nominalist wrote:
It depends on the type of conservativism:
1. Most political conservatives are economic liberals.
2. Most political progressives are economic Keynesians or neo-Keynesians.
3. Neoconservatism is a blend of Trotyskyism, fascism, and Platonism.
4. Then, paleoconservatism tends toward political isolationism.
Well, I was asking for the OP's idea. I can analyze the words according to my definitions, but our OP is the one who is deciding upon what he wants to consider what.
1 tends to be correct which is why I asked.
2 is not so relevant as I did not bring up progressives. I really don't think that most progressives are that economically minded as to be called Keynesian or neo-Keynesian. The intelligent ones perhaps, but, like conservatives, the dumb progressives get suckered into all sorts of odd economic ideologies. So even though we have supply-side economic ideas twisted beyond all virtue on the right, we also have some left-wing gobblety gook on the left.
3 Neoconservatism is a blend of things. It is arguable that they are less liberal than other conservative groups as even though they tend towards some economic liberalism their policies are less liberal.
4 Isolationism does not say much about liberalism outside of the trade stance perhaps. The lack of military interventionism could be argued as more liberal but the trade stance can easily be regarded as illiberal at least from an economics point of view.