Is there not a need for conservatives to have a more reliable, efficient means than we have now of bringing new conservatives “up to speed?”
Does the current process not leave new conservatives with a choice between a long, obscure, initially incomprehensible, substantially unrealistic intellectual path and an easier path paved largely with sound-bites, slogans, and intellectual junk-food from the wrong parts of the internet?
Is it not true that even the higher-quality parts of that "easier path," which includes mostly content focused on current events, does not efficiently convey the fundamentals of the conservative philosophy?
As valuable as the volumes of books concerning conservatism are, could any book be so concise and available that its length or unavailability would not limit its usefulness in giving new conservatives a roadmap and a head-start?
Would it not be valuable for conservatives to tout and circulate a concise summary, available online, which introduces its reader to the best of conservatism and could jump-start a new conservative's intellectual journey?
If you answered "yes,"
You Will Like the Twelve Points.
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