 1997-2002. Since 2002, among other work, Mark has written policy papers on British Columbia’s treaty process, the Canada Pension Plan, Alberta’s Heritage Fund, automobile insurance, corporate welfare and the flat tax. He is writing a book on the effects of anti-Americanism on deliberative democracy in Canada and is a Sunday columnist for the Calgary Herald. In addition, his columns on politics, hiking, nature and architecture have been published across Canada including in the National Post, Globe and Mail, Reader’s Digest, The Western Standard, Vancouver Sun, and Victoria Times Colonist and the Washington DC magazine on politics, The Weekly Standard.



Feedback:

  • RE: Compassion Has No Ideological Litmus Test — December 23, 2009

    Good column.  I think of myself as a conservative but given your examples could also be a liberal/libertarian and as regards corporate welfare a socialist. I don't know how the NDP ever got to think they have the market cornered on compassion, I suppose they view conservatives as hard hearted capitalist only interested in money. I often think the point they miss is, if there weren't entrepreneurs out there creating wealth where on earth would the money come from to be compassionate and provide social services. I think with a little research one could come up with a long list of conservatives who are compassionate and donate substantially to charity etc. I was just reading the other day about a group of Calgary businessmen who are developing a plan get homeless people off of Calgary streets within ten years, I bet they succeed.  -- E-mail from Calgary, AB

  • RE: Compassion Has No Ideological Litmus Test — December 22, 2009

    ‘Compassion knows no ideological bounds’ is true. Not all ideologues have compassion is equally true. It is a truth that needs to be impressed on the voting public. About thirty years ago I first participated in a brainstorming session and later led several other sessions to develop a list of ‘the five most desirable human qualities’. All groups, with not much in common, surprisingly came up with the exact same list. One, I remember, insisted on adding a sixth. Try it in your classes. More . . .   -- E-mail from Canmore, AB


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