How This Ex-Liberal Found Fortitude and Her Way Home
posted at 10:32 am on October 10, 2009 by Anita MonCrief
Growing up black and Catholic in the South was an interesting experience that taught me a great deal about people. I believe I spent less than a week in public school before transferring to a private Catholic school and beginning theology classes that still intertwine with my life experience. I remember going to a Baptist funeral and feeling so out of place. The expression of intense emotion was not something that I had ever seen in church, the songs were unfamiliar and the style was foreign to me. Growing up poor in a less than ideal family dynamic led for me to crave order and routine. Some friends often remarked about the order of the Mass or told me that it was boring, but to me it was comforting. I knew what was coming and I was ready. Reciting phrases in Latin or receiving Communion were things I trusted and understood.
Often in interviews I am asked about my conversion from the far left liberal (radical) to the conservative movement and I always think back to first grade. While I had been Catholic all my life, I did not realize it until I went to school. I felt a little lost and very scared. That’s how I feel about blacks and conservatism. I left the church as a young woman, the church never changed but my desire not to live by its rules led me to break free.
Over the years, I have tried and studied other religions but Catholicism is home, and nothing feels like home. As a liberal there was a certain part of me that fought against the world. It was never a fair fight though, because my opinions were set and no amount of proof could change that. As a liberal trying to find her way, I often felt like I was trying on religions again. I didn’t fit in, asked lots of questions and was uneasy about my path. Being lost will do that, only I did not know I was on the wrong path. I channeled that anger at the “system” into art work, I went home at night and tried not to think about the moms living on Section 8 in the “projects” who worried about their kids and still tried to look out for me too. I ignored the feelings of desperation when I talked to my young friends, so full of promise but without an adequate foundation to succeed.
The Democrats seemed to be the answer: social programs, better schools, and politicians who cared. I do think that if I had never seen the other side of community organizing that I would still be blindly following along that same path. Being a conservative gives me hope, and peace. While it has not been easy, I decided to start with what made me love America as a child – its history and Constitution- and go from there. Friends who are still radicals rail at me for loving a country that enslaved us, and I tell them I don’t. I love a country that had the guts to stand up time and time again and right a wrong. A country that is not afraid to pick itself up and start again.
The media, think tanks and leftist organizations paint the right as hate mongers and I believed it for a number of years. Going to events like the Defending the American Dream Summit this past weekend continues to enlighten me. I find warm, regular people who have traveled and taken time off to be there. It was not a gathering of paid hacks, or reporters patting themselves on the back for Van Jones. Moms, dads, nurses, doctors, bloggers and people from all over America, discussed the state of our country and their fears for the world their children would be inheriting.
Comparing it to a leftist conference I went to in 2007 I was amazed at how helpful and open the staff and sponsors were. No egos here. Tim Phillips went out of his way to accommodate those of us who ended up in the overflow room after an expected surge of attendees. The next day, I spoke on a panel and was overwhelmed by the support in the room. Conservatives seemed to be more accepting of differences and willing to listen and respond to others without attacking or belittling them.
Putting political ideology aside for a moment, I will tell anyone that there has been a certain amount of inner peace that I have never had before and I have noticed more harmony in my family. For the first time in my adult life I can honestly say that I am not at war with myself or the world. I never knew that by changing my political beliefs that I would find my faith, change the course of my life and end a self destructive pattern of victimhood.
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This is the first comment posted, making this about race, fyi:
bridgetown on October 10, 2009 at 7:01 PM
The author defines that gender, race, religion, and political affiliation are all valid topics, as they are the separate threads she uses to weave her own story. We are welcome to comment or counter-comment in each of these directions, either warp or weave, or none if we choose. That some commenter chooses a given direction is often more of a comment on their own predilections and concerns than the author’s.
unclesmrgol on October 10, 2009 at 7:03 PM
unclesmrgol on October 10, 2009 at 6:59 PM
I agree with you, but throughout the history of the US, even our parties have changed over time. Thus, my argument that no party deserves credit for righting the wrongs.
American people did it, repub or dem or independent or what have you.
The democrats have become over the top, out to lunch lefties. The republicans..I don’t even know what they are doing anymore, but they aren’t that much different than the dems, in my view. A little different, but not much.
bridgetown on October 10, 2009 at 7:04 PM
I do indeed know what “they” are doing.
The 2008 Republican Party Platform
The 2008 Democratic Party Platform
And for those who care about a party that received no electoral votes in the past election,
The 2008 Constitution Party Platform
If you want to understand where a party is going and what road it wants to take to get there, the party platform is essential reading.
There will be common issues in each party platform, and other issues unique to the individual party’s platform. If you want to get really analytical, you read the platforms, note the universe of concerns across all parties, weight each concern by your concept of its importance, determine the weight as to whether the party aligns with your concern (a weight between negative one (doesn’t align) and one (fully aligns), and then sum the multiplied weights. In the end you get a number for each party, and the one with the greatest value is the party which aligns most with your viewpoint. Note that a party which fails to take a stance on an issue important to you should be given a negative one (doesn’t align) value for that issue, because a “don’t care” ought to be coded as a false (because your important issue isn’t important enough for them to consider important).
Again, I’m aligned with the Republicans, except on the issue of immigration (which I weight as less important than abortion).
unclesmrgol on October 10, 2009 at 7:28 PM
No, it never occurs to a leftist that one of their pet minorities is capable of being judged by the same standards as white males. Deep down, they believe that blacks can’t cut it, and need Affirmative Action to have decent odds at achieving. They’ve pushed the need for double standards for so long that it seems like a lot of the Ballot Cattle (™ ‘Zo) believe it, making it a self-fulfilling prophecy for those who have been coddled by the low expectations. (Chris Rock has some brutal material on the subject, which I can’t quote here for reasons that should be obvious.)
Leftists project that attitude onto those who oppose them politically, and assume that we must make special allowances for the Untermenschen, just like they do.
But now that Anita has turned to The Dark Side according to Leftist theory, she is no longer “authentically” black, and probably isn’t even really a woman, based on some of the rhetoric we heard when Sarah Palin was nominated to be Veep last year. She’s at least an Aunt
ThomasinaJemima Oreo or something. (I ponder what Oreo cookies saturated in pancake syrup would taste like.)The Monster on October 10, 2009 at 7:44 PM
Welcome Anita. Wonderful article….even read it aloud to my husband.
yoda on October 10, 2009 at 8:20 PM
I get the same feeling every time I head to one of those events.
It was an honor to have met you there, and at RightOnline before that.
steveegg on October 10, 2009 at 8:35 PM
So true.
If you’re a lib and you go conservative, you stay conservative.
And your remark about Huffie is true. She NEVER was a conservative.
I lived in CA and trust me on that.
Sapwolf on October 10, 2009 at 8:39 PM
Bingo!
It took a cynical beast of a president to not only politicize the Viet Nam war and lose it, but to make war on the black family KNOWING it would make them dependent and weak and voting Dem for years.
Sapwolf on October 10, 2009 at 8:45 PM
Didn’t you know that blacks can’t be conservative, and all of us here at HA are lily-white?
/sarc
Anyone who has to call someone “dumbass” to make his point can’t be firing on all cylinders, IMHO.
tcn on October 10, 2009 at 8:46 PM
Ahem. Wrong on so many levels… At the point you do this, you have constructed your own God. Good luck worshiping him, but if the Real One shows up…
unclesmrgol on October 10, 2009 at 9:09 PM
…the Devil will be in the details.
unclesmrgol on October 10, 2009 at 9:10 PM
Thank you, Anita, and welcome to the fold. My dad is a convert to Catholicism and he has always said that converts bring passion and energy that revive the faith of cradle Catholics. Your story brings us cradle conservatives encouragement and new energy.
inmypajamas on October 10, 2009 at 9:21 PM
Anita, I pray you will still have that inner peace when they start to crucify you. Being one a child of Light ain’t that great. But then again suffering is testing how much your faith means to you. Welcome home.
TwilightStruggler on October 10, 2009 at 9:35 PM
YOU GO GIRL! You’re a strong woman Anit, and I respect you so much!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVGf3ePIO04
njpat on October 10, 2009 at 9:36 PM
Don’t get out much do ya?
DSchoen on October 11, 2009 at 12:51 AM
As someone wrote on the first page, that’s my story but I’m white, Irish Catholic. All that Dem feel good crap is a delusion. Hatred is the driving force. Thank you Anita.
tessa on October 11, 2009 at 4:14 AM
Anita, thank you for that truly wonderful editorial. You are to be heartily congratulated for your courage.
Please note, as a representative of the libertarian movement, that the Right has two wings; conservative AND libertarian.
I sincerely hope that you will join us libertarians in addition to your new conservative friends. We have Cato, Club for Growth, Americans for Tax Reform, Republican Liberty Caucus, and even the editorial board of America’s #1 newspaper – the Wall Street Journal.
Consider yourself an Honorary Member of the libertarian movement. We would welcome you at any of our events and into our organizations.
Eric Dondero, Publisher
Libertarian Republican
ericdondero on October 11, 2009 at 8:36 AM
And we are glad to have Libertarians as part of the conservative movement, along with Republicans.
It is not “two separate wings”…please don’t try that old trick of dividing up the conservatives so the liberals will stay in power.
It worked with Perot…it won’t work again.
When the libertarians can put a legitimate ticket together, they will be taken seriously.
Until then, they can continue to argue about how many angels can sit on the head of a pin…
right2bright on October 11, 2009 at 8:45 AM
Great inspirational post. I too was on the wrong path at one point, explaining away the facts that conflicted with my fervently held left wing ideological beliefs. Those on the left are taught to scorn conservatism, not engage and refute it for a reason. Those facts start lining up into a pattern, and all of a sudden something clicks and you ask yourself, “Could I be looking at the world from the wrong direction?”. And the experience is liberating, exhilarating, and not a little bit scary. You also quickly learn who your friends are. Thanks for sharing your experience Anita. Be strong, never stop learning, and be an inspiration to those seeking the right path.
DaMav on October 11, 2009 at 9:07 AM
If she ain’t a victim….she ain’t a liberal.
There is no more important foundation of a liberal then being a victim. The cornerstone of liberalism.
right2bright on October 11, 2009 at 10:04 AM
Anita,
Keep in mind this is not a Republican/Democrat issue. It is about the dignity of the individual and his/her struggle against those that wish to enslave them.
It is good against evil.
If you put your faith in political parties instead of the underlying principles then you will be sorely disappointed.
God Bless You
True_King on October 11, 2009 at 10:13 AM
It’s not “faith” it is aligning yourself with a group that better reflects your goals.
Just because something is not “totally” right, doesn’t mean you discard it.
There is no organization, no union, that provides everything you “want”, since that would just be a selfish and greedy motive to belong.
You align yourself with a group to find commonality, to promote commonality, to promote the ideals you feel, to learn from others ideals you need reforming (unless you are so smart you know everything), and to begin changing those standards you feel need revision.
You may join the Republicans because their general platform is in general alignment, but work within to strengthen, lets say, border control.
But in general, Republicans are for less government (something more to work on), and independence, state rights (more to work on), etc.
Intelligent people know, that organizations provide a platform for change.
right2bright on October 11, 2009 at 10:24 AM
DaMav Oct 11th @ 9:07
Exactly how I felt. Liberated, exhilirated and just a little scared. Funny thing is now I am a guest speaker at Block Club start ups who actually want to know how to fight crime in their neighborhoods. Conservative do-good beats out liberal do-good any day of the week. And the best part is I don’t give speeches TO these people, I have conversations WITH them. In that way we deal with THEIR priorities and not those of the politicians. Liberalism is dying out, thank goodness.
elclynn on October 11, 2009 at 11:33 AM
Welcome to the dark side Anita (and others!). We’re glad to have you.
God bless.
SueM on October 11, 2009 at 11:59 AM
God Bless you Anita… Well written heart felt piece.
Keemo on October 11, 2009 at 12:08 PM
Ms Moncrief said; Putting political ideology aside for a moment, I will tell anyone that there has been a certain amount of inner peace that I have never had before and I have noticed more harmony in my family. For the first time in my adult life I can honestly say that I am not at war with myself or the world. I never knew that by changing my political beliefs that I would find my faith, change the course of my life and end a self destructive pattern of victimhood.
Sounds to me like she doesn’t want to change the conservative movement, she just came home to a way of life that is right. (no pun intended)
Herb on October 11, 2009 at 12:35 PM
Just read through all the comments. It is indeed very telling how the many comments from the conservative side are largely positive, uplifting and encouraging. Whereas the few comments from those on the left are negative, angry, snide, and disingenuous.
Liberals: your unhappyness speaks volumes.
infidel4life on October 11, 2009 at 1:48 PM
Here, here Anita. W
Geronimo on October 11, 2009 at 1:52 PM
That is, well said.
Geronimo on October 11, 2009 at 1:52 PM
Anita,
Thanks for your story. I hope you publish more on Hot Air.
Are you writing a book? Your knowlege of the travesties of ACORN and your efforts to make them known in the NY Times are appreciated. But you picked the wrong paper as you found out. Use a neutral medium this time. Write your own book. Then no one can cut you off when you get too close to the truth.
You probably won’t get reviewed by the Times as other conservative best sellers have found. But it hasn’t hurt sales. All it does is prove the Times is no longer the “Newspaper of Record.”
Corky Boyd on October 11, 2009 at 2:19 PM
Excellent piece. Hope to hear more from Anita.
Bleeds Blue, I have been fortunate to live in a very nice gated neighborhood this last decade. In the deep South. You know, where all the racist white people are? Here’s the link, if you are interested, http://tinyurl.com/ygjk565.
Now, I am off to tell my neighbors they are not “authentically black” since they live in our all white gated ‘hood.
di butler on October 11, 2009 at 2:27 PM
I am black conservative and female I have been so since I was old enough to make my own decisions and I am christian since I was 12. I am now 26, you go girl!
Christiangothkitty on October 11, 2009 at 2:46 PM
As someone who lived her life on the West Coast where you are inundated with liberal principles, it took me a long time to come to where I am now. As I tell my children, my brand of conservatism is a CHOICE. A commitment to a certain set of principles and values that I freely and knowingly embrace.
I’ve seen what liberalism has wrought. No, I’m not a far right winger, more of a moderate. But I am indeed ‘conservative’. I know why, I can explain why, and I most certainly know why I am not liberal.
Welcome ‘home’. I’d like to hear more of what you have to say.
GeeWhiz on October 11, 2009 at 4:10 PM
Kitty..please let Bleeds Blue know who you are. He thinks everyone in here is a old balding white male…LOL
Jeff from WI on October 11, 2009 at 4:20 PM
This piece, folks, is why Black Americans, who became leftist by default or due to a misunderstanding of conservatism will end up disillusioned with the Left and will abandon it. Many conservatives are frustrated by the fact that the leftist Democrats have absolute and unshakable political fidelity of the vast majority of our black fellow citizens (among other ‘minorities’). Some conservatives don’t even care to try (where possible) converting these folks anymore.
Fear not, however, folks, for Leftist philosophy is naively ambiguous at best or fradulent at worst; as far as each truly open-minded leftist person is concerned, this realization will occur—sooner or later. That is because despite appearances, these people aren’t stupid, they’ve simply ‘been had.’
Anita, well done. Welcome home, sister.
ConScribe on October 11, 2009 at 4:39 PM
I was at one of your panels Anita and came up to shake your hand afterwards, Anita.
It was a pleasure to meet you.
Thank you for what you are doing for you, for us, and for America.
TriciaNC on October 11, 2009 at 4:59 PM
well he can go the my myspace page myspace.com\ladydarkheart I have pics
Christiangothkitty on October 11, 2009 at 5:02 PM
It goes to values. Such a wonderful word. Everyone in my family is a free (and imaginative) thinker. We all agree with Anita. I wish I could surround myself with only such people.
BTY Jeff: Not balding…yet
obleo on October 11, 2009 at 5:53 PM
Just woke up here in South Korea and talked with my 17 year old black god-daughter and her older sisters 21, 23, and 26. They live in Canada but I’ve known them and their parents for 20 years.
This was a beautiful post. It made me cry. Thank you.
Canadian Infidel on October 11, 2009 at 6:53 PM
Dear Anita~
What a heartfelt and sincere essay. I hope you will continue to speak out on your experiences. The little bit that you revealed made me want to learn more about you and your life.
cynccook on October 11, 2009 at 11:05 PM
sounds like the writer has converted to catholicism, not conservatism.
until the “conservative” movement finds its bearings and stops encouraging that sort of confusion, count me out.
eh on October 11, 2009 at 11:22 PM
Those of us who are conservative and Catholic dispute your statement that the two are incompatible.
Some of Anita MonCrief’s conservative credentials are here, and here, and here.
She’s been sued by ACORN. By my estimation, her conservative creds far outshine yours, Mr. Wristaction Eh, and we count you out, per your request. Hopefully, you are happy there.
unclesmrgol on October 11, 2009 at 11:50 PM
When I first heard about Ms. Moncrief, I knew only that she was an ACORN whistleblower, and, therefore, a person with principles and the courage to stand up for her values. I didn’t need to know the color of her skin to be interested in hearing more about her journey and her ideas.
I first encountered Black Face Counting (BFC) while watching the Republican Convention with my stepdaughter last year. She often brings up talking points that she’s heard from her leftist mother, in a casual and offhand way, in order to hear my view of those points without blatantly pitting me against her mother. It’s a razor edged, guilt ridden line she walks, and I’m proud that she continues to walk it, putting the truth ahead of blind loyalty. As the camera panned through the crowd, she blurted out something about the number of white faces in the crowd. I was shocked, and my response was more abrupt than usual.
“Are you counting black people?”.
She was a little embarrassed, and I regretted my tone. I then explained to her how difficult it is for black people to be – openly – conservative. I told her about the abuse suffered by Michael Steele, Justice Thomas, and others. Then I pointed out that, given the ostracism black conservatives endure, every black face that she did see, represented an extraordinary commitment to a value system, and a strength of character so uncommon, that to reduce them to a game of numbers was a terrible disservice.
Every Anita Moncrief represents a threat to the BFC crowd. They fear the day that that camera pans across the crowd and there is enough variation in skin tone to render their petty point moot. I don’t know why; they’ve shown an endless ability to generate new bumpersticker sized talking points, no matter how many are shredded by logic, truth, or common decency. Maybe the fear is more personal. Maybe they see more of themselves in Ms. Moncrief’s experiences than they dare to admit, even to themselves, because they don’t know if they have the courage to walk that lonesome valley, and they don’t want to risk putting themselves to the test.
ral514 on October 12, 2009 at 12:35 AM
From Shakespeare
This above all:
To thine own self be true
And it must follow as the night the day
Thou canst not then be false to any man
entagor on October 12, 2009 at 2:16 AM
Welcome home.
Should another try to lead you astray, let your inner compass point the way.
hoakie on October 12, 2009 at 8:44 AM
Welcome back, true explores step over the line and stay for awhile to insure they fully understand how the other side works. Once they understand the goal and methods the Left must use to keep you interested enough to stay, the light comes on that it is time to come home.
Again, great description of your experiences. I appreciate how you highlighted a view of your past; “I decided to start with what made me love America as a child – its history and Constitution- and go from there.” I work hard sharing that concept with others. Because the idea is essential to fully understand U.S.
Remember, if you understand your past you can see your future. Also, our Constitution are the words that bind U.S. together.
MSGTAS on October 12, 2009 at 10:38 AM
I have followed Ms. Moncrief’s story with interest since it broke and feel it was very important in bringing ACORN to it’s knees.
In my ignorance, I had no idea she was black until today.
If I wasn’t so colorblind, I’m sure I would be a racist.
Best wishes to you and those you love, Anita.
riverrat10k on October 12, 2009 at 10:43 AM
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