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Matthew Yglesias

Matthew Yglesias - Matthew Yglesias is a fellow at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.
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Matthew Yglesias is a fellow at the Center for American Progress. His first book, with the working title Heads in the Sand: Iraq and the Strange Death of Liberal Internationalism, scheduled to be published next spring by John Wiley and co., deals with the Democratic Party's struggle to find a post-9/11 foreign policy, focusing primarily on the rise and (hopefully) fall of the liberal hawk movement.

Previously, he was a staff writer at The American Prospect and an Associate Editor at TPM Media, where he contributed to the group blogs Tapped and TPMCafe. His main blog, now at The Atlantic, has existed in various forms since the dark ages of the blogosphere in January 2002.

His writing has appeared in The Guardian, Slate, The New Republic, and The Washington Monthly, and he is a regular on BloggingHeads.tv and makes the occasional radio or television appearance.

Desperately out of touch with the American mainstream, Yglesias was born and raised in Manhattan and studied philosophy at Harvard where he was editor in chief of The Harvard Independent, a campus alternative weekly.

His latest writings can be found on the Matthew Yglesias blog.

McCain as Burkean

By Matthew Yglesias
Apr 11 2008, 2:13 PM ET Comment

200px-EdmundBurke1771.jpg

Jonathan Rauch, writing in The Atlantic, makes the case that John McCain should be understood not as a conservative heretic but as an old-school Burkean conservative at a time when much of the GOP may have come unmoored from those traditional roots.

I think there's a lot of truth to this analysis (though I don't really think it can account for everything McCain did early in the Bush administration -- a lot of the positions he staked out for a couple of years there seem explicable primarily as driven by anti-Bush pique that he eventually got over) but it neglects the whole topic of foreign policy. Which is fine -- the other issues are important, too. But foreign policy questions are McCain's passion, he's chosen to put them at the center of his campaign, and there's really nothing at all Burkean about McCain's take on them. The "our country is democratic, democracy is awesome, therefore we should try to conquer the entire world in the name of spreading democracy" syllogism at the core of McCain "Enduring Peace Built on Freedom" is straight out of the French Revolution.

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