Perhaps, but it's most associated with the right-wing youth.
For you, sure. Not for people who've been using it since before the right co-opted it.
Additionally, the focus shouldn't be on who it's directed towards, but the applicator of the phrase-- Christina Hoff Sommers was considered "based", ultimately, because her ideology as presented was germane to the emerging right-wing youth at that time (if they had actually realized what second wave feminism was, though, they would have considered her a Great Satan).
Are you trying to say gamergate was right-wing? Lmao.
The current progressive zeitgeist had already been brewing in universities for decades, and those graduates had to go somewhere in our society. The foundations for the orthodoxy regarding homosexuality and moreso transgenderism in particular were generated by psychologists such as Kinsey and Money. The sexual revolution, during which events such as the Roe v. Wade verdict and the creation of Playboy (which coincided with and influenced greatly the already extant free love movement and the general relaxation of sexual mores) well predated even the rise of the religious right, talk less of any proposed fallout caused by them.
Ceteris paribus sans the elevation of the religious right, however, we would have still largely been in our present situation. The dominance that rad-libs were allowed to have in our cultural propagators without substantive pushback all but assured that.
This is apologia. Those college students and those societal events still wouldn't have led by themselves to what we're seeing today without the heavy-handed authoritarian Religious Right at the helm constantly driving the youth of that day to things seen as "subversive". It simply wouldn't have been as popular if it wasn't able to be framed as a form of rebellion against an established dogma.
This all gets away from the point, however, that the idea of tempering the current evolutionary stage of progressivism with the center-left instead of diametrically stomping at least most of it into the ground is naive at best-- they have the same ideological foundations, and present progressivism is in large part a natural progression of the center-left mindset writ more annoying and obtrusive.
If what you were saying were true, the right wing would all be goose-stepping ethno-nationalists or theocrats at this point seeing as it's the same principle but on the right. Ultimately it doesn't
have to be a conservative or right-wing ideology that takes it's place - that's you speaking from your own idealized view of the situation rather than looking at it objectively.
You're getting nowhere with that, because in order to defeat them ideologically at this point you either have to propose a superior and better liked values system
Which could be the system that I entailed already.
or show that your values system better embodies their values than theirs does. You just can't do the former when your distinguishing factor is only that you're "less intense" and you can't do the latter properly when they're operating from what they feel is moral because under most circumstances you'd be able to be accused of not going far enough or intentionally stopping short of the logical conclusions.
And why is that, do you think? Because while I may agree with the former point the latter doesn't quite make sense. Again if this were the case you'd have the right wing falling into unironic fascism and other such extremes, or you'd have the entirety of the left rather than a prodigiously squeaky wheel parroting this tripe. As it stands, I think you're missing a large part of
why progressivism has such pull at the moment with the establishment, and such are filling in those gaps with suppositions.
Why wouldn't this be an entirely conservative viewpoint?
Because calling everything that isn't progressive conservative is fucking annoying and is the same fallacious bullshit feminists pull, as I remarked further on in the post. Not everything exists in a duopoly of "progressive or else".
Curbing illegal immigration may be a moderate position (assuming "moderate" to be "status quo" and considering the laws we have on the books to be "status quo"), but curbing immigration in general is distinctly conservative because it's an action meant to, in cultural terms, conserve culture and provide more incentive to assimilate.
Again this is a feminist saying "but you want equality for women, right? You're a feminist!". I cannot repeat this often enough because it's such a fucking irritating, shitty logical trap to try and pidgeonhole people as your "allies" when they're patently not. If they were "conservative" as the label is currently understood, they'd be for much, much more than just what I mentioned they'd theoretically be advocating.
You have to care one way or the other, because you have to uphold laws that go one way or the other. Also, why would it be that we care about illegal immigration and transgenderism but not abortion or gay marriage?
"We"
Nigga stop. People are capable of holding complex and nuanced views. Just because someone's not a fan of immigration doesn't mean they need to give a fuck about gay marriage. Politics isn't a game where you "pick a class" and take the good with the bad. With the environment that the generation we're discussing has grown up in, it's entirely plausible that they would care more about transgenderism for the same reason you have a legion of fedora-tipping euphoric atheist millenials long after the religious right has been defanged - they're a big face of progressivism. To say nothing of the fact that telling someone that they have to treat a man like a woman because he says he's one, regardless of medical facts or all reason really, is a world apart from caring about homosexuality or gays marrying when it was established as "normal" when these people were still in gradeschool.
Same question as above, but this is just reckless. "Sh'yeah, let's not pay mind to the fact that the building block of our national community is crumbling and leaving children more exposed to malignant influences while causing them to suffer developmental disadvantage. Let's not pay mind to the fact that men, mainly, are being robbed blind of their finances and parental rights just because their marriage didn't work out."
Again, that's the mindset I'm expecting from them since it was established as "normalcy" when they were young, and it's an aspect of society that either won't have much sway over them by the time they enter politics, or it wasn't a problem for them to begin with. We're talking about a generation that is going to have to be selfish
by necessity given how much rougher of a start they'll have even compared to millenials. I fully expect a political atmosphere centered around trying to make things better for themselves first and foremost.
And yes, yes, I know, "oh making the nuclear family stronger is better for everyone!" and so on. Reminder that these people are raised in an environment where it's already had such damage done to it that the only way to rectify it would be seen as "oppressive" by them.
Yeah, that's the entire thrust of what I was getting at.
That's the kind of thing Carlson did in that interview with Shapiro when he talked about how he was just a guy who wanted to go back to the way things were in 2005-- it completely misses the point. 2005, 2008-- what we're dealing with now has been brewing since well into the 20th century and was bred from ideologies that sought to destroy the hold of cultural institutions seen to maintain the status quo (such as churches and families) with little regard for the harm that would bring. The roots go far deeper than "they're pushing trans stuff on our kids!" if you believe that to be a bad thing to begin with, which is my entire point regarding my cynicism regarding the ultimate political orientation of Zoomers: they don't realize how far the rabbit hole goes, and they either don't realize or don't want to realize how much needs to be extricated and how much they need to yoke themselves with afterwards. "You've gone too far!" will never be an adequate argument against the current zeitgeist-- it's like rubbing a topical cream when you really need an injection.
That's a fine opinion, but it's not fact. It seems more to me that you'd rather have a much more conservative society and - while I can't begrudge someone of a political opinion for wanting it to be the dominant one, that's politics after all - you're acting as if though if we don't go back to the way things were before the RR toppled over then we're all doomed to be in the progressive zeitgeist for eternity. It's just not black and white, and as I said if that were even remotely true progressives wouldn't have had to wriggle into all the right nooks and crannies of society to ensure that their ideology came out as the figurehead when the pendulum finally did swing back leftwards. I've gone on at length in a different post as to why I think they came out ahead of other left-of-center ideologies, but I will admit openly that while I do believe a lot of their prominence is artificial it can't be understated that they did in fact only come to the fore ahead of their contemporaries
after they had attained critical mass in the news media, education, and government infrastructure of the west.
Basically, to reiterate, if what you're saying here were true then there wouldn't have ever been a transitional period between the RR and the progressive dogma we see today. There was, however, and I do believe that a non-insignificant part of the next generation will try and bring that about - that's the "based zoomers" meme in a nutshell. I also believe that thinking that there's any reason to be dismayed or disappointed about that
when that's the best you're gonna get is the very definition of looking a gift horse in the mouth. Just be glad there's a chance they won't be even fucking worse or more leftward than the inmates currently running the asylum.