NOUN
- an approach to politics or theology that represents a return to a traditional point of view (in contrast to more liberal or radical schools of thought of the 1960s)
How To Use neoconservatism In A Sentence
- The term neoconservatism was created by the socialist writer Michael Harrington in the early 1970s. BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition
- We take refuge in foreign policy systems: liberal internationalism or realpolitik, neoconservatism or noninterventionism.
- Elsewhere a romantic vision of the American people (despite the self-perceived "antiromantic" nature of neoconservatism, noted earlier) is combined with an appeal to demonstrate greatness to non-Americans. Neopersuasion
- # Obama means well, but is utterly unable to work against the residual neoconservatism from the stay-behinds in the Pentagon. Matthew Yglesias » Taliban on the Run
- Noah's piece tends to show that neoconservatism is not the sinister conspiracy he thinks it is, not that neoconservatism is cracking up.
- Irving Kristol, sometimes called the godfather of neoconservatism, calls it not a movement but a persuasion.
- It is to neoconservatism's credit that this doctrine is consistent with extant work on how best to respond to the zombie menace.
- Critics of neoconservatism and the Bush foreign policy are fascist because "neocon" is code for Jewish, pro-Israel intellectuals. The Partial Observer
- In other words, neoconservatism is a Jewish movement and Jews are responsible for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and all the problems which they have caused for all countries involved. Wonk Room » Project For The Rehabilitation Of Neoconservatism
- Francis Fukayama's autopsy of neoconservatism is well worth reading, and makes many sensible points about the direction that American foreign policy should now take. Balkinization