According the this quiz, I am a "neoconservative" in foreign policy, which isn't a term that I would apply to myself but is probably correct if the only other choices are "isolationist", "realist" and "liberal". Illustrating how little content "neoconservative" has in common usage, the quiz-maker's examples of that tendency are Theodore Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. I'm happy to associate myself with both, but their views on foreign affairs were simply incommensurable. The circumstances in which they operated were so vastly different that it is absurd to treat the two men's views as instantiations of a common set of principles. It's not inconceivable that Reagan would have negotiated an end to the Russo-Japanese War, created the Great White Fleet and urged early U.S. entry into World War I, or that Roosevelt would have accelerated defense spending, installed Pershing missiles in Europe and financed covert operations against the Soviet Union, but it's not a certainty either.
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