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Sullivan's views on religion in society are decidedly negative. In 2009, he wrote in his blog for the Atlantic: "Conservatism has become a religious movement. Although I am a religious person, I do not believe that any specific form of religion has a veto in determining who is or is not a political conservative in a secular society." 

Religion has played a crucial role in the growth and development of democratic nations. As Robert Putnam and David E. Campbell noted in their excellent book Amazing Grace, religion may occasionally divide us — but it unites us far more regularly than left-wing academics and pundits care to admit. (For the record, I am a non-religious conservative who has never been told what to think or how to act by other conservatives, religious or not.)    

There are plenty of moderate conservative thinkers in this political movement, and they'll always be welcomed with open arms. Sullivan isn't one of them. He doesn't understand how other conservatives think, because he doesn't think like a conservative. Without the word "conservative" attached to his biography, he's nothing more than an overrated vanity blogger — and he knows it. 

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Cunctator
May 6th, 2012
12:05 PM
I seldom get too upset about political labels anymore. Was Sullivan ever a conservative -- who knows? Should anyone care? I think part of the problem for conservatives like Michael Taube is that the tent is now so big that everyone save hardcore Marxists can find a place to stand. Sullivan is really no different than David Cameron or Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper (who Taube worked for). Neither leader is a conservative, strictly speaking, but both have chosen parties with that label as a mechanism to get to power and advance their own progressive agendas. Cameron is basically a liberal: Harper appears to be a libertarian ("appears" because he is so purposefully misleading). Consequently, the disquiet about Andrew Sullivan is probably misplaced -- it is more a reflection of the intellectual sloppiness that attaches to the word "conservative" than to anything else. That said, Taube is correct in one thing, namely that Sullivan is now a vastly over-rated writer. I think that is very unfortunate. Sullivan is more a tragic character than anything else. Consumed by his "gay-ness", the judgement and the cleverness he displayed in his writings in earlier years has slowly disappeared. He is now little more than a polemicist, and his views are almost always predictable. He was, for example, an early sufferer of Bush derangement syndrome, where all the ills of America were chocked up to George W. Bush. One certainly grew tired of such simplistic argumentation and I resented reading his blog and articles, and eventually I stopped. What happened to the Sullivan of the mid-1990s? People can of course change their opinions over time, even their whole approach to politics and/or life. But one gets the impressive with Sullivan that he is rather like a candle at the end of a long dinner -- a small flame still burns, but no one is interested in looking at it and the likely fate of that lump of wax that is left is to be discarded.

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