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Inside the right-wing conspiracy

Braxton Boren

Issue date: 5/21/08 Section: Forum
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It's a beautiful Friday afternoon, and my Conservative Political Thought seminar has decided to meet outside. Sitting on the steps of Deering Library in the not-quite-too-warm sunlight, a sweeping discussion ensues, ranging from Christian theology to the writings of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. I almost wish a photographer could have been there - it was the kind of scene Northwestern always paints in its admission packets, yet I had never experienced such a thing until now (it should be noted that last week the class met in the Celtic Knot, which is probably not the type of scene NU likes to portray to prospective students but was quite delicious).

While you might think that a class like this would only contain iconoclastic males, the political affiliation of the class is quite diverse, even if the gender is not. There's a good blend of moral traditionalists, moral relativists, capitalists, communists, libertarians and even a neoconservative or two.

Glancing around the class, there are some notable campus personalities: several ASG senators, the president of College Republicans and the editor in chief of the Chronicle, to name a few. Finally, there is Weinberg freshman Jonathan Green, the founder of Northwestern Students for John McCain (to satisfy the roving spirit of Francis Willard, I should add that Green was absent when we met at the Knot).

Green claims no specific party affiliation, but describes himself as a philosophically conservative independent. McCain appealed to him because of his conservative approach to government combined with progressive stances on issues like climate change and immigration. After Super Tuesday, Green thought it would be a good idea to get an early start on the general election campaign, leading him to start Students for McCain. While he is aware of the political leanings of the NU community, Green doesn't consider that to be a problem. He believes that he and his liberal friends are both motivated out of compassion for others, but disagree on which policy implementations best exemplify that compassion.
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