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Given that it took less than fifteen years to go from "get the government out of our bedrooms" to "we're coming for your kids", I'd expect future movements to become even more concerned with people's personal lives--seeing demands for "privacy" or "live and let live" as nothing more than evil ploys by a group that isn't (yet) powerful enough to impose their will on the majority. A right that embraces "the personal is political" will not become more tolerant of private immorality.
The left's whole "we pulled that 'free speech' trick on you, we're not about to let you pull it on us now we have power" thing has been a more important lesson than people currently appreciate. When they're being directly told by the gloating winners that's how culture war works, reactionaries and even some conservatives are smart enough to realize: "Fool me once, shame on me. Fool me twice... I won't be fooled again."
I expect the upcoming culture
warcurbstomp of conservative resistance by "minor attracted persons" activists will solidify that, if nothing else does. Watching that swing into low gear has been fascinating.TBH I'm shocked that rightists stick by liberal principles at this point. If you're a conservative Jew like Ben Shapiro I guess you feel you have no choice since, as a minority religion, you want the strong minority protections of liberalism.
But any conservative Christian who watches not only the short-term - where the Left basically suckered them that LGBT matters weren't going to be a big imposition - but the greater sweep of history in liberal countries where Christianity (after 2,000 years of resiliency) is facing demographic eclipse and destruction, not to mention legal restrictions on Christians (it's your business but you can't decide to not support a fundamentally unChristian activity)...
By their fruits will ye know them, surely?
Rightists don't stick by liberal principles when they can get away with not. Sure, it isn't illegal to be gay in hungary and poland, but gay propaganda is totally illegal.
The US is different because the civil cold war isn't yet in full swing, and aside from Texas(whose reactionaries both very much exist and are very, very procedural in a way of slowing down the implementation of their agenda) there isn't really a political jurisdiction which is both big and rich enough to do whatever it wants and dominated by conservatives enough to try.
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I think this is only a partial answer, but in some cases, people broadly on the right picked up some liberal principles and then grounded them in right-oriented justifications. On the face of it, there was then agreement on the point across the aisle, but via different paths. Roll the clock forward, those liberal principles fell out of favor on the left, and the right looks confused because they thought that point was settled. One example: "colorblindness" as a rejection of racism. This fits in well with the universalist aspects of Christianity, and was adopted by much of the American right as such.
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