Right Wing Nut House

11/1/2006

APOLOGY ACCEPTED. LET’S MOVE ON

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 6:31 pm

A day late and a dollar short but welcome nevertheless:

As a combat veteran, I want to make it clear to anyone in uniform and to their loved ones: my poorly stated joke at a rally was not about, and never intended to refer to any troop.

I sincerely regret that my words were misinterpreted to wrongly imply anything negative about those in uniform, and I personally apologize to any service member, family member, or American who was offended.

Short, sweet, and to the point. Sincere? My friend Bird Dog at Maggies Farm made a point overlooked, I believe, by many on both the right and the left:

Let me begin by saying that I do not think that Kerry misspoke. I believe he said what he meant, regardless of whether it is what he was scripted to say.

Why do I think that? Because what he said is classic, typical Eastern lefty condescending elitist talk: I hear this kind of thing at every Cambridge cocktail party. It is completely normal talk in the Kerry’s circles. And because he is still stuck in 1968.

I’ve been back and forth on the issue of whether he botched a joke or, as BD suggests, simply was being himself in disparaging the troops. In the end, since his apology was so obviously forced upon him, we’ll never know where the truth lies.

Of course, the Senator couldn’t let an opportunity slip by to blame someone else for his own hubris and stupidity:

It is clear the Republican Party would rather talk about anything but their failed security policy. I don’t want my verbal slip to be a diversion from the real issues. I will continue to fight for a change of course to provide real security for our country, and a winning strategy for our troops.

Does he expect us to believe that he really wants to implement a “winning strategy” in order to “win” the war when he has offered a timetable for withdrawal not based on anything except the passage of time? The Senator’s withdrawal resolution was rejected by the Senate 86-13 and would have required all American troops to pull out of Iraq by July 1, 2007, one year from the date of passage.

Two weeks later, 11 insurgent groups demanded that American troops leave Iraq in 2 years. In short, the enemy was willing to give our military twice as long to quit Iraq as the Senator from Massachusetts.

I guess that’s a liberal’s idea of “victory.”

And Kerry’s acknowledgement that his “verbal slip” was a “diversion” could mean that the issue resonated a lot deeper with the American people than many Democrats are willing to admit. Not surprising if you peruse lefty websites and take a gander at the comments left by the netnuts that talk about how retarded or ignorant our men in uniform for being suckers and defending the United States. With this kind of attitude prevalent on the left, the Democrats were probably desperate to put that display of “patriotism” and “supporting the troops” back in the basement where they’ve tried to keep it the entire campaign season.

They tie it up right next to the economy - another issue that’s hardly seen the light of day this election season.

Kerry’s gaffe and forced apology have injected an unknown element into the campaign going into the final few days. My own sense is that it may affect a few state wide races - Burns and Talent in Montana and Missouri especially may benefit. But on the local level in Congressional districts, it might not be more than a small boost to Republican turnout. Helpful but not decisive.

Will Democrats be able to forget this and give Kerry another look when the 2008 campaign season starts? Stay tuned.

UPDATE

Allah has a list of who is accepting the apology and who isn’t.

Preston has a point about the statement being an attack ad more than an apology. But six days before an election, would we expect anything else?

As for the others, they’re not going to get anything better from Kerry plus the story is now dead. Making a commotion about his apology might be a good way to squeeze one more statement or blog post out of the matter but for all practical purposes, it’s over. Let’s move on.

UPDATE II

Ladies and Gentlemen…May I present a prominent member of the new majority party:

I don’t want to be around people too afraid of their own shadows to be worth anything. I want to be around fighters.

Like Sherrod Brown:

Rep. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat leading in late polls in his bid to unseat Republican Sen. Mike DeWine, said Republicans are merely trying to change the subject. “The people who should apologize are George Bush and Mike DeWine for sending our troops into battle without body armor and without examining the cooked intelligence,” he said.

Thats the way you show strength. That’s the way you beat back bullies. That’s the way you win in America. Not by going around whining about “apologies” and worried that Rove and his Republican bullies might say “boo!”

All you hand-wringers — grow some cojones or get the frak out of our way.

Somebody botches a joke. Big f**king deal. Laugh at those who would make it an issue, kick them in the shin for good measure, then move on.

Sincerely yours,

Kos

KERRY STORY BUILDING TOWARD CRITICAL MASS

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 2:00 pm

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
(VIA DRUDGE) WHO SAYS OUR WARRIORS DON’T HAVE A SENSE OF HUMOR?

Rest assured that the above picture will be the most displayed picture on the internet by the end of the day.

Also, the MSM is in full feeding frenzy on the story. That’s right. Six days before the election and what is the media reporting? Bush’s failure in Iraq? Incompetence in government? Republican turpitude?

Nope. The mainstream press (despite the wailing and gnashing of teeth on the left) is wondering if, how, when, and why not John Kerry is apologizing for his “botched joke” on the President that turned into an unintentional smear against the troops.

Kerry doesn’t get it. Most of the left certainly doesn’t get it. Many Democrats don’t get it either. It doesn’t matter what you meant when you said it. The fact that you said it and haven’t acknowledged the words themselves as a mistake, a verbal burp, is not only extremely impolite but also crass, arrogant, and has the super-rich Senator from Massachusetts appearing to be above the ordinary niceties that allow for the smooth functioning of a civil society.

In short, it makes him look petty and small. And the longer he goes without apologizing or acknowledging the fact that he unintentionally slimed the troops in Iraq, the less forgiving the American people will be towards him and his party.

Despite the unbelievable corruption and incompetence of the Republicans, the American people have made it absolutely plain that they will hand power to the Democrats only with the greatest reluctance. And the longer this matter continues to fog up TV screens and until the blood in the water has fully dissipated, the voters are going to be reminded exactly why they approach voting for Democrats with such trepidation. Kerry’s self-inflicted gaffe has actually come along at a perfect time for Republicans - almost as if Evil Karl had scripted the entire scenario himself. As recently as early this morning, I was predicting that the story wouldn’t amount to much, especially if Kerry apologized promptly.

But since then, the press has gone nuts with the story. It’s all over the nets and occupying almost 8 minutes of every hour’s broadcast on the cable news outlets. Not saturation coverage but give it time. Another 48 hours and we’ll have Wolf Blitzer and the rest of the press camped out in front of Kerry’s house holding vigil for word on when the “apology” will be forthcoming.

An exaggeration? Probably. But think about the poor Democratic challengers, heading down the homestretch of their historic run for a majority, not being able to make points with the voters about incompetent George or dirty, rotten Republicans, but instead having to answer questions about John Kerry. Think about that brand, spanking new GOP attack ad calling on Kerry to apologize airing in Virginia, Missouri, Montana, and Ohio. And think about all the other Democrats standing by and watching as their former standard bearer, war hero, and leading liberal light takes them closer to defeat than they thought possible even a week ago.

Kerry will be forced to acknowledge his mistake and make contrition to the troops for unintentionally smearing them because if he doesn’t, he can almost certainly kiss 2008 goodbye. And because this lickspittle of a man - this cold and calculating political beast of a man - does nothing better than looking out for his own political hide, I fully expect some statement in the next 24 hours that will be passed off as an apology even though it will almost certainly fall far short of any such thing.

If he doesn’t? I’ll let you in a my inner thinking today. I’ve been thinking about Al Michaels historic call at the end of the USA-USSR Olympic hockey game in 1980 when a bunch of college kids beat the greatest hockey team in history…

“Do you believe in miracles…YES!

UPDATE

Bird Dog at Maggie’s Farm has a superior piece about Kerry (and perhaps the ugliest picture of Kerry as a young man I have ever seen). BD thinks that Kerry meant what he said about the troops. I have to give the guy the benefit of the doubt but BD makes a fairly convincing case.

Also, Michelle got a hold of the picture above even before Drudge and has some excerpts from a conversation the President had with Rush Limbaugh about the troops and about Kerry and the Democrats.

IS KERRY MELTDOWN A BLIP? OR A TURNING POINT?

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 7:29 am

Most of us who follow politics more than casually have become inured to campaign gaffes like the one John Kerry fell into a couple of days ago. After all, implying that our troops in Iraq are stupid losers who who didn’t do their homework or work hard in school so that they could “avoid” military service (in an all-volunteer army?) had to have been some kind of misstatement - although the haughty disdain with which he uttered the remark and his subsequent refusal to apologize calls into question all of the ink spilled by his apologists that he was skewering the President of the United States rather than combat troops fighting and dying in the field.

I guess we’ll just have to take the Senator’s word for it that he botched a joke that no one has ever heard him tell. And considering Kerry’s own marks when he was in books compared to Bush, one wonders who the joke was on in the first place.

But we’ve now moved beyond the “campaign gaffe” stage of the story and into the “apology vigil” segment. When will The Great Man lower himself and humbly beg the voter’s pardon for misspeaking? My guess is sometime this morning a slightly more contrite but still defiant Kerry will appear before a bank of microphones and grudgingly acknowledge that his remark may have given offense. Apologizing for the incredibly vile personal attacks he unleashed in his angry statement yesterday may take a little longer - like when the nether regions experience a severe case of hellish cooling.

No matter. Party leaders have probably been on the phone with the Senator half the night pointing out that it is now no longer a question of what he said about the troops but rather his refusal to acknowledge his mistake that is driving the story. Every hour that goes by without a Kerry mea culpa lessens the level of sincerity the American people will take any apology or explanation by the Senator whenever it comes.

As he blundered with the Swift Boat Vets so too now The Arrogant One is blundering with this minor “slip of the tongue.” Not recognizing the damage being done to both his party and his reputation, Kerry is once again slow off the mark to respond to danger. Anyone see a pattern here? The Senator, always appearing to be conflicted about his service to the country during Viet Nam, seems equally conflicted about lancing a campaign boil that, at bottom, speaks to his bona fides as a loyal veteran of the armed forces. The Swift Vets questioned his honesty and courage. This latest kerfuffle questions his honesty and character. For it takes real character to recognize a mistake and apologize - something even Andrew Sullivan can see:

What Kerry said he must apologize for. Sooner rather than later. He may not have meant it the way it came out. That doesn’t matter. It’s wrong to talk about the military that way - wrong morally, empirically and ethically. And the way he said it can be construed as a patronizing snub to the men and women whose lives are on the line. It’s also dumb politically not to kill this off in one news cycle. Is Kerry not content to lose just one election? Does his enormous ego have to insist on losing two?

Sullivan refers to the question on desperate Republican minds today; how much will this affect the voting next Tuesday?

Not too damn much, I’m afraid. Where the story matters most - red state America - the imperiled Republican incumbents will hardly be able to “nationalize” their race into a referendum on Kerry or the Democrats and their real attitudes toward the troops. That dog ain’t hunting, not this late in the game. To many, it simply re-enforces people’s beliefs about the left and their disdain for America’s fighting men. And it appears the American people are willing to live with that just as long as it’s a Democrat bringing down the gavel when the House reconvenes in January.

At the same time, I disagree with John Cole and his buddy Kos that this is all a tempest in a teapot and not really an issue in the campaign:

Again, I wish Kerry had not made the remark (or phrased it better), but really, it changes nothing. The Republican party has no plan for Iraq other than rhetorical shifts, their policies are not constructed or implemented to actually accomplish anything but rather to maintain Congressional power, and we all will be better off if the GOP is swept out of power. The Republicans are corrupt, morally bankrupt, have no ideas, no principles, and are hoping upon hope that this latest distraction will help to stop the bleeding. Unfortunately, the bleeding they care about is at the polls and not the bleeding in Iraq.

Let’s crush their hopes.

Note: Also check out former Republican/still a conservative Cole’s anguished, whiny, nauseating, self pitying, screed here where he solemnly announces the Republican party has left him behind because all they’re interested in is power and politics.

Duh.

They are, after all, politicians who happen to be in the majority. Not being interested in being re-elected and maintaining their majority would constitute a form of political suicide that would truly be unique in the history of American politics. While Cole is correct in pointing out their malfeasance and incompetence, (I would add arrogance and an unhealthy disdain for the electorate), his self-serving, holier-than-thou shots at fellow bloggers who don’t quite see the world the way he does reveals the West Virginian to be a small minded, petulant man indeed. The GOP certainly does not deserve to be returned to majority status. But then, the Democrats don’t deserve anything except the utter and complete contempt of conservatives. Cole doesn’t like the fact that elections are about choices. Well, as I’ve written before, if it comes down to a choice between Republicans and Democrats, give me the side that doesn’t put “The War on Terror” in quotation marks and spread vicious lies about stolen elections and wars for oil.

As I said, read the whole thing. Just make sure you have a barf bag handy.

Kos, like Cole, sees Much Ado About Nothing:

Kerry responded perfectly. Perhaps not in a way that the DC wise men would approve, those Gang of 500 fools who have enabled this administration’s disasters at home and abroad.

Perhaps not in a way that will appease the 101st Fighting Keyboardists and their acolytes who would rather talk tough than actually show genuine courage by enlisting in the armed forces.

And sure, not in a way that will appease Republicans hoping to find anything to desperately detract from their crappy policies, crappy candidates, and lie- and hate-filled campaigns.

Yeah, those people won’t be happy with Kerry’s response.

But in this case, Kerry responded the right way. Not by bowing to the full blast of the right wing noise machine, but by standing up to it on behalf of our troops, our nation, and the truth.

As I said yesterday, the netnuts can’t see the practical benefits of a Kerry apology through the veil of their own hate. They are cheering him on to destruction because his childish name calling and anger against his detractors mirrors perfectly their own feelings of inadequacy and powerlessness which expresses itself sometimes in wild conspiracy theories but more often in simple, direct, malignant loathing of conservatives.

Not to be outdone in the hysterical denunciations of the right department, MSNBC’s Keith Olberman rises to the occasion:

Senator John Kerry has, in essence, called out President Bush for not being smart, not studying, and being intellectually lazy. And the President and his minions have replied by demanding that Kerry apologize — to the troops in Iraq. Kerry called them stupid, and they were too stupid to know he called them stupid. Our fifth story in the Countdown, to top his own original remarkable comments and the administration’s equally remarkable missing of the point, intentional or otherwise, there is also Kerry’s response, blistering with phrases like ‘crazy,’ ’stuffed suit,’ ‘lied,’ ‘lie,’ ‘lying,’ ‘Republican hacks,’ ‘right-wing nut jobs,’ and ‘doughy.’ We begin where the story did at yesterday’s rally for the Democratic candidate for governor of California. Senator Kerry charming the college-age crowd with tales of surfing before segueing into a series of one-liners about his former opponent in the 2004 race for the White House, Mr. Bush.”

Yes, “charming” indeed.

One of the shrewdest political observers in the media, Time Magazine’s Karen Tumulty sums up Kerry’s situation nicely:

His initial impulse, predictably enough, was to fight back against the criticism. He didn’t want to fall again into what turned out to be the biggest trap of 2004, when he failed to understand that a relatively small ad buy from a group that no one had ever heard of could be more damaging than he imagined. He was determined not to be “swift-boated” again. So he declared: “If anyone owes our troops in the fields an apology, it is the President and his failed team and a Republican majority in the Congress that has been willing to stamp — rubber-stamp policies that have done injury to our troops and to their families.” But even Rand Beers, his national security adviser in the 2004 campaign, said: “It’s unfortunate that Senator Kerry misspoke. No one who has ever been in combat would intentionally impugn our brave troops.”

In other words, Kerry has managed on the eve of what could be a watershed election to remind pretty much everyone what it was they didn’t like about the Democrats, and especially what they didn’t like about him. It might have made more sense just to say he was sorry — for once to get ahead of a mistake, instead of trying to compensate for it the next time.

Kerry will buckle today, bowing to the enormous pressure his friends in the party will place on him to offer some sort of apologia for his “joke.” The media will be satisfied no matter what he says as long as the word “sorry” is stuck in the statement somewhere. Even if it’s buried, they will be drawn to it like moths to a porch light and trumpet the Senator’s “sincerity” to the skies.

And the world will begin to turn again, the sun will set in the west, and Republican chances for maintaining control of the House and Senate will remain exactly as they were before the words of disparagement left the Senator’s mouth.

In other words, Nancy Pelosi and probably Harry Reid can resume packing. They’re movin’ on up to the majority side…

UPDATE

Ed Morrissey points to a general tip-toeing away from Kerry by Democrats running for office as one congressional candidate from Iowa has already cancelled a Kerry appearance:

Will we see more of this? Kerry has scheduled events here in Minnesota for Tim Walz and a party-building event for the DFL (Minnesota’s Democrats) today. Tonight he goes to Pennsylvania to campaign for Bob Casey, Jr, and the Braley campaign event was scheduled for tomorrow.

Will Walz withdraw his invitation to Kerry as well? Will Casey?

Only if the Senator keeps this story alive for another day by not admitting his mistake. Ed’s gut feeling about Kerry’s losing an opportunity to close out the story quickly is spot on.

10/31/2006

KERRY: AS COLD AS THEY COME

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 3:49 pm

When I first read of John Kerry’s remarks holding our troops in Iraq up as an example of what happens if you fail in school, my contempt for the man - already high - passed over into the realm of having the mere mention of his name trigger my gagging reflex. How in the name of all that is good and holy did this man come so close to commanding these very same troops that he has so cavalierly disparaged? And an even more basic question this election season is can’t the Democrats see that Kerry, as their nominee for the highest office in the land in 2004, speaks for them when is quoted thusly?

The contemptuousness that Kerry showed by making those remarks was exceeded by his statement today that, rather than clarifying his remarks or apologizing for them, he hurls the rawest and most shocking invective at Republicans only seen perhaps on the far left websites that the Senator from Massachusetts has been writing for recently:

“If anyone thinks a veteran would criticize the more than 140,000 heroes serving in Iraq and not the president who got us stuck there, they’re crazy. This is the classic G.O.P. playbook. I’m sick and tired of these despicable Republican attacks that always seem to come from those who never can be found to serve in war, but love to attack those who did.

I’m not going to be lectured by a stuffed suit White House mouthpiece standing behind a podium, or doughy Rush Limbaugh, who no doubt today will take a break from belittling Michael J. Fox’s Parkinson’s disease to start lying about me just as they have lied about Iraq. It disgusts me that these Republican hacks, who have never worn the uniform of our country lie and distort so blatantly and carelessly about those who have.”

Note for the record that Kerry does not even address the subject of his insulting remarks. Rather, he slimes his critics - a classic defense strategy for murderers and rapists but not, one assumes, a United States Senator who ran for President two short years ago.

Those are extremely personal attacks. Rarely does a politician immerse himself so thoroughly in excremental politics by debasing the motives, the honesty, and the honor of his opponents as Kerry did in that short statement. No doubt, the ignoramuses on the left are cheering Kerry on. This, the man who consorted with the enemy during the Viet Nam War, who met with representatives of the Viet Cong and agreed to carry their propaganda water for them here in the United States while that very same enemy was shooting and killing men in uniform that Kerry now pretends to respect.

Kerry is as cold and calculating a politician as there has been on the American scene since Nixon. Whether he knew his remarks would generate the firestorm of controversy that they have is beside the point. Given the opportunity to give the finger to his opponents while catering to the powerful netnuts and their ability to mobilize money, resources, and political support, the Senator designed his response to appeal to the far left as a way to separate himself from other potential Democratic presidential hopefuls. He has become angry and spiteful - just like them. In this, the Kos Kids and others on the far left see Kerry as a kindred spirit, someone who “speaks their language.” How well this personae will play in 2008 remains to be seen. For the moment, it allows him to bask in the glow of their admiration and affection.

Michelle Malkin points out that coverage of Kerry’s remarks by the MSM is sorely lacking. One week before the election, this shouldn’t be surprising; not the way that most news organs have cheered the Democrats on in shockingly shameless fashion. What little attention that has been paid to the Senator’s remarks have come as a result of reaction to them by the White House and other conservatives.

Lost in all of this was what Kerry actually said - that if you didn’t study hard, do your homework, and make an effort to be smart, a student would get “stuck” in Iraq - and what was implied. The obvious implication that Kerry did not address in his statement today was that our soldiers in Iraq are the dregs of society, that they are failures in school and should not be emulated.

Sickening. And the fact that the Senator doesn’t deny either what he said or what he implied in his statement today shows that the remarks were exactly as he meant them, that there was no misunderstanding.

So far, no major Democratic figure has come out and chastised Kerry for his remarks. We may be in for a long wait if we are expecting such condemnation any time soon. At bottom, it really doesn’t matter in a political sense. Kerry could be discovered naked in Osama’s bed and it wouldn’t help the Republicans that much. And in this respect, it gets me madder at Republicans than I was yesterday. How conservatives so thoroughly bollixed things up in Washington and allowed people like Kerry to perhaps sit in the majority by their arrogance and malfeasance should make all of us mad.

UPDATE

Kerry now says he was trying to make a joke about President Bush and that the last line of the joke was “…You end up getting us stuck in a war in Iraq.” Predictably, the netnuts have rushed to Kerry’s defense.

There is absolutely no doubt in my mind - nor should there be in any rational observers’ - that after watching the video of those remarks by Kerry he meant exactly what he said and that he said what he meant to say.

There was no fumbling for words. There was no stumbling over a sentence - two clues that would lead one to give the Senator at least the benefit of the doubt. And the emphasis he placed on “stuck in Iraq” as well as with the tone of voice that bespoke such utter and complete contempt for the military leads one to the inescapable conclusion that Kerry is a liar of monstrous proportions when he says that he left a couple of words out of a joke on Bush.

Why does this surprise us? He has consistently disparaged the military during his entire public life. He has demonstrated utter contempt for ordinary Americans on numerous occassions.

Those of you who believe this mountebank should go and watch the video. Then you come back here and tell me that he was joking.

10/28/2006

DEMS HOLDING THEIR BREATH DOWN THE STRETCH

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 11:55 am

As we wind down toward the end of this, the most bizarre Congressional election in memory, the Democrats appear to be holding their breath in anticipation of victory, hoping against hope that no one realizes that the national media, their candidates, and even their opponents have failed to ask the one question that any political party on the cusp of power should be able to rattle off an answer to with ease:

Just what is it you stand for?

Fortunately, it has not been necessary for them to annunciate any grand ideas or overarching themes that would motivate their mass of voters to go to the polls on election day. This is because the Republicans have all but handed the keys to the Majority washrooms to the Democrats on a silver platter with nary a vote being cast. Spectacular arrogance, malfeasance, cowardice, and a slimy essence permeating the halls of Congress during the last few years have all but sealed the deal and, failing a not insignificant miracle, guaranteed a Democratic coup.

Having acknowledged that the Republicans certainly don’t deserve to win, this could be one election where all those dead people registered to vote by ACORN, the unions, and other Democratic party activist organizations may actually have as much idea of what the winning party stands for as anyone else - thus making their vote as intelligent and perspicacious as say, the mindless morons at the Democratic Underground or Daily Kos. Of course, dead people probably don’t smell very good which means they’d fit right in at gatherings of other Democratic party activists such as those at Moveon.Org meetings.

But promising America their supporters will bathe once and a while would at least be an idea that Democratic politicians could run on. The fact is that few Democrats in competitive races are bothering to annunciate any set of coherent principles save 1) George Bush sucks; and 2) They’re not Republicans.

Iraq? No plan to win or get out except “timetables” for troop withdrawals that don’t mean diddly because there are as many timetables floating around as there are Democratic candidates for President. The economy? (SHHHHHHHH…no go zone). Immigration? We are against calling it amnesty even if it really, truly is. Homeland security? We can do better even though we reserve the right to impeach the President of the United States for initiating surveillance programs that precious few of us have called on him to abandon.

Even believing in bad ideas is better than believing in nothing at all. But since the focus of this election is entirely on Republican shenanigans and stupidity, all the Dems have to do is tread water, smile for the cameras, and accept the glowing encomiums of a press that is beating the Tom-Toms (is it racist of me to include that descriptive?) for every Democrat within range. Gone are all the wild-eyed liberals. This is the party of “moderates” now. Not scary at all just a little eccentric about things like national security and enemy identification. Don’t worry about a thing we’re told. Elect a Democratic majority and all will be right as rain.

Given the way the polls have been trending the last week or so, it appears that most Republicans and many conservatives have “come home” just in time to make many races competitive while perhaps even tipping some Senate races into the red column which would allow the GOP to keep their majority in the Senate. And what Charles Franklin at Pollster.Com calls a built in “firewall” for the Republican House members against huge losses thanks to both 1990 and 2000 redistricting efforts by the GOP that managed to carve out dozens of safe seats, it seems likely that Democratic gains - while significant - could probably be erased in 2008 with a strong candidate at the top of the ticket and much better candidate recruitment.

And given the state of the world, including coming confrontations with the madmen in North Korea and Iran, the differences between the two parties on the overriding issue of national security will still be at the top of the voters’ agenda two years from now. Unless the Democrats can prove over the next two years that they take the security of the United States as seriously as they take investigating Republicans - including the President - the voters are more than likely to lose patience rather quickly and put back into power a party (hopefully chastened and back in touch with its conservative roots) that knows what side it wants to win in Iraq and who the enemy trying to kill us is.

10/27/2006

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 5:53 am

It is an axiom of politics that the candidate who finds himself trailing going into the home stretch of a campaign must “go negative” in order to make up the deficit before election day.

The thinking behind this strategy is not to get voters to change their minds necessarily but rather so disgust the supporters of your opponent that they stay home on election day.

Congratulations, George Allen. You’ve hit the jackpot.

Issuing a press release that quotes a character from one of Webb’s saucy war novels doing unspeakable things to his own son (sorry - find the damn link somewhere else. I don’t link to porn.), Allen may very well have sealed his victory by “outing” Webb’s fictional day dreams but he has lost his soul in the process.

Yes, yes, I know all the excuses my intelligent and worthy commenters are going to give below. It’s in the public domain. It is weird. Allen included a plethora of other quotes showing Webb’s disdain for women in the press release - in a way much more disturbing than the incestuous porn and barely concealed pedophilia. And Webb’s dishonest attacks on Allen’s character deserve to be answered in kind.

But doesn’t this make anyone else’s skin crawl? Both because Webb wrote it and Allen brought it into a political campaign?

Don’t get me wrong. I’ve written many times that politics is a full contact sport and that just about anything is fair game when it comes to the kind of bare knuckled, Pier Street brawl that the Allen-Webb contest has become.

But I also believe that politics is not a zero sum game. There must be limits beyond which a candidate is penalized for exceeding. The absolutely disgusting nature of the passages quoted in the Allen press release fills that bill. The fact that they are quoting piece of fiction obviates only slightly Webb’s startling and disturbing imaginative wanderings into the sexual dark side of the human mind as it also reveals the depths to which Allen’s honor and integrity have sunk.

If this doesn’t doom any Presidential hopes for the Virginia Senator, it certainly should.

This “outing” does nothing to elevate the debate over Iraq, homeland security, the economy. or any number of other important issues. But then, few campaigns going today are interested in doing so. Perhaps, as in other times in our history, the real issues are so divisive, so painful to discuss that we substitute this kind of excrement and call it politics so that we don’t have to face the hard choices.

The winds of history are blowing gale force outside our door while inside, the occupants are tearing at each other’s vitals, going toe to toe, hammer and tongs over trivialities, personality quirks, and the real or imagined malfeasance of one party or another. Evil lurks in dark corners, conspiracies flourish, and the absolute worst of our fellow countrymen is said and believed.

In some ways, the election of 1800 was similar. The Democratic Republicans (Jeffersonians) were convinced that 4 more years of Federalist rule would doom the American experiment. Democrats were telling anyone who would listen that the Federalists wished to establish a monarchy along with a debased aristocracy while corrupting the republic with their money schemes and unconstitutional actions.

The real issues were the formation of a national bank and the support of the Federalists for Great Britain in their war with Napoleon. The campaign carried out against one of the greatest Americans who ever lived, John Adams, was shameful. Rather than attack his policies, the Democrats went after Adams personally. The viciousness of their attacks depressed the great man and caused a rift in his friendship with Jefferson that was to last almost 20 years.

In the end, Jefferson and Adams healed the wounds from that campaign and, in the most remarkable of exchanges in the history of American letters, explored the philosophy and politics that made up the basis of the grand experiment in democracy in which they both played such a vital role. Their letters - affectionate, teasing at times, and thoughtful - prove that even the rankest of political enemies can find common ground if a modest effort is made.

I daresay that Allen and Webb will be enemies until the day they die. A pity, that. Both men have proved in the past that they have a lot to offer the country. And given the perilous times in which we live, we could use whatever wit and wisdom they could contribute to public life in America.

UPDATE

Michelle Malkin:

Now, the George Allen campaign has detonated its October surprise using the same tactics as Cheney’s and Libby’s critics–attacking the fiction of his Democrat opponent, James Webb via an official “press release” sent to the Drudge Report last night. Are the passages in Webb’s “Lost Soldiers” bizarre and perverted? Yes. But they are no more proof of Webb’s immorality and unfitness for office than the passages in “Sisters” are proof that Lynne Cheney hates men or that the passages in “The Apprentice” are proof that Scooter Libby endorses sex between children and bears.

Agreed. But the efficacy of using Webb’s words as a device to attack him in some way still rubs me the wrong way.

10/25/2006

INSULTING THE EXPLOITED

Filed under: Ethics, Politics, Science — Rick Moran @ 6:23 am

Rush Limbaugh should be royally ashamed of himself.

In a shocking display of insensitivity, not to mention gracelessness and incivility, Limbaugh accused actor Michael J. Fox, who carries on a daily battle with Parkinson’s disease, of exaggerating the symptoms of the disease in several political commercials for Democratic candidates:

To Rush Limbaugh on Monday, Michael J. Fox looked like a faker. The actor, who suffers from Parkinson’s disease, has done a series of political ads supporting candidates who favor stem cell research, including Maryland Democrat Ben Cardin, who is running against Republican Michael Steele for the Senate seat being vacated by Paul Sarbanes.

“He is exaggerating the effects of the disease,” Limbaugh told listeners. “He’s moving all around and shaking and it’s purely an act. . . . This is really shameless of Michael J. Fox. Either he didn’t take his medication or he’s acting.”

Limbaugh went on to say that it was the only time he had seen Fox exhibit symptoms of the disease and that “he could barely control himself.”

Limbaugh must have realized how extraordinarily stupid and insensitive his remarks were because he apologized for them later in the show. What possible good that did except highlight the broadcaster’s utter contempt for common decency is beyond me. Apologies don’t get it done in this case.

Perhaps Limbaugh should be sentenced to a class on how Parkinson’s progresses and what the afflicted must deal with every day just to get out of bed. Here’s a description of the disease from the National Institutes of Health:

The four primary symptoms of PD are tremor, or trembling in hands, arms, legs, jaw, and face; rigidity, or stiffness of the limbs and trunk; bradykinesia, or slowness of movement; and postural instability, or impaired balance and coordination. As these symptoms become more pronounced, patients may have difficulty walking, talking, or completing other simple tasks. PD usually affects people over the age of 50. Early symptoms of PD are subtle and occur gradually. In some people the disease progresses more quickly than in others. As the disease progresses, the shaking, or tremor, which affects the majority of PD patients may begin to interfere with daily activities. Other symptoms may include depression and other emotional changes; difficulty in swallowing, chewing, and speaking; urinary problems or constipation; skin problems; and sleep disruptions. There are currently no blood or laboratory tests that have been proven to help in diagnosing sporadic PD. Therefore the diagnosis is based on medical history and a neurological examination. The disease can be difficult to diagnose accurately. Doctors may sometimes request brain scans or laboratory tests in order to rule out other diseases.

Limbaugh’s reference to Fox being off medication fails to take into account that even if the patient is on one of the many drugs that help alleviate some of the symptoms of the disease, that each day is different for the Parkinson’s patient. Altering dosage as well as changing medication is a frequent necessity in order to allow the Parkinson’s sufferer to live something close to a “normal” life.

The left, of course, is having a field day with Limbaugh’s ignorant and ill tempered remarks as well they should. But perhaps they should also be wary of casting the first stone in this case. The shameless exploitation of people like Fox and the late Christopher Reeves in pushing embryonic stem cell research in a political context is dishonest, appealing as it does to a voter’s pity when the only basis for deciding whether such research should be funded by the government must be the quality of the science that could be achieved.

And in that case, there is much room for disagreement.

Speaking purely as a secularist, the scientific argument over the efficacy of using embryonic stem cells vs. adult stem cells (which, in fact, have no restrictions when it comes to funding), has yet to be resolved. In fact, the evidence suggests that even the so called “undifferentiated” embryonic stem cells supply little additional value to the cause of research given the enormous strides made in recent years using adult stem cells.

The scientific debate has taken a back seat to what many pro-life advocates see as using the fruits of abortion to advance human knowledge. While some of their arguments are compelling, the fact remains that under the law, an embryo is not a person and therefore can be treated as any other body part that is donated to the cause of science. Embryonic stem cell research is perfectly legal. The question is whether or not the government should fund it.

To determine whether or not our tax dollars should go toward this kind of research, the exact same criteria we use to decide whether to fund other scientific projects should be used. And in that respect, advocates for embryonic stem cell research have failed so far to make the case that using embryos is different than using adult tissue. It’s that simple. And for Democrats to play to the pity of voters by showing a wheel chair bound Christopher Reeves or a palsied Michael J. Fox and hint that if only those evil, mean, nasty Republicans could be defeated, Reeves would walk and Fox would be cured is nothing more than a disguised attack ad which uses a disgusting appeal to emotionalism. It is dishonest. It is exploitive. And Limbaugh was correct in calling attention to this shameless display of political tomfoolery.

But in typical Limbaugh fashion, the broadcaster had to go beyond the mundane kind of criticism levelled here and seek out controversy. It’s one of the reasons I stopped listening to him years ago. As his fame has increased, so too has his need to stand out. And sometimes - like yesterday - he goes too far out on the limb and he’s forced to make a hasty retreat.

Except in this case, the branch broke before he could scramble back to safety.

Limbaugh owes Fox more than an apology. If he were an honorable man, he would have Fox on his show to discuss the ravages of the disease and help his audience understand how cruel a life becomes when suffering from such a debilitating illness. Perhaps then, both Rush and his listeners will understand how truly despicable his comments about Fox were and why such a storm of condemnation has so righteously broken about his head.

10/24/2006

A LIBERAL MANIFESTO AND OTHER HALLOWEEN FRIGHTS

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 2:09 pm

Over at The American Prospect, they decided to get a head start on scaring the public half to death this Halloween season by publishing a “Liberal Manifesto” which carefully lays out what the authors believe all good liberals should stand for.

This kind of earnestness on the part of the left is something we’ve grown used to over the years. In fact, it is a defining characteristic of modern liberalism, this cloying self righteousness. It fits in with their constant need to avoid introspection by formulating intellectual conceits based on a heroic self-image, standing up against the villainy of the opposition with only the lantern of truth and a pen to battle evil. Creating a “moral” universe that has about as much foundation as a pool of quicksand, liberals who are constantly defining and redefining themselves fail to see the monumental irony in their efforts to simplify their riot of conceits into any kind of logical or coherent set of principles.

Give the boys at American Prospect credit for trying. However, in the process of trying to be politically reasonable - for example; with regard to the use of force - the authors reveal where the emotional underpinnings of Bush Derangement Syndrome originates as well as a truly frightening glimpse into a future where foreign policy is run by the left:

Make no mistake: We believe that the use of force can, at times, be justified. We supported the use of American force, together with our allies, in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Afghanistan. But war must remain a last resort. The Bush administration’s emphatic reliance on military intervention is illegitimate and counterproductive. It creates unnecessary enemies, degrades the national defense, distracts from actual dangers, and ignores the imperative necessity of building an international order that peacefully addresses the aspirations of rising powers in Asia and Latin America.

The misapplication of military power also imperils American freedom at home. The president claims authority, as commander in chief, to throw American citizens into military prison for years on end without any hearing, civil or military, that would allow them to confront the charges against them. He claims the power to wiretap Americans’ conversations without warrants, in direct violation of congressional commands. These usurpation’s presage what are likely to be even more drastic measures if another attack takes place on American soil.

“Unnecessary enemies?” Name one nation pre-Iraq War who wasn’t an enemy and who now sports an undying hatred of the United States as a result of our intervention?

The blindness necessary to posit the notion that America’s enemies have changed in the last decade, much less the last five years is Exhibit 1 in the case against liberal control of foreign policy. After all, the mullahs wanted to talk to us in 2003 and we spurned them! Gotta be the Iraq War that made Ahmadinejad call for our destruction. The fact that one of the most consistent policy pronouncements out of the Iranians since the 1979 revolution has been statements supporting the destruction of Israel and the United States doesn’t seem to have made much of a dent in the thought processes of even these liberal “hawks.”

And please note the inclusion of Bosnia and Kosovo in places liberals are willing to use force - two interventions where no US interests were involved, that the United Nations did not sanction the use of force, and where conservative Republicans made up President Clinton’s most vocal supporters.

It is this kind of myopia that shows itself throughout this Manifesto. Witness very carefully what these “sane” liberals believe:

We reaffirm the great principle of liberalism: that every citizen is entitled by right to the elementary means to a good life. We believe passionately that societies should afford their citizens equal treatment under the law — regardless of accidents of birth, race, sex, property, religion, ethnic identification, or sexual disposition. We want to redirect debate to the central questions of concern to ordinary Americans — their rights to housing, affordable health care, equal opportunity for employment, and fair wages, as well as physical security and a sustainable environment for ourselves and future generations.

Instead of securing these principles, the president and his party view the suppression of votes indulgently and propose new requirements for voting that will make it still harder for the poor and the elderly to exercise their democratic rights.

Absolutely fascinating. After an obligatory nod to constitutional protections, the “central questions” of concern to ordinary voters may very well be what liberals believe they are. What should scare the bejeebees out of these same voters is how our friends on the left plan on accomplishing these feats of legislative legerdemain in order to bring about our liberal utopia.

What is a “fair” wage? Who decides? Is there really a “right” to housing? Maybe I was asleep in civics class when that part of the Constitution was discussed. And we’ve already seen the inventive ways that liberals define “equal opportunity” for employment. By taking a necessary function of the national government - protecting minorities from discrimination - and turning it into a weapon used at the beck and call of the special pleaders in the so-called civil rights movement, liberals have made criminals of companies whose only transgression is that they got in the cross hairs of groups like the NAACP, PUSH, or other legalized extortion outfits.

But it is in their not well concealed hatred of the President and their ideological opponents that we see where the intellectual underpinnings of Bush Derangement Syndrome originates. To actually believe that both political parties don’t do their damnedest to suppress the opposition’s vote is either the height of naivete or delusional thinking. I daresay the massive, coordinated campaign in the press over the last several weeks designed to discourage Republicans (especially religious conservatives) from voting gives the lie to any attempt to assign blame for quashing votes to one side only.

And to further believe that it is voter “suppression” to take the most modest of steps to ensure that the historically crooked big city machines (run by Democrats) aren’t able to cheat on election day by requiring people to be able to prove they are who they say they are when showing up at the polls in order to keep them from voting a dozen or more times is pure sophistry.

Sophistry would be an improvement over this kind of idiocy:

The administration’s denial of reality reaches a delusional peak in its refusal to acknowledge basic science describing the massive climate change now under way. Against the advice of all serious experts, the government has grossly failed in its responsibility to our descendants. It has consistently sought to undermine the Kyoto treaty and refused to encourage energy conservation. We insist on a clean break with this shameful record. Our government should be taking the lead in reducing greenhouse gases, recognizing our responsibilities as the world’s leading polluter. We should be investing massively in energy sources that carry out a commitment to environmental stewardship and help restore our manufacturing base at the same time.

First, there is nothing “basic” about the science of global warming or climate change. There may, in fact, be no more complex question ever confronted in a collective way by so many scientific disciplines. Perhaps the scientific riddle of the atomic bomb, an effort that involved chemists, several branches of theoretical physicists, and engineers, to name a few rivals the problems confronting the scientific community in coming up with practical answers to the questions surrounding the theory of global warming. It doesn’t help that ideology has so suffused the debate that contrarians can be tarred with the sin of denying reality. Which reality? Whose reality?

The only consensus that scientists seem to have achieved is that the planet is getting warmer and that humans are at least partially to blame. Beyond that, specific, measurable, scientific progress in answering basic questions like why are CO2 levels in the lower atmosphere not rising as fast as the models say they should or is global warming actually a result of cyclical solar activity is lacking.

Does requiring proof before we penalize ourselves to the tune of a couple of trillion dollars in lost and reduced economic activity make sense? Not to a liberal. And the Manifesto’s call for a restoration of our manufacturing base at the same time that we’re supposedly slashing our greenhouse gas emissions to 1993 levels as called for by Kyoto is jaw dropping stupidity. How, praytell, are we to increase economic activity in a sector of the economy that contributes enormous amounts of greenhouse gas emissions while staying competitive with China and India - two nations not obligated under Kyoto to curtail their atmospheric pollution?

Smoke and mirrors, I guess. As long as the smoke doesn’t pollute.

Where the Manifesto loses much of its focus is in this digression from the facts:

The administration’s contempt for science is of a piece with its general disdain for reason — a prejudice that any modern society ought to have left behind. Whether confronting scientific research, evolution, birth control, foreign policy, drug pricing, or the manner in which it makes decisions, the Bush administration has defied evidence and logic, sabotaging its own professional civil servants. It refuses serious consultation with experts and critics. It acts secretly, in defiance of the powers of Congress. It refuses to identify those whose advice it solicits, even concealing the names of the vice president’s staff. It stifles civil servants attempting to do their jobs. It appoints cronies whose political loyalty cannot compensate for their incompetence. When challenged, it responds with lies and distortions.

A close look at this litany of complaints reveals some truth along with some typical liberal bunkum. Refusing to listen to critics and not taking the advice of political foes would be sins committed by every President since Washington. Cronyism is also as old as the republic - although this Administration has made a nasty habit of placing their cronies in positions where they fail miserably - and publicly.

But “sabotaging” its civil servants? And what powers of Congress has the Administration “defied” by acting secretly? This is hyperbole, pure and simple. Perhaps more than other recent Administrations, this one has found itself at war with the inside the beltway crowd - especially in the intelligence community. But civil servants are not elected. And when they seek to undermine policy established by elected officials just because they disagree with it, what else are you to do except “stifle” them? The brazenness with which this kind of bureaucratic turf protection and disregard has gone on for 6 years should have these good government liberals up in arms. Except, of course, they agree with the bureaucrats that policies they oppose should be squelched.

While the Manifesto is primarily inoffensive liberal pablum, this section is risible:

This government’s failures to respect the process of public reason have generated predictable consequences — none of them good. The Bush administration has failed to protect its citizens from disaster — from foreign enemies on September 11, 2001, and from the hurricane and flood that afflicted the Gulf Coast in 2005. It has driven the war in Iraq to an impasse. It is incapable of presenting a plausible strategy to bring our military intervention to a tenable conclusion.

How does a failure “to respect the process of public reason” by this Administration prevent an attack where the terrorists who carried it out were trained and nurtured under the previous do-nothing Presidency of Bill Clinton and while the United States government ignored the ideology that animated them for more than a quarter century? And “public reason” should tell any rational person to get the hell out of the way of a hurricane - which highlights the failure of state and local governments to implement their own disaster plans not Washington’s timid and belated response once the storm had hit.

Finally, the Manifesto makes clear what the real problem with America is; too many people vote for conservatives:

We refuse to confine our criticisms to personalities. We believe that the abuses of power that have been commonplace under Bush’s rule must be laid not only at his door — and the vice president’s — but at the doors of a conservative movement that has, for decades, undermined government’s ability to act reasonably and effectively for the common good.

We love this country. But true patriotism does not consist of bravado or calumny. It resides in faithfulness to our great constitutional ideals. We are a republic, not a monarchy. We believe in the rule of law, not secret prisons. We insist on justice for all, not privilege for the few. In repudiating these American ideals, the Bush administration disgraces America and damages our claim to democratic leadership in the larger world.

Now this is more like the liberalism we’ve come to know and love; irrational, incoherent, sloganeering instead of rational thought, gross exaggeration, and the inevitable contradictions - as in the authors generously “refusing to confine their criticisms to personalities” and then proceeding to do so by saying that the “Bush Administration disgraces America.”

But it is the calumnious statement that conservatives have “for decades, undermined government’s ability to act reasonably and effectively for the common good” that the authors reveal modern liberalism to be the collectivist nightmare they truly are. Any group or ideology that purports to speak for the “common good” in a country of such radically diverse interests, sects, races, creeds, and economic strata should be feared. Not only is the Manifesto saying that the American people are idiots because they have voted for conservatives consistently over the last quarter century, but that conservatives themselves are illegitimate guardians of the public trust with regards to the “common weal.”

I believe in the collective wisdom of the people over the ability of government to determine what is actually the “common good.” And this is the primary difference between liberals and conservatives. In a nation of 300 million people, popular will makes itself known only through the ballot box and not in some academics ivory tower or conference room at a liberal think tank. The failure of modern liberalism to understand this simple, straightforward truth about America and her people is why they continue to lose elections - not because they haven’t “defined themselves” properly. They can come out with a dozen “Manifestos” and as long as they refuse to acknowledge their utter and complete contempt for the will of the people, they will remain in the political wilderness.

As the Democrats seem poised to take power on election day, liberals might remind themselves that only the extraordinary hubris and stupidity of Republicans and not any grand clash of ideas is giving them this victory. If they have learned nothing from Republicans about listening to the people as to what constitutes the “common good” and continue to treat the voters as wayward children who need to be coddled and nannied, then they will almost certainly be returned to the political oblivion to which they have been banished these many years.

10/21/2006

KENNEDY AND OTHER LIBERALS ANSWER TO A DIFFERENT MORALITY

Filed under: Media, Politics — Rick Moran @ 11:07 am

Try as I might, I’m just not that shocked at the news that Ted Kennedy and other Democratic liberal Senators were willing to work with the Soviet Union in a joint PR campaign to undermine and defeat President Reagan at the polls in 1984.

Bryan at Hot Air has the skinny on what is either the most egregious violation of trust in the history of the United States Senate or the most calumnious lie ever told about - love him or hate him - one of the most dedicated public servants in American history:

There’s a new book on Ronald Reagan making the rounds, The Crusader: Ronald Reagan and the Fall of Communism. Its author, Paul Kengor, unearthed a sensational document from the Soviet archives. That document is a memo regarding an offer made by Sen. Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts via former Senator John Tunney, both Democrats, to the General Secretary of the Communist Party, USSR, Yuri Andropov, in 1983. The offer was to help the Soviet leadership, military and civilian, conduct a PR campaign in the United States as President Ronald Reagan sought re-election. The goal of the PR campaign would be to cast President Reagan as a warmonger, the Soviets as willing to peacefully co-exist, and thereby turn the electorate away from Reagan. It was a plan to enlist Soviet help, and use the American press, in unseating an American president.

There are many reasons why this might not be true, not the least of which is that Soviet agents were notorious for lying to their superiors - especially when it came to bragging to their bosses about Americans who may or may not have worked with Communists. Contained in the million or so pages of documents that came to light in the immediate aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union are the names of dozens of prominent Americans that Soviet agents claimed were helping the Communist cause, including FDR’s friend and closest White House advisor Harry Hopkins as well as famous entertainers like Marilyn Monroe. The long and short of it is, you need a helluva lot more than one memo to prove that Ted Kennedy wanted to take part in this scheme.

Ted Kennedy helped invent the modern Senate. His knowledge of its workings as well as his advocacy for issues like education, health care, and workers’ rights have transformed what at one time was a clubby, almost aristocratic body where little of domestic importance happened into a liberal legislative laboratory, often driving changes in the law ahead of the House. Kennedy’s encyclopedic knowledge of Senate procedure has allowed him to triumph in the face of almost certain defeat many times. In this respect, he is one of the giants in the history of Congress.

He is also a vainglorious hypocrite, scion of one of the most screwed up families in American history who has demonstrated time and time again that he believes that the law does not apply the same way to he and his family as it does to the rest of us. In this respect, I always thought Kennedy one of the greatest threats to American liberty ever to serve in Congress and that defeating many of his more outrageous proposals to smother the American spirit to be a patriotic duty.

The point is, it is not beyond imagining Kennedy or any other liberal from that period taking part in such an effort to betray their trust. This is because one of the core tenets of modern liberalism is that ordinary morality that may apply to most of us can be set aside in the name of a higher goal. For Kennedy, his belief that he would be preventing nuclear war overrode any more mundane considerations like loyalty to the country or his President. This kind of action feeds the liberal’s heroic self image while also revealing the dirty little secret of the New Left; they consider ideals like patriotism and love of country subservient to their belief in the universality of man. And from the time of the Russian revolution until the fall of the Berlin Wall, they felt that spirit - despite all evidence to the contrary - was embodied in the old Soviet Union.

I predict that not much will be made of this revelation in the media. Too many years have gone by and the information itself is so tenuous that it will be difficult to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. It will probably be treated the same way that revelations about the possible resting places for Saddam’s WMD in Syria has been covered by the press. But the fact that the information is in and of itself believable says much about the modern left and their continuing war against all that is decent and good in America while calling into question the patriotism and loyalty of such people.

10/19/2006

ARE PRE MORTEM REYNOLDISTAS SABATOGING THE GOP?

Filed under: Politics — Rick Moran @ 8:13 am

This article originally appears in The American Thinker

In this, the season of Republican discontent, the various tribes that make up the GOP have been slapping on the war paint and dancing the war dance while getting ready for the big day.

No, not election day. The real fun begins the day after the vote when the recriminations following a probable Republican loss of the House (and perhaps the Senate) will explode into the kind of internecine warfare not seen by the GOP since the Goldwater debacle of 1964. Many conservatives will have the long knives out hunting for scalps, looking for scapegoats, and readying the hot tar and feathers for use against some very special targets.

The immediate butt of their ire will be a small but influential group of pundits who, to one degree or another, are predicting a GOP loss prior to the election while intimating in so many words that perhaps this is the best thing that could have happened to the party at this time. The logic (or insanity depending on one’s world view) used to justify this position is that a thoroughly chastened GOP will magically reform itself in two years, kick out the deadwood in Congress, throw up a new generation of dynamic conservative leaders who will take the party back to the promised land in 2008.

Yeah. Right.

It should be noted that there is a difference between those, like Richard Baehr, Chief Political Correspondent for The American Thinker, whose coldly rational and logically devastating look at Republican prospects in November points to a probable takeover by Democrats of the House and those who actually look forward to a GOP defeat, believing that it would be good for the party. After all, with a half dozen seats written off already due to the malfeasance or turpitude of the GOP member, the historical forces at work during the off year election of a second term incumbent become extremely difficult to overcome when the margin for error is as small as it is for the GOP.

I have dubbed this group of GOP curmudgeons Reynoldistas after Instapundit’s Glenn Reynolds whose “Pre Mortem” post on the election raised the hackles of many conservatives who felt the blogger was being a defeatist by listing the reasons for the GOP’s probable downfall. Reynolds makes it clear that he believes that the GOP deserves to lose while also saying that the Democrats don’t deserve to win. Is this defeatist? Or realism? Or, as Mr. Reynolds claims, is it simply analysis?

It is perhaps unfair to lump Reyonolds in with other pundits who are actually urging people to sit on their hands on election day in order to teach the GOP ” a lesson.” The problem is that the effect that Reynolds has on the thinking of other bloggers and, more importantly, the fact that he is widely quoted by the opposition, does tend to raise the visibility of questions surrounding conservative commitment to voting on election day. Whether he realizes it or not, many see his belief that Republicans deserving defeat is no different than those Republicans who believe a Democratic takeover would somehow be good for the party.

As a counterpoint to the Reynoldistas, there are many conservatives who are dismissing the polls out of hand while confidently predicting that the GOP will hold on to both Houses of Congress despite the seeming lack of evidence for such optimism. I have dubbed these sunny side of the street Republicans Hewittonians after the most enthusiastic and eternally optimistic Hugh Hewitt. Again, it may be unfair to Mr. Hewitt to lump him together with some of the mindless partisans who refuse to recognize the dire straits that the GOP finds itself in three weeks out from the election and viciously attack anyone who they believe isn’t showing sufficient enthusiasm for the coming GOP victory. But for those who hunger for hope and a reasonable analysis, Hewitt supplies the antidote to the Reynoldistas relentless pessimism.

But the question is are both camps doing a disservice to the party? Or, are they both serving a vital purpose to prepare the party faithful for both the election and its aftermath?

A GOP loss will, from a purely political standpoint, be a devastating blow. The inevitable finger pointing and scalp hunting that would follow a Republican debacle on election day would almost certainly encompass the current leadership in the House and open the door to new leadership who, it is hoped, will have learned a thing to two about satisfying the base not to mention how to govern according to conservative principles. In this respect, the Reynoldistas are correct that a loss at the polls would probably make the GOP a better, smarter party.

But is an electoral loss necessary to achieve that goal? The Hewittonians are convinced that party reform could best be accomplished as a majority, albeit a chastened one. Wholesale turnover of the leadership would not be in the cards but that doesn’t mean that meaningful change couldn’t be accomplished in other areas, especially on the issues of pork and earmarks.

In the end, both the pessimists and optimists make it clear that they only have the good of the party at heart. This is all well and good except when it comes to the real world consequences of a Democratic takeover of the House. It is when thinking of what handing the reins of power over to a group of irresponsible, unserious, conspiracy mongers in the Democratic party that one should pause and think very carefully about teaching the GOP “a lesson” about anything.

Criticizing the Administration for their failures in Iraq and the War on Terror is one thing. There are many of us who wish that the War was prosecuted much more vigorously and with more passion. Now imagine a party in power that doesn’t believe we are at war at all, that the War on Terror is a political ploy being used by the White House to win elections and gather power for the executive at the expense of the other branches of government.

It is simply unconscionable to advocate for the defeat of the only party that wishes to engage the enemy in battle, confront rogue states that support terrorism, and do everything that the Constitution allows to keep the homeland safe. We can quibble about details regarding strategy or tactics. But in the end, the election of Democrats would mean a radical change in the way that the War on Terror will be fought. A newly hatched Democratic Congress, driven by their far left net roots who will take full credit for any electoral victory by the party, will disengage from Iraq, end programs that have proven themselves over time to have kept us safe from attack at home, while turning to the United Nations for directions on what to do about Iran and North Korea.

It is perhaps inevitable that there is enormous discontent among conservatives with this Congress and even with the President. But conservative angst about their performance and translating that dissatisfaction into election day pouting absolutely must take a back seat to what the alternative would be. For if the Democrats take control, the blame for such a turn of events will be shared by both Congress itself and those who believe that reforming the party takes precedence over the safety and security of the United States.

Those are the stakes. Now quit your griping and go vote.

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