This is misleading. First off liberalism isn't the difference between the left and right in Americas paradigm the status Quo in America is one of liberal though hence the term "classical liberalism" this is again why the paradigm is also not to be quantified by equality or inequality but statism and anti-statism, because it's not the differentiating factor anymore. Remember they broke away from the status quo themselves making them the ones who valued reason over tradition. Here we are today where it is now it's own established status quo.
I understand that you're asserting that the American right is liberal, but there isn't any good reason to think that's true, and at the very least, I think you have to realize that there are significant illiberal elements that have influenced the movement (and currently control it).
True American conservatism aka classical liberalism is on the far right of the spectrum. The further right one goes the further state and it's affairs on the individuals lives dissolve.
Incorrect. The far right of the spectrum is monarchy or monarch-like systems. The far left is no gov't at all and a totally flat hierarchical structure (no property, essentially).
Beyond that would be complete anarchy in the truest sense of the meaning and not what leftists believe comes after a communist state. How the current majority of the right in America votes makes no difference in negating that fact. Just like it doesn't negate the history and existence of communism if registered Democrats don't happen to vote in a communist. That reasoning is completely irrelevant.
It depends. If you're discussing the American right, which you have mentioned many times, the character of the American right is relevant. If you're simply saying that right-wing liberalism is not authoritarian, that's true, as liberalism (left, right, and center) is inherently opposed to authoritarianism.
This is exactly the point I'm making. If you have taken the time to read into the philosophical under pinnings of American rightism you would know that it's a completely base in individualism and is completely unlike the status quo which it broke away from which, as you are now verifying for everyone, was collectivist.
I have taken the time to read into the philosophical underpinnings of American rightism, and it is deeply collectivist. There are right-wing liberal thinkers who are individualists, but that's not the whole American right, or the dominant element in it.
American rightism is an amalgamation, a mish mash of many different people's thoughts. I'm sure you could pick specific passages that some how made them seem unlike the founding fathers when they wrote the constitution but at the end of the day it doesn't change the fact that those people are the foundation they stand on.
The American Constitution is a liberal document, and the liberal right has good things to say about it, but it doesn't define the "American right." Calhoun is a much bigger influence on the American right than Locke or Smith, who generally (not just certain passages) promote a different, opposing viewpoint that fits better with the American left.
We already understand that we have a fundamental disagreement on what a conservative even is since you still think they want to maintain institutions they broke away from. That needs to be cleared up (even though it won't) to continue.
I think that what conservatism is (well-described
here, which I recommend) is a belief in the wisdom of tradition.
Again. Left and right in America isn't seperated by liberalism. This is why equality and Inequality is an outdated mode of quantifying it.
It mostly is. You're not American, right? Can you clear up where you get your ideas about the American political scene?
How the right votes today or what the Republicans do is irrelevant to lockes influence on the constitution. Again I'm talking about the ideology.
Correct, but it is relevant to identifying what the American right believes. Maybe after all this, we're really on the same page? We agree that the American right is authoritarian and not particularly liberal but also that Locke and Smith (big influences on the American left) are liberal?
What we are discussing is the political paradigm. How you view the right wing American base is irrelevant as I've said numerous times. Your last sentence "most of the right in America disagrees with that" is you not taking your own recommendations, keep this to ideological talk. People vote for all sorts of nonsense and yet it doesn't negate history and the terms associated.
How I view them is irrelevant, but how they view them defines what the "American right" is. And what the American right is, is mostly an authoritarian movement that is increasingly disconnected from liberalism and conservatism.