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Permit me to wax philosophical for a moment:
In mathemeatics there is a field known as dynamical systems theory, colloquially called "chaos theory". Everything interesting that happens, happens at the boundry where order meets chaos. Perfect order is stagnation and perfect chaos is, well, chaotic. Neither extreme is conducive to growth and life.
In living systems, if cellular reproduction ceases, death and stagnation ensue, but unrestrained growth results in cancer. There is a constant battle between the forces of order and the forces of chaos, and if either force gains ascendancy the result is catastrophic.
In another example, those companies that are most succesful are characterized by constant tension between the marketing and engineering departments. If marketing controls the company then creative engineering is sacrificed to follow the fads of marketing so that only "safe" products are created and the company quickly falls behind the technology curve and stagnates. If engineering dominates the company then the creative juices flow and inovation becomes a way of life, but this creative energy is not harnessed and sent to market and, for all its inovation, the company starves for lack of sales. For the company to thrive engineering and marketing must be in a constant state of struggle against each other, with neither force dominating.
In political life the conservative forces resist change and the liberal forces promote inovation, but if either philosophy dominates to the exclusion of the other, social ruin results. If the conservatives suppress all liberal inovation the society stagnates, but if liberal inovation runs unchecked, instability and chaos rule the day.
The stability and vitality of a society depends on the constant tension between these two opposing forces; this life at the edge of chaos. As much as the conservatives are the enemy we love to hate we must recognize that we are both, conservatives and liberals, dependant upon each other to maintain the vitality of our culture and society. Sometimes we venture a bit too far in one direction or the other, but for the most part, we maintain that delicate balance that makes democracy work.
Sometimes we are acutely uncomfortable with all the stress and tension, but such is the nature of life at the edge of chaos. And the only alternative to this dynamic tension is the catastrophic failure of society either in the direction of chaos or in the direction of stagnation.
As we fight the good fight against the forces of conservatism, therefore, let us be ever mindful of the fact that we owe our very existence to the loyal opposition, as they owe their very existence to us. May neither of us ever succeed in completely banishing the other, for in that act would we sow the seeds of our own destruction.
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