The WSJ  rips off my "Affordable  Family Formation" series. In "Cheer Up, Conservatives!  You're still winning," John Micklethwait and Adrian Woolridge write:
Last  November, American conservatives were full of grand visions of a permanent  revolution, with spending brought back under control, Social Security  privatized, conservatives filling the federal bench, and a great depression  visited on the lawsuit industry. Six months later, listening to conservatives is  as uplifting as reading William Styron's "Darkness Visible." Larry  Kudlow bemoans "the dreariest political spring." John Derbyshire  worries about the "twilight of conservatism" as the Republicans go the  way of Britain's Tories. For Pat Buchanan "the conservative movement has  passed into history"--much as, some would say, Mr. Buchanan himself has  done...
The biggest advantage of all for conservatives is that they have a lock on the  American dream. America is famously an idea more than a geographical expression,  and that idea seems to be the province of the right...
If the American dream means anything, it means finding a plot of land where you  can shape your destiny and raise your children. Those pragmatic dreamers look  ever more Republican. Mr. Bush walloped Mr. Kerry among people who were married  with children. He also carried 25  of the top 26 cities in terms of white fertility. Mr. Kerry carried the  bottom 16. San Francisco,  the citadel of liberalism, has the lowest proportion of people under 18 in the  country (14.5%).
So cheer up conservatives. You have the country's most powerful political party  on your side. You have control of the market for political ideas. You have the  American dream. And, despite your bout of triste post coitum, you are still  outbreeding your rivals.
They don't  mention, of course, of where they got this idea or data. It might raise a few  red flags about the health of conservatism if they admitted that the mainstream  Republican establishment's drink-the-KoolAidism means that all the interesting  intellectual work on the right is being done by a demonized fringe.
They also  don't mention that higher fertility among whites doesn't automatically  ensure a growing slice of the electorate for the GOP: nonwhites,  who on  average favor the Democrats have higher fertility than whites. Plus immigration  is boosting the Democratic-leaning groups. I'm not sure who is going to win this  struggle, but I don't think it's healthy for the country.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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