Can you enlighten me on PaleoConservative and NeoConservative ideals?

Thanks – I will study more about Conservative ideas.

Makes perfect sense.

Start here. Click on the folder labeled “Conservatism – For Tradition, and Skepticism!”

In answer to your question, the best time to paleocons is perhaps the 1950s, before the Civil Rights movement and all that . . . or perhaps back before the New Deal . . . or before the Federal Reserve and the federal income tax . . . or even before the Civil War in some cases. The neocons’ ideal time is some time in the future, after democracy and capitalism have swept the whole world and we’ve reached the End of History. The neocons’ root influences include ex-communists, and Marxists also tend to think in terms of global revolution culminating in some future “End of (Pre-)History.”

If there was a time that was better matched to conservative ideals it was probably the 1920s. Economically, the top marginal rates for income tax were cut in 1924 to 25%. There was little regulation, growth of government was slow, and the government debt was cut by a third. Immigration had been slowed, and abortion was outlawed. Because of this unemployment was low, standards of living were rising so fast that the decade was known as the roaring 20s.

And by the end of that decade, the smallness of that regulation allowed a massive stock market crash that kicked off a decade of Depression. Funny how your description stops short of those standards of living diving into the Marianas Trench for everyone but the Gettys, Rockefellers and Goulds.

Unemployment was low because abortion was outlawed?!

The stock market crash and the great depression had nothing to do with a lack of regulations. It was caused by currency deflation that resulted from bad government policy here and abroad.

There are several theories. Yours appears to be the Monetarist theory.

Well, I dunno about that – the neocons were always an academia-and-think-tank phenomenon with no mass base, but paleocons are a bigger deal electorally. See this article by John Judis on “Middle American Radicals” or “MARS.”