What accounts for the rise of neo-conservatism in the early eighties?

Where did anyone get the idea that neoconservatives are religious, let alone driven by evangelical Christianity???

Virtually all the leading neoconservatives are JEWISH, and not particularly observant ones, at that.

If you didn’t know that, I’ll thank you not to throw around words or phrases like “neoconservative,” until you’ve learned what it actually means.

Pssst- hint to all liberals: it does NOT mean “any conservative I don’t like.”

Perfectly true, astorian, but a lot of American evangelical Protestants have allied themselves with the neocon agenda. From The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America, by John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge (New York: The Penguin Press, 2004), p. 215:

Which relates directly to the OP. Why has American conservatism been in the ascendant since the 1980s? Mainly because of a vigorous alliance and synergy between various branches of American conservatism – economic-libertarian conservatives, big-business interests, religious conservatives, and foreign-policy neocons. This does nothing, however, to explain the rise of conservative movements in other countries with completely different cultural traditions and conditions. For instance, there is no religious right to speak of in Britain.

Because “neoconservative” has become a bogeyman to scare little children with by people who don’t know what it means.

No, they haven’t. Neoconservatives and members of the religious right just happen to agree on a single policy position, for different reasons. You can find a lot of liberals who support Israel, too, but nobody would say there’s a neoconservative-liberal alliance.

Overlook-ha! He’d crawl right into bed with them and declare them the “moral equivalent of our founding fathers!”

Well, except for me. And him. And her, and her, and those folks over there. And increasingly, you.

bwah-ha-ha-ha-ha