Does Newt Gingrich Want the Constitution to ‘Die?’

American conservatism has long been synonymous with protecting and promoting the U.S. Constitution.  Barry Goldwater explained what it meant to be a conservative leader in his  famous 1960 book “The Conscience of a Conservative”:

The turn will come when we entrust the conduct of our affairs to the men  who understand that their first duty as public officials is to divest themselves  of the power that they have been given. It will come when Americans, in hundreds  of communities throughout the nation, decide to put the man in office who is  pledged to enforce the Constitution and restore the Republic.

In 1995, authors Alvin and Heidi Toffler published “Creating a New  Civilization: The Politics of the Third Wave.” The Tofflers formulated something  they called the “futurist” movement, in which they believed technological  advancement would usher in massive civilizational change. One of the  implications of their envisioned societal transformation was alluded to on page  91 of their futurist tome:

For this wisdom above all, we thank Mr. Jefferson, who helped create the  system that served us so well for so long and that now must, in its turn, die  and be replaced.

“The system … Mr. Jefferson … helped create … now must … die and be  replaced”?

We can safely assume the Tofflers were speaking of Thomas Jefferson. We can  also infer that “the system” Mr. Jefferson and his generation helped create was  the experiment in limited government known as the United States  Constitution.

Wrote Newt Gingrich in the foreword to “Creating a New Civilization”:

This book is a key effort in the direction of empowering citizens … to  truly take the leap to invent a (new) civilization.

“A new civilization”?

Goldwater believed that conservatives would finally win the day when “Americans, in hundreds of communities throughout the nation, decide to put the  man in office who is pledged to enforce the Constitution and restore the  Republic.” Yet the man many Republicans currently want to put in this nation’s  highest office once heartily endorsed a fad philosophy that essentially  advocated the death of the U.S. Constitution to make way for a “new  civilization” that would replace the old republic.

Not that the current Republican presidential front-runner has ever been a big  fan of the Constitution. Based on his record, we can assume that Gingrich’s “new  civilization” would include individual health care mandates, cap-and-trade, bank  bailouts, gun control, amnesty for illegal aliens, No Child Left Behind, Medicare Plan D, Planned  Parenthood funding — all of which our Constitution prohibits. No wonder Gingrich  needs our nation’s founding charter out of the way.

But rattling off Gingrich’s many liberal policy offenses is easy. What is far  more disturbing than Newt’s constant support for dreadful ideas is his  consistently anti-conservative frame of mind from which they spring. Russell  Kirk wrote that, “In essence, the conservative person is simply one who finds  the permanent things more pleasing than Chaos … A people’s historic continuity  of experience, says the conservative, offers a guide to policy far better than  the abstract designs of coffee-house philosophers.”

Completely void of Kirk’s custom-and-habit conservatism, Gingrich has not  only always been eager to follow outlandish “coffee-house philosophers” like the  Tofflers, he fancies himself as one — and Newt has always been way  over-caffeinated. Gingrich is really not the oft-perceived brilliant man  brimming with innovative ideas, but a political schizophrenic whose  philosophical center never holds because he doesn’t have one. Said former  Congressman Mickey Edwards (R-OK), “I’ve known Newt now for 30 years almost. But  I wouldn’t be able to describe what his real principles are.”

Read the entire column at The Daily Caller