Admittedly, I looked at the labels you guys have for political ideology here, and the Rockefeller Republican label seemed interesting.
I brought it up to a friend, and she said that it's nice on the surface, but that deep down, it's much more sinister. On one hand, it embraces socially liberal values and government regulation, but on the other, it has a fake appreciation of culture. It doesn't care for the everyday person relating with what they're doing, but rather institutionalizes people while celebrating celebrities and expects them to be happy or else there's just something psychologically wrong with them. If they're not happy enough with the institution to be willing to keep working, then Rockefeller Republicans are willing to just call them lazy. In other words, they've compromised on everything... except ruggedly individualist work ethic. Drugs, illegal immigration, abortion, gay marriage, affirmative action, and even moral emotivism/relativism are fine by them... as long as they get to bully some minority around who's too difficult for justice to be bothered, and call that minority lazy and force it to do menial labor that nobody wants to do.
I told her in response that sounds rather cosmopolitan...
...and she said that I didn't know what I was talking about. After that, she linked me to this: http://www.firstthings.com/article/2011 ... nservative
She told me that cosmopolitanism isn't what we typically believe it to be in the mass media sense of the word. In fact, Stalin even used "cosmopolitanism" as a way to discriminate subversive Jews versus "patriots", especially in light of the media. He was convinced that Jews used the media to indirectly impose their religious values on society even if they didn't directly preach them.
What's most interesting about this, however, is how many conservatives actually complain about the media themselves, and claim that it subverts society in the same "cosmopolitan" way in contrast to patriotism. These conservatives tend to not be Jews though. Heck, Zionist neocons often celebrate mass media consumerism as a venue of capitalism, especially in contrast to those artsy-puny liberals who aren't willing to endure the rugged individualist attitude of crazed consumption...
...so what does it really mean to be a cosmopolitan, and can conservatives actually relate with it or is it just a label they're using for their own self-interest?