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Saturday Rant

I was just out on the liberal Upper West Side of Manhattan, where I live. I was observing the sea of brainwashed people. I was thinking about our institutions crumbling like once great and strong marble pillars, succumbing to too many years of being eaten away at by the cancer of liberalism. And once eaten away, the house will eventually fall. 

The current credit mess is an excellent case study (albeit an all-too-real one) in what liberalism does when injected into our institutions. It was precisely because liberals thought they could legislate equality, through the idea that "everyone deserves to own a home", or more accurately, "people of minority races and of lower income brackets need to own homes just like white people." That's what caused all of this. They made up phony studies back in the 90s showing that blacks and other minorities were being denied loans, and starting regulating banks so that they'd lower their credit requirements. It's that simple. So the credit market became yet another playground for their social agenda, brought on by people who have no idea how markets work. They do the same thing by telling the military they have to accept gay people, through redefining what marriage is, by redefining what a family is, and by lowering standards all around so that they can tell the lowest among us that they should be able to have anything that anyone else has if they want it. They defy human nature, stand in the way of progress while calling themselves "progressives", and intentionally or unintentionally destroy every single institution that made this country great and unique. 
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McCain! (ugh)

The problem as I see it (and an article today in the New York Liberal Times expounded on this) is that the McCain campaign knows what to do, the problem is McCain himself. His sense of honor is a double-edged sword. He's out there trying to calm down many of his angriest supporters (and some of them are of the racist ilk that we could really do without) and he's telling them that Obama is a decent man, a family man, and that they have nothing to fear from an Obama presidency. ?????  People are booing him at his own rallies. McCain is past the point of getting anyone to vote for him. Palin initially was a reason to vote for the ticket, but that window too has closed. The two of them have become the only thing standing in the way of the Manchurian president. So will it be enough? I think our only hope here is that the Bradley Effect is in play. No one's poll shows McCain leading where it matters. We have to accept that. The only saving grace is that the Bradley Effect is happening, or that a lot of these Obama supporters are deadbeats who won't actually go vote on election day. But since McCain isn't giving anyone a reason to vote for him, then he needs to make this about Obama. It's exactly right that Obama's been helped by shady, radical people since his entry into politics. He worked for and with the very organizations and pushed the exact same agenda that caused the credit collapse. How is this getting past everyone? He's a sitting duck on that issue. It's ridiculous. 
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What We Stand To Lose In This Election

We risk losing more here than just a couple of candidates. Our candidates are certainly not the best or strongest, and their ineptitude is maddening at times. A McCain administration would certainly be often frustrating, but here are the more vital things I think we would lose, and it's simple, should the polls stay as they are: 

1. Loss of faith in free market capitalism. The most distressing thing about the financial/credit mess is that capitalism is getting the blame. People who don't understand the problem are quick to blame deregulation and various bogeymen like greedy corporate CEOs and other usual class-warfare targets. If it's one thing we're seeing immediately from the stock plunge, it's trickle-down economics in full view. So it's just a theory? Tell that to all the various service providers of Wall Street bankers. So the main instigator of the problem, the federal government, is mostly getting off scott-free while others take the fall. The reason this happened is not due to the free market, it's due to the fact that a major actor (the federal government) with no profit incentive nor fear of risk or consequences meddled in the free market, which should be driven entirely by profit motive and risk. Take those two things away, like what happened in the housing markets, and this is the result. 

2. Socialist solutions gain momentum. If we learn the real lessons of the market collapse, we would see that this is what happens when the government intervenes in markets best left alone. Instead, the incrementalist approach to socialist policies will gain momentum. More and more people believe, because the mantra has been chanted for enough years now, that the government can best provide health care to all. And it doesn't stop at health care. Too many people believe that if there's a problem, government is best suited to fix it. And our side has become less and less adept at explaining the fallacy of this argument.

3. Steps back in Iraq/War on Terror. So the Iraq war has made us less safe? So far the results are the opposite. Since going on offense, we have not been attacked once. Go back to a law-enforcement approach to terrorism, and we're right back where we were in the late 90s, when our interests around the world were getting attacked about once a year. But even more importantly, all the progress made in Iraq could be lost. Regardless of whether you were for the war or against the war from the start, the reality, as it exists in late 2008, needs to be considered, not what you thought of it back in 2003. Obama's policy apparently hinges on his heroic speech he made to the Illinois legislature more than five years ago. Since then, he's been of one note, and fails to acknowledge progress. A president inherits certain things when he takes office and many other unforeseen events occur during his presidency. You can't pick and choose your issues. They confront you, sometimes with the energy of a freight train. The fact that he's ignoring the reality and defers to his position from five years ago is a bad sign, both for this particular war and for other issues that may arise. 

Two other disturbing trends: the Democrats for years have been working to engineer the electorate in their favor. First it was gerrymandering, now it's pushing immigration full throttle to register new Democrat voters. This seems to be working in their favor, to the point where they may be able to keep winning elections for a long time to come. Which takes me to the other problem: an absence of leadership on our side. Our candidates may have their hearts in the right places, but they can't make the connection between the heart to the mind to the mouth. Until someone comes along who can actually articulate these concepts and explain how things work to people, we will continuously lose these arguments to the mainstream media and their governmental allies.
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Cautiously Optimistic

While I'm feeling positive and optimistic by the turn of events, there's a bit of unease in the back of my mind. I do attribute the polls in large part to the Palin effect, and that's a good thing, and I sincerely hope that the wave pushes all the way to November. But knowing what I do of human nature and history, I'm feeling a little more cautious than optimistic. As conservatives, we put our trust in ideas and values, not people. The libs put their faith in people and personality, and that's exactly what they've done with Obama. When the person fails, so do their hopes and dreams. I don't want our side falling into the same trap. 

Our side should stay focused on why McCain and Palin are excellent agents for implementing conservative concepts and principles. I'm just worried that people were so wowed by Palin after one speech that we're setting ourselves up for disappointment, because, let's face it, there's still a lot that is not known. She's going to start making the media rounds this week and we now know that Dem operatives have landed in Alaska and are swarming every inch of her life, past and present. I hope she's exactly who we think she is, but we're not about "hope." That's liberal territory. It took two decades for Ronald Reagan to cement his legacy after his famous 1964 address to the convention. It's been less than a week since Palin made hers. We should be trumpeting the ideas and goals and world-view that she and McCain are espousing, rather than getting caught up in personality. Let the Dems focus on the tabloidization and personal stories of this campaign; our side should be focused on doing what's right, and little else. We have to know what we don't know about Palin, and let things unfold rather than projecting a lot of hopes and desires onto this person that we still have limited knowledge of.
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After the Convention

This today in the London Times, one of the remaining few bastions of respectable, intelligent journalism:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/gerard_baker/article4677799.ece

I will also go ahead and point out something that I'm sure remains an underlying feeling to many of us this morning. We find ourselves in an interesting situation where we suddenly have a candidate for vice president that represents everything we want conservatism to be. Unfortunately last night we saw McCain's shortcomings in this area. He's not exciting, he's not confidently and intelligently in your face. He's not ready to go for the jugular against liberals. There could be a building tension within conservative ranks, wanting more Sarah while being stuck with 'ol John McCain. She's far more exciting and articulates conservatism with a confidence not seen since Reagan. So, was this 1976 all over again last night? Should McCain lose, she's the new standard bearer of Republican conservatism. If McCain wins, what does he do with her? Will she outshine the president? McCain is a humble enough man to let his surrogates shine, but it will be interesting to see what such a firebrand does with the lazy role of veep. My mind keeps going back to Theodore Roosevelt, another firebrand who quickly ascended the ranks, spending only a short time as veep before inheriting the presidency. I'll end the analogy there.

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Apologies

Barack Obama yesterday addressed many of his cheering disciples in the press, and spoke of the United States' "tragic" history in regards to its treatment of Native Americans and other persons of color.  He said:

 "There's no doubt that when it comes to our treatment of Native Americans as well as other persons of color in this country, we've got some very sad and difficult things to account for." He went on: "I personally would want to see our tragic history, or the tragic elements of our history, acknowledged."

Fine. But what does he mean by "acknowledge"?  There exists within his party a growing movement to apologize for slavery and for the treatment of American Indians. Some want to take the issue even further in the form of offering reparations. 

A couple of thoughts here. No one alive today has been either a slave or a slave owner. No one alive today has displaced or slaughtered any groups of American Indians, and no descendants of American Indians have invaded or attacked any white settlements. While we could not nor should not forget or misunderstand the painful or negative aspects of our shared history, this attempt on the part of Obama and his fellow Democrats serves to further drive a wedge between different groups in this country, and it's an arrogant attempt by Obama to set himself up as the messiah who can heal all wounds. The reality is that it's a further attack by him on our nation and our history. We've all had to live with the consequences of slavery, from the divisions that still consume black and white, to the stunted growth of the southern states. And let us not forget that slavery was an extremely divisive issue since this country's inception, leading to a devastating civil war that cost both sides tens of thousands of lives. 

If the Democrats really want to apologize for something, then I would suggest some apologies for the many failed policies of the post-New Deal era. How about apologizing for the welfare state that kept black families dependent on government hand-outs for decades. How about apologizing for Medicare and Medicaid, which have severely damaged our health care system and plunged our government into trillions of dollars in debt. How about apologizing for tying our hands and preventing us from developing our own sources of energy, so that we don't have to depend on the tyrants and thugs of the world. 

The list could go on, but I think this would be a good start.  
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Love Hangover for Obama?

The sycophantic way the press has treated Obama -- the drooling, the panting, the screams of delight -- may come back to haunt them very soon. Having succeeded (so they think) at derailing the Clinton Machine, they're now faced with the prospect of having their enemies, in the form of Republicans and the New Media, stepping in the fill the investigative void left by the verklempt mainstreams. Ironically, it was the similarly sycophantic way they treated Bill Clinton that allowed the corrupt southern governor to move his wares to Washington, and the Clinton myth was created, giving us eight years of scandal and egocentric policy, not to mention his greatest legacy: Hillary. Of course Hillary was next in line for coronation, that is, until Obama came onto the scene, and the Old Media took on a new, torrid love affair. But as is often the case with naive smitten-ness, the flaws have been seriously overlooked or disregarded. 

Amid the accusations of keeping shady (to say the least) company, from Bill Ayers to Rev. Wright to Tony Rezko, Obama has casually shoved aside such meddlesome inquiries with the old Clintonian tactic of blaming the tone of politics and his political enemies, rather than offering up any substantive explanation as to why he seems to travel in such anti-American circles. Now that it has been proclaimed "over" by the mainstreams and the Democrat party (who continue to demonstrate that they still don't fully understand the Clintons), they're now faced with rumors about a supposed Michelle Obama "whitey" tape. Is this just a rumor started by Republican operatives to have circulated on the internet? Perhaps. But when Barack Obama was asked about the comments' validity (where Michelle apparently refers to "whitey" in a diatribe about Hurricane Katrina and Iraq), he didn't actually deny the comments; he instead, in true Clinton fashion, mocked the seedy tactics of politics. 

If the whitey tape does indeed exist, it could very well be the undoing of Barack Obama's candidacy. Because if the rumors are true, there is apparently footage of Michelle Obama seated with Louis Farrakhan during the same conference. Obama's ties to Farrakhan are already known, yet unreported by the mainstreams. If there's actually footage of either Michelle or Barack with Farrakhan, then that presents a dream come true for political ad makers. It will set in stone an image that many Americans already have of Obama, that far from being some kind of messianic uniter who transcends race, as the press would have us believe, he's an anti-American interested only in his own power, and who believes that blacks do indeed have to fight back at The Man. Many Democrats voted for Obama because they bought into the image of him being above race. However, most Americans will not vote for someone with militant black ties. The press and the Democrats may be left a serious hangover, and may regret throwing their first love off the boat. But not to fear, she'll still be waiting there in the wings if they decide they want her back.
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The Adults vs. The Children

It's becoming more apparent with each passing day that the drawn out battle between the dueling Democrats is a gift that just keeps on giving for Republicans. For all of the rancor that McCain's securing the nomination wrought, those days are behind us; and it's now a pleasure to be able to sit back and watch the other party implode under its own mistakes.

The Democrats are paying the price for two big mistakes. The first is the jumbled and elitist primary system they've created, built to keep out certain undesirable candidates (Jesse Jackson?). So many of the states are not winner-take-all, certainly fewer than under Republican party rules, and therefore having two popular candidates results in a deadlocked war of attrition. Furthermore, we've learned (surprise!) that under the Democrats rules, there really are no such thing as pledged delegates.  So while the idiocracy is all over cable news pontificating over the delegate count and who the superdelegates are leaning toward -- it doesn't matter people! The fact that there are not only superdelegates in the first place, but that really none of the delegates are actually committed until the convention has guaranteed that Hillary would stay in this race as long as she kept it close enough to have a fighting chance.

Which takes us to Big Mistake #2. The Democrats have had years to throw the Clintons overboard for the sake of their party, but up till now have behaved like the Clinton's lapdog, defending them and joining in the demagoguery of all those who dared to criticize the King and Queen of the party. What we have learned is this: It takes an Obama. Until Obama came along, the Clintons were still the best, if not the only, hope of reclaiming the White House. Now that there's a new guy in the neighborhood that they like better, the Clintons become old hat. Now prominent Democrats and members of the mainstream idiocratic media are calling for the Clintons to just get out of the way and let Obama do his thing. We're finally hearing things said about the Clintons from the mainstream that had previously only been said by conservatives and Republicans. Suddenly, other Democrats and the press care that Hillary and Bill lie, cheat, are phonies, will smear anyone who stands in their way, will try to be all things to all people, and will steal to get what they want. So every time I now read Maureen Dowd completely get the Clintons, or hear anger toward them from the likes of Keith Olberman or Chris Matthews, just to name a few, I think "Where were you people for the entire decade of the 90s?" The Clintons accomplices in the media and within their party allowed them to survive an endless string of scandals, so rather than getting rid of such dubious characters when they had the chance, they've allowed them not only to survive but to remain at the head of the party, and now they won't leave.

Message to Democrats: you brought this all on yourselves.

And Republicans have absolutely nothing to do with any of it. Sure, conservatives had problems with McCain being our nominee. We had an honest debate over core conservative principles, and this time principles lost. But at least McCain understands national security and would never propose any kind of socialist agenda close to what both of the Democrats are out there proposing.

Also, the ways in which issues of sex and race, basically identity politics in general, are so infused within liberalism that they're paying yet another price for this. This serves as a nice contrast to Republicans, who have in recent years nominated a black man to the Supreme Court, and under George W. Bush we've had two black Secretaries of State, one of whom is a black woman. Do we have celebrations and pat ourselves on the back when this occurs? No. In each case, these people were appointed to these respective positions based on merit and character, not because of skin color. Meanwhile, the Democrats are out there talking about how blacks will vote for the black man and women will vote for the woman, while very few Democrat voters have any idea of what either candidate would actually do if elected (see Obamamania).

Now McCain and the Republicans can sit back and watch what will inevitably be more of the same for the Democrats all the way up to the convention. Don't listen to anyone who says Hillary will drop out if she's down in the delegate count. These people obviously still don't get the Clintons, even after all these years. In the meantime, McCain can take trips to Iraq like a responsible adult. And that's what this race has come down to: the adults vs. the children. It's those who will do what they know is necessary for the good of our country vs. those who wish to whine and complain about how unfair everything is.

If you Democrats really want something to complain about, and if you wind up losing this election that was supposed to be handed to you on a silver platter, don't blame the Republicans.


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Nappy Headed Hos and The Culture of Fear

If I could sum up the Imus flap with one word it would be this:

Fear.

In today’s society, the mere perception of being a racist is probably the worst thing anyone could be. An accused murderer stands a better chance of holding on to a radio show. Qualifications for being a perceived racist include merely referring to someone’s race, making a joke about race, or using racially charged words, especially in a demeaning way. But of course, as many pundits have correctly pointed out this week, what matters most is not just what is said, but who says it. In a society where white males have had “the power” since the beginning of time, their remarks carry a different charge than the same words spoken by someone of a minority race. Much has been made of the double standard that exists for rappers and other artists.

The hypersensitivity to these charged remarks abound. Should these Rutgers girls really have gotten that upset at what was said? This was an off-hand remark, a lame attempt at contemporary humor, that was really just rude and crude. Imus didn’t know these girls, and they probably didn’t know who he was prior to this blowing up. Are we really to believe that people are this sensitive? I suppose many insulting remarks can be brushed off, but not a remark dealing with race, and not if you’re black and the person making the remark is a white man.

The main perpetrators of the politically correct world we live in love to wrap themselves in the first amendment, proclaiming the right to free speech as the only piece of material truly sacred within all of our founding documents (if only they held the rest of it in such high regard).  The political correctness proponents will defend to the death an artist’s right to portray the most debasing language and the most violent and sexually perverse art that one can conceive. But don’t say anything about race (unless you’re part of a minority or a well-intentioned liberal). Borat can get away with it only because he picks on the racist oppressor class, exposing them for who they truly are as they unknowingly play along with his dimwitted, savage beliefs.

I happen to think Borat is very funny. I appreciate Quentin Tarantino’s brave use of racist terms and stereotyping within his scripts. I appreciate the long line of black comedians, from Richard Pryor to Eddie Murphy to today’s younger comedians, who poke fun at white (and black) stereotypes. There has to exist a level of truth in comedy in order for it to be funny.
    
The term “racism” itself has long been bastardized. The term refers to a belief that differences in race lead to certain races being naturally superior to others. We have stretched this definition to include just a mere reference to race, and the perpetrator’s relative position to the offended.

We do not live in a uniform society. Racial differences exist, as do cultural, economic, linguistic, educational – the list goes on. The sensitivity to the subject of race in society today has resulted in one of the worst forms of censorship: the invisible kind. When college campuses, those supposed bastions of intellectual freedom, consider themselves at the forefront of thought, expounding to challenge all of your deeply held beliefs and see the world in a different light but forbid any honest discussion about race or racial differences, then something is seriously wrong. Censorship in this arena is the closest thing we have in this country to communism or totalitarianism. In this one area, truth takes a back seat to political correctness. The subject is so charged, no one wants to touch it. The fact that someone with as dubious a reputation as Al Sharpton can make a career out of throwing charges of racism around, regardless of any truth or merit, is testament to the state of fear we all live in. The fact that a cowboy like Don Imus found it necessary to legitimize Al Sharpton by bowing at his feet, like many others before him, points to the pervasiveness of this fear – the acceptance that the worst kind of sin has been committed, and redemption can be found only by kissing the ring of Rev. Al, the foremost representative of mob rule. Al Sharpton has single-handedly ruined many lives over the course of his career simply by throwing around accusations of racism, from the Tawana Brawley affair to the Duke lacross team.

I’m not suggesting that Don Imus himself was censored, at least not directly. CBS, or any other broadcasting company or media outlet, has the right to determine what they do or do not want to broadcast. This was a business decision – advertisers were pulling out left and right and the network saw their profits and their reputation falling quickly. WE are the censorship. We have been conditioned over the last few decades to not only censor others by denouncing them and calling for their firing if they’re public figures, but we have censored our friends, and we have censored our own language and even our own thoughts. It’s this pervasiveness that makes this so dangerous. It’s dangerous because it ignores the truth, and only by addressing the truth can we as a society really begin tearing down the walls of real racism and real inequality.

Modern racism (or charges of) goes something like this: whites can’t make any reference whatsoever about any minority. By minority, I’m including non-racial minorities like homosexuals. Whites are the historical oppressors and everyone else represents the oppressed. The oppressed can say whatever they want (see rap music), and the more oppressed your history is, the more severe the crime if you’re white. In our society, blacks are viewed as the most oppressed, and therefore charges of racism against blacks by whites becomes the most offending form of speech. This has become a very convenient form of mind terrorism played by the minority classes and their politically correct white enablers. Terrorism is a tool used by the weak to hurt the strong, because they don’t have the might or the power to inflict pain any other way. Like terrorism of the more familiar, deadly kind, this racial censorship does hurt the more powerful. But does it do anything to elevate the weak? As an example: during last week’s on-air argument between Bill O’Reilly and Geraldo Rivera over whether or not illegal immigration was a cause in the death of a Hollywood director who was killed by a drunk driving illegal alien, Geraldo alleged that O’Reilly was being racist, that this had nothing to do with whether or not the drunk driver was an illegal, the anger was because he was Hispanic. In the case of illegal immigration, many excuse the illegality of the immigration simply because they are an oppressed minority. If you advocate enforcing the law, you’re called a racist, and that’s the ultimate trump card in a debate - the heavy-handed silencer. McCarthyism is alive and well in today’s politically correct left.

There are many positives to come out of the civil rights movement. First of all, blacks and others now had access to the same opportunities as everyone else, even if time must be allowed for institutions to adapt. Second, it helped to break down many of the mental barriers that whites in this country held against blacks and others, expanding acceptance at the local, human level.  Whites, or the dominant class in society, had to change. But this is but one side of the coin. The oppressed must take the opportunities they’re given. Many people of minorities have taken advantage of those increased opportunities, but many more have not. Continuing to blame the oppressors will not ever pull anyone out of the lower levels of the socio-economic ladder (unless you’re Al Sharpton).

The reason black homicides are not treated with the same relevance on the news as white homicides is this: people tend to treat others with the same level of respect that they show for themselves. A large segment of black society does not respect life. Gang murders are common, education is not valued, philandering fathers leave women alone with multiple children, and their art forms depict the basest forms of humanity in a world of pimps and hos. This is not a culture that has shown a great deal of self respect. Those blacks that have elevated themselves out of the ghetto-ization of this culture are mocked and impugned and accused of being sell-outs. The rest of us have been forced (through the conditioning of fear) to merely accept this culture for what it is and blame ourselves for whatever inadequacies exist there (see Hurricane Katrina). Many non-blacks even embrace the hip hop culture and make it part of their own. The self flagellation by whites in our society over references to race will do nothing to elevate the status of the black race. Only the black race can elevate the black race.

What I have just written would no doubt result in the hurling the racism charge. Tony Blair this week, on his way out of office, made similar points – that the high rate of murders in England is predominantly a problem within the black community and it should stop being treated as a societal problem at large. Of course, outrage ensued. In these cases, the truth or falsehood of the statement is never debated. You’re racist, end of discussion.

As long as we continue to ignore the truth, and merely cover it up and censor it by throwing around charges of racism and invoking fear throughout our society, the problems will never be solved. They will only worsen. Maybe now that Imus has been liberated from his job he’ll regain his manhood and call out the race McCarthyists like Al Sharpton for who they truly are. Maybe we can begin to have an honest debate about minorities and what makes them special and what holds them back. First we must remove the muzzle from our brains and refuse to be intimidated by those who will readily ruin lives to protect their version of the world, the one where the only injustices are committed by oppressors against the oppressed. This is segregation, not integration; this is censorship through fear.
 
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Pelosi and The High School Party

         Was there a better picture this week than the one of feminist Nancy Pelosi donning a headdress (or what could be considered a form of burka) in between smiling and exchanging pleasantries with one of our top enemies? What she’s been doing, notably conducting a shadow foreign policy and undermining the president and the State Dept., could easily be considered treasonous. There’s a reason we don’t talk to these people! She’s over there insinuating that we (specifically the Bush administration) are at fault for lacking the “courage” to open a dialogue with a state like Syria. Once again, liberals have shown that they carry more reverence for our enemies - states that oppress their own people, threaten our own security and that of other states, and support terrorism – than they do for their own freedom-loving country. Apparently supporting those diametrically opposed to freedom is fine as long as they’re undermining the Bush administration. Pelosi, her entourage (which includes a couple of Republicans) and Jimmy Carter apparently cannot grasp the reasons for which we do not openly speak to, negotiate with, or legitimize governments such as Bashar al Assad’s Syria. They are on enemy soil not implying, but overtly stating that the U.S. is at fault for not opening a “dialogue.”
         But to say that Ms. Pelosi’s actions are treasonous may be to overestimate her understanding of what she’s actually doing. She apparently thinks, in her own naïve little way, that undermining the president and conducting some kind of good will tour with our enemies, will both elevate her at home and fix what she sees is the damage to our reputation wrought by the current administration. She probably feels very big pointing that finger inward, implying that if we only had the courage to “open a dialogue”, we could start solving the problems of the middle east. Her actions go beyond liberal apologist, or even Blame America First thinking. I’ve seen people like her before. The place was high school. This is what we get when we elect people with a high school mentality to high levels of public office. I hereby propose changing the name of the Democrat Party to The High School Party.


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A Conservative Approach To Reframing The Climate Debate

One can no longer make an innocuous comment about the state of the weather without identifying where they stand on the climate change issue. Both warm and cold days in a weather-extreme month illicit revealing political responses. To suggest that this issue has only recently turned political would be to suggest you’ve been living in a cave for the last fifteen or twenty years. True, what was once a fringe debate has moved to the front burner like never before. Like most issues, reason and sanity get lost in the tug-of-war between Right and Left. Conservatives can do more toward fighting their arguments for the sake of the sane and sober.

Those of us who believe in the virtues of capitalism and eschew doomsday predictions and conspiracy theories are quick to jump on the hysteria-induced calamity soothsayers. Whether it’s Al Gore saying we only have ten years left until climatological Armageddon or The Weather Channel’s Heidi Cullen calling recently for having all meteorologists decertified who dare question whether human activity has resulted in a warmer Earth, we scoff at both the alarmism and dogmatism inherent in such statements. We chuckle at the liberals, like the Kennedy’s, who push for alternative sources of energy, like windmills, as long as they’re in someone else’s backyard. The twenty four hour news cycle, along with the twenty four hour weather cycle, has fueled the fire. Every major storm, mudslide and power outage becomes evidence of new climate and environmental forces at work. Never mind that more people than ever before live in vulnerable areas and their plights are instantly broadcast around the world.

By now, we should all be pretty familiar with the argument of the pro-human induced global warming theory. Carbon based energy sources like oil and coal have been spewing carbon waste into the atmosphere since the beginning of the industrial revolution. These greenhouse gases reflect heat energy back toward the earth, blocking their path into space, resulting in trapped heat that in time heats the earth’s oceans and land. Over time, this warming trend causes the polar ice caps and glaciers to melt, resulting in rising sea levels. The increased ocean temperature results in more intense storms. Coastal areas will eventually be underwater, certain species of animals will not survive. The deserts will expand, changing the cycle of weather patterns forever. We’ll have a water shortage in certain parts of the world, leading to more death. That’s basically it in a nutshell.

What I don’t find satisfying about the straightforward nature of this argument is the marginalizing of other factors that alter atmospheric conditions and have led to periods of warming (and cooling) in the past. First, there are natural (or non-human) induced gas emissions from the earth, like carbon dioxide and methane emitted from the oceans themselves, and from volcanic activity. Fluctuations in their levels are due to many earthbound factors (like a period of increased volcanic activity). Second, outside factors like sun spots, solar flares, and other cosmic rays can have an effect on the earth’s atmosphere. These factors are rarely, if ever, noted by the global warming crowd. In addition, they’re very adept at quoting numbers from the last 150 years or so when temperature record keeping began. But you must consider that that represents an infinitesimal amount of time on a cosmic or geological scale, not to mention the steadily proliferating practice, and improvement, of record keeping around the world in the first place. This emphasis is magnified even more when the focus is last the last fifty years or so, as often is. Rarely do we hear references to the many extreme climate fluctuations the earth has gone through in its multi-billion year history as evidenced by the geologic record. There have been ice ages, and mini ice ages (the last one occurring around five hundred years ago). The earth has survived extreme warming periods, as well as the severe climate effects of being pummeled by multiple meteor impacts. Somehow, life managed to survive and continue evolving. You can’t accuse others of cherry-picking evidence when many of your arguments ride on a single track.

The other reason so many remain skeptical of the global warming arguments: their motives. They’ve lost legitimacy by presenting themselves as anti-capitalist, anti-American, and in some cases, anti-people. Their solutions to the “problem” involve a reduction in greenhouse gas emitting activity, which basically means a scaling back in industry in general, whether it be through emissions caps or behavior inducing measures like taxes. They want the government, not private industry, to instead invest in alternate sources of energy like wind, solar, or ethanol, none of which would come remotely close to the energy output of oil or coal. They want the U.S. to engage in agreements with other nations (i.e. the Kyoto Protocol) that would force developed, first world countries, like the U.S., to scale back their carbon emissions while allowing “developing” countries, like China, to continue to pollute. When they oppose sources of energy comparable to that of oil or coal (nuclear), it appears suspicious that they’re more interested in hurting the U.S.’s economic standing relative to the rest of the world; at their most extreme they seem intent on creating a world where everyone rides bikes and grows their own food, that is if they see a place for us humans on the earth at all. Their arguments would strike a chord of legitimacy if they directed some of them at countries like Russia, China and India, who are producing at an ever expanding rate without the controls and standards that we have in the U.S.  Finally, the Left has been making doomsday predictions for decades. At the time of the first Earth Day in 1970, the primary culprit was “global cooling.” Then the warming debate flourished, and predictions were made that some rivers would be boiling by 1990. We should all collectively have skin cancer by now if we were to believe the predictions in the late 80’s and early 90’s about the shrinking ozone layer. The Left would be wise to tone down some of the apocalyptic rhetoric, although it does make good theater.

This is not to suggest that the Right has either popular support or the facts entirely on its side. Two things are becoming more and more clear: (1) A general warming trend has been taking place over the last few decades; and (2) more and more people believe, including more scientists, that human related activity is to blame. The global warming deniers on the Right love to point out how nice it is to have 65 degree days in New York in January -- that we should just embrace our liberation from winter. They also have fun highlighting every major cold snap and blizzard that occurs, as though these occurrences directly contradict a broader trend. While it may be fun to tweak the hysterical Left, it unfortunately underlines a lack of understanding in regards to the complex relationships that determine the state of the weather, like fluctuations in the jet stream or the gulf stream, and the effect that temperature changes have on these currents, just to name a couple of such complexities.  While it’s a worthy point that “scientific consensus” does not equal “scientific fact” (new evidence often arises that can completely reframe a debate), the right can’t keep pointing to a few scientists who don’t agree, as though this were evidence enough that human-induced global warming was all a hoax.

If we continue to debate the global warming Left using arguments like “What about solar warming?” and “It’s just a cycle” and “It’s twenty degrees outside” and “There are scientists who don’t agree”; then we will lose this argument, as it appears we’re doing now. In a practical sense, this will quickly lead to things like tax increases on gasoline and curbs on greenhouse emissions, which is just another way to tax the rest of us. Long term, these measures will result in negative downturn in the world economy. The Right has done a worthy job of pointing out the hysteria and highlighting other reasons for a possible warming trend, but in doing so they seem to have ignored the most reasonable part of the global warming debate: they have not effectively stated why industry-created carbon emissions have not had an effect on the climate, at least to the point of accelerating natural trends. This could be a little like trying to prove a negative, but at least to me, the theory seems plausible, true or not. At the very least, it appears as though this theory cannot yet be disproved based upon the evidence on hand.

A more reasonable approach for the sober minded non-hysterics to take would be to reframe the debate somewhat, and focus on how we can promote more efficient and cleaner energy sources without sacrificing both our way of life and the economic progress being made in the developing world.

First of all, as conservatives, we should not look directly to the government for solutions to improving our energy situation. Subsidizing farmers so that they’ll produce more ethanol will solve very little. As a practical matter, the federal government’s power to tax oil imports, establish positive diplomatic relations with oil exporting countries, subsidize industries, pass laws that curb behavior (like emissions levels), and grant federal lands to energy companies for the purposes of drilling, obviously all have a significant impact on the greater state of energy creation and consumption. While it would be silly to argue that a gasoline tax for instance would not have an affect on consumption, we could argue that this would have a greater affect on slowing down the overall economy than it would have toward finding viable alternatives. Of course, it’s always easier to frame these issues around “What the government should do” rather than “What energy companies should do” or “What consumers should do.” So as conservatives, we should look to the government as a limited force that can have a limited impact, not as the primary force for change.

The laws of supply and demand will work their magic like they have throughout history. If cheaper, more efficient sources of energy can be developed that can pack the same punch as carbon based fuels, people will buy them. It has to be in the consumers’ best interest to expect people to really change behavior. As an example, more and more people in California are installing solar panels at their homes. While not enough to completely power their houses, they subsidize the power they already receive off of the electrical grid from the power company. The power company in effect buys back the power produced individually through solar. While initially expensive to install (currently only the wealthy can afford an installation running in the tens of thousands), this arrangement saves these consumers thousands of dollars over the years, the installation having paid for itself after a certain amount of time. Therefore, these consumers are acting within their own economic self interests. (While these homeowners are probably liberals who would claim they are acting in the interest of the environment, they are also acting within their own economic self-interests). The government’s role in this arrangement was to force the power company to honor this system of credit. So really, the policy of the government is best served when it allows a framework for market forces to take hold. Simply punishing behavior through straight taxation would arguably do more harm than good.

As conservatives, we should be more aggressive about the effects many of the measures called for by the global warming Left would have. The global warming crowd says that even though there are still scientific questions left to be answered, we must act now before it’s too late. Acting now, to them, means essentially slowing down the world economy. So what is the morally superior option? Do we force a slowdown of the world’s economy at the expense of not just the wealthy, but of the entire labor force in this country that relies on the relatively cheap flow of goods and services and maintains the jobs that support this infrastructure? We can’t allow the argument to persist that things like gasoline taxes primarily affect the wealthy and that taxing energy companies through emissions caps would only hurt corporate profiteers. The point should be driven home that the burgeoning world economy, led by the United States, has resulted in a much higher standard of living not only in this country, but throughout the developing world. By punishing the United States directly, you’re punishing the third world as well, and stunting their chances for further growth. So, is the morally superior option to curb carbon use at the expense of the greater economy if it means hurting those struggling to free themselves from the grip of poverty? By allowing the Left to use American Consumerism as their bogey-man, we have forfeited the argument that trickle down economics is a reality. Further economic growth will serve to drive innovation and investment in new and better technologies. The fact remains that the robust economy, led by the U.S., has resulted in a better standard of living throughout the world. Slowing it down serves only to hurt those you claim to want to help.

Conservatives cannot cede the scientific or the philosophical debate here. The Left has been relying on a scientifically narrow portion of the climate argument for too long. They have taken a dogmatic approach and continually attempt to smear those who question the validity of their extreme claims, and we have failed to correctly question the end results of their proposals. It is not enough to simply note that there’s disagreement within the scientific community. Unfortunately, the scientific counter-arguments have not effectively made it into the mainstream. Nor have we sufficiently questioned the logic or the morality of their proposed solutions. We could do better by understanding the full scientific basis for their claims, and attacking them head on. We should be the ideology of sensible conservation, not hysteria. We should continue to note that humans are part of nature, part of the life cycle, and that altering the environment is not the same thing as destroying it. We should be the ideology of scientific and technological progress rather than ceding this realm of thought to the Left, as we have for too long.

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Joe Biden: Clean White Guy for President

         Drudge leads today with the Joe Biden interview conducted by Jason Horowitz in the New York Observer. The quotes that will most undoubtedly lead to the greatest chattering and buzzing on the right and the left are the comments Biden made about Barack Obama, saying in regards to Obama’s candidacy: “I mean, you got first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that’s storybook, man.” We’ll await the reaction of Biden’s P.C. friends within his own party, although he may have fewer of them now than he did at the beginning of the week. If this does turn out to be his Jimmy The Greek moment (we’ll see if the race experts at ESPN pick up on this), it may unfortunately overshadow his comments about the other Democratic candidates -- the more interesting aspect to this interview is what Biden says about Hillary Clinton and John Edwards, among others.
         Biden has carved a niche for himself recently as being one of the few within his own party who has put forward a legitimate plan for dealing with Iraq. (Biden is a strong proponent for partitioning the country along ethnic lines, and makes a strong case as to why this is the most pragmatic approach under the present circumstances.)  He refers to Al Gore and John Kerry as “blow-dry” candidates put forward by the party in 2000 and 2004. He ridicules John Edwards’ lightweight-ness on foreign policy, specifically Iraq, saying: “I don’t think John Edwards knows what the heck he’s talking about,” in reference to Edwards’ calling for an immediate withdrawal of about 40,000 troops from Iraq. In a reportedly mocking tone he calls for an explanation from Edwards about the effect that a large scale pullout would have. It’s obvious to him that Edwards has not thought this through any further.  “What about the chaos that will ensue? Do we have any interest, John, left in the region? Well, John will have to answer yes or no. If he says yes, what are they? What are those interests, John? How do you protect those interests, John, if you are completely withdrawn?” Certainly valid questions, indeed. We’ll be awaiting Mr. Edwards’ response.
         Then there’s Hillary. “Everyone in the world knows her,” he said. “Her husband has used every single legitimate tool in his behalf to lock people in, shut people down. Legitimate. And she can’t break out of 30 percent for a choice for Democrats? They’ve looked at you for the last three years. And four out of ten is the max you can get?” Well, suddenly there’s some sniping about to the Clintons’ heavy handedness. And the campaign is little more than a week old.
         Biden must clearly be somewhat annoyed and frustrated at his lack of respect within his own party; certainly no one would consider him anything close to a “blow-dry” candidate (his coif tells a different story). But surely Joe knows that he belongs to the Blow-Dry Party. This is the party not of ideas, but of personality, good looks, and shallow intellect. We can only imagine what it must be like to have legitimate ideas within that group, only to be overshadowed and outshined by fluffy intellectual lightweights (just ask Joe Lieberman). Assuming he hasn’t just committed inadvertent political suicide, this could become one of the more entertaining aspects of the fledgling Democratic campaign.
         Good luck, Joe.

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Apocalypse Now Revisited

        Nicholas Kristof, in the New York Times today, looks to the classics for analogies to explain the trajectory of George Bush’s presidency and the “adventures” in Iraq. In the “Aeneid”, Alcibiades forgoes all warnings and invades Sicily, believing that the Athenians will be welcomed with flowers and seen as liberators. The strength of the opposition is underestimated, but rather than retreat the Athenians choose to “escalate”, resulting in a catastrophic defeat for them, ultimately leading to the fall of democracy and Athens being conquered by Sparta. Then there’s the analogy to “Moby Dick.” Captain Ahab becomes so obsessed by his fanatical pursuit of the great white whale that he loses all perspective and spirals into self-destruction, ultimately destroying Ahab and his ship.
         Opponents of the war have continuously looked for historical or allegorical analogies to explain what they see as the destructive consequences of “Bush’s War”. It’s all in Bush’s head, and if only he had heeded the warnings of history, we wouldn’t be in such a mess in Iraq. Opponents of the war, and especially liberals, have not loved an analogy more than the one of Vietnam. Vietnam, you see, was a “quagmire” that resulted in the loss of thousands of lives and billions of dollars wasted for the supposed purpose of heading off communism in Southeast Asia. It was a lost cause and certainly not worth the price. If only Bush had studied his recent history, or second guessed some of those in his administration who were architects of the first losing war, we wouldn’t even be in Iraq today, or at least we would have pulled out long ago. Those of us on the right are quick to separate Iraq from Vietnam and point out the many differences, including the fact that 3,000 lost American lives pale in comparison to 57,000 during Vietnam. But perhaps we’re too quick to simply dismiss some of these historical analogies.
         I recently revisited the movie “Apocalypse Now” for the first time in several years. Francis Ford Coppola’s film is based on a novel called “Heart of Darkness” by Joseph Conrad. In the story, Captain Willard, played by Martin Sheen, is sent on a secret mission up a river into Cambodia to find and “terminate with extreme prejudice” Col. Walter Kurtz, played of course by Marlon Brando. Col. Kurtz, we’re told, has gone insane and has installed himself as a god to a local tribe. The military has no choice but to kill this once highly decorated Green Beret who has become a rogue across enemy lines. Willard, already burnt out from previous missions prior to receiving his orders to find Kurtz, soon finds himself in the fog of war; the same fog that manifested itself so deeply into the apparently stable psyche of Col. Kurtz. That fog, a visual motif throughout the film, does not refer to the trials of logistics in a confusing and chaotic environment as the expression “fog of war” usually implies. It goes beyond that; rather, it’s a fog clouding our own moral judgment, manifesting itself deep in our minds, causing us to question the very essence of who we are.
         On the boat up the river to Cambodia, Willard experiences first hand the morally chaotic environment created by a breakdown in the command structure, resulting in a disturbing free-for-all, where a Lieutenant’s first priority after destroying a Vietnamese village is to find good waves for surfing; where many of the soldiers are stoned or tripping on L.S.D.; and where indiscriminate killing of women and children has become common place and without a second thought. Lost are the questions of why we’re fighting in the first place -- killing has become killing without any other purpose. Willard begins to experience his own descent into the confusion created by killing without moral purpose. Whatever moral or upstanding reasons these men were sent to fight for in the first place have become tragically lost; and these men have become nothing more than pleasure seeking killing machines.
         Late in the film, Willard, having survived a descent into his own psychosis, finally makes it to Col. Kurtz’s village. It’s immediately clear that Kurtz has installed himself as a god or a king or both, and it’s clear he has accomplished this both with his superior intellect as well as his brutality. Naked dead bodies are seen hanging from trees, from stakes in the ground, piled into pits, and several heads litter the walkways surrounding his fortress. We get the sense that Willard wants to talk to Kurtz, to try and understand him, even more than he wants to complete his mission and terminate him, even if it means risking his own life to do so. He gets that chance, after Kurtz has him locked up in solitary confinement for an unknown period of time. Kurtz, knowing that Willard was sent to kill him, could have simply killed Willard instead at any time.  He doesn’t do this, and we’re left wondering if perhaps he wants Willard to fulfill his mission. During the famous climax, with Brando’s bald head bathed in a single spotlight, he describes “the horror” to Willard. Kurtz tells the story of how his unit was sent to a Vietnamese village to inoculate the children against polio. They returned some time later to find that the enemy had sawed off every single child’s arm who received the inoculation, finding a “pile of tiny arms.” The story is outrageous and sickening, and serves to underline the extent to which the enemy will go to achieve its ends.
         This is at the core of Kurtz’s monologue, as well as Willard’s own inner moral dilemma. These are men who were sent with a moral purpose to fight an enemy who will use any means to justify their ends, whether it be killing “innocent” women and children, torture, sabotage, terrorism. These methods are all justified because driving out the foreign invaders and spreading communism are worth any cost. There is no moral judgment on anything but the end result. The ends always justify the means.
         America was born from Europe, from a world where war was conducted with honor and rules. War was always hell and it was always brutal, but there was always a code, always lines that separated war from crimes against humanity. Southeast Asia was a different world. These people had known only centuries of fighting and repression. When Americans were sent to fight in this world, part of them had to become as ruthless as the enemy, throwing into doubt the morality of the bigger mission, where the means sometimes overtook the ends. The military has always had to engage in activity that is morally questionable in order to protect the morals of our society from outside dangers. The military must sometimes do awful things to other people to protect the rest of us from awful people. That’s why the mission and the purpose must always be clear: we need to know that the ends do indeed justify the means. If they don’t, our moral structure breaks down, and we suffer defeat, whether it be militarily or psychologically.
         Today, we again find ourselves facing an enemy in a part of the world that fights without rules. We face a people, much like the Southeast Asians, who believe that the means always justify the ends. Everyone is a combatant in their version of warfare. We are held to our rules of engagement while they fight by none. We have found ourselves collectively in the fog. How do we fight such an enemy without sacrificing our own morals and values? To sacrifice them could lead to moral chaos and a war without justification; to refuse to fight could lead to an emboldened enemy who will only make things worse for us after they become stronger.
         During Vietnam, the antiwar camp eventually weakened our resolve to the point where we pulled our forces and our support away from the free people of South Vietnam. This was seen as a betrayal by those who were quickly overrun by the communists. The domino theory never really played out, but perhaps this is because of all of those years America held ground there and continued fighting. Still, South Vietnam became communist and the people there suffered through another fifteen years of war with China and Cambodia.
         Today, nothing in the war on terror has amounted to atrocities like the My Lai massacre, where American G.I.s indiscriminately killed hundreds of women, old men, children, and babies, primarily out of revenge for the Americans’ own losses. What happened at Abu Ghraib pales when compared to My Lai, and it pales when compared to tactics employed by the enemy we’re fighting. Still, it outrages and offends many people in this country and throughout the civilized world. Even the detentions at Guantanamo Bay send people frothing. Therefore, is it even possible to engage and fight an enemy like the Vietnamese or the Islamic fundamentalists without breaking our own rules of civility and morality in warfare? If we do break them, do we sacrifice our own moral structure and fall victim to the ends justifying the means? If we don’t, we may put our defenders abroad and at home in situations impossible to win.
         Perhaps history will show that Iraq was indeed Bush’s great white whale. But Bush didn’t create militant Islamic fundamentalists any more than Johnson or Nixon created ruthless Asian communists. This broader war is not just “Bush’s War”; it belongs to all of us. If we remain engaged on all fronts, only a shared sense of purpose will get us through the collective fog. Otherwise, we can simply leave it alone and withdraw from this war, confident that we’ve retained our own inner morals, and let the dominoes fall where they may.

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Clinton and Others Wrestle with Logic of 'Phased Troop Withdrawal'

    It seems that there are two ways to go on the soon-to-be proposed troop increase in Iraq, or more specifically, Baghdad.  President Bush and others, like John McCain, favor the increase as a last-ditch attempt to get the fires of sectarian violence under control and create what could optimistically be called a manageable atmosphere in the country’s capital, allowing Iraq’s own security forces to gain a foothold and the government to function in a relatively normal way.
   
    The (apparently) inverse view is that the U.S. should withdraw all troops immediately, leaving it to the Iraqis to sort out for themselves, basically saying an increase would be too little, too late, and it’s no longer worth the loss of more American lives. This view is shared by many Democrats, including John Edwards, and a few Republicans, perhaps for different reasons.
   
    The third view calls for a “phased withdrawal,” and has Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, and Ted Kennedy among its champions. This is the plan that has terms like “timetable” at its core.
   
    (As an aside, it’s important to remember that as the Democratic congress wrestles with itself over how to respond to the imminent troop increase proposal by Bush, they cannot block the increase itself, but they can block funding, something that places them in a bit of a political pickle when it comes to the issue of troop support vs. Bush support.)
   
    When considering the three possible approaches listed above, it seems that only the first two make sense. If the reason Iraq (specifically Baghdad) is falling deeper and deeper into a sectarian civil war is due to the lack of security, ostensibly by the American forces, as many critics have contended for nearly three years, then logically a ramping up of those forces necessary for greater security would seem to be in order. If we’re to believe that the Iraqi forces are not yet capable of putting out figurative fires and preventing attacks on civilian, and we believe that it is in our interest (as far as Iraq is important to our physical and economic security) then we would presume that the problem falls once again into our laps. The downside would be that the surge in troops does little or nothing toward quelling the violence and the subsequent further loss of life and funds would be for naught. Also, it could be argued, the greater American presence would in itself only serve to promote more violence. This last point appears weak, since Shiites and Sunnis would be killing each other, as they have for millennia, with or without the U.S. presence.
   
    Those that favor an immediate withdrawal inadvertently side with the Rumsfeldian approach (to an extent) that places primary responsibility for the country’s security in the hands of the Iraqis themselves. The only way Iraq will ever be able to police itself, the logic goes, is if they are forced to do so. The downside to this approach, once again, would be failure by the Iraqis to halt the situation from falling further into chaos, eventually leading to what would probably be a strong-armed Shiite shadow government that would be militant in nature and allied with Iran.
   
    The third, or “phased troop withdrawal” approach is the most non-sensical, and simply serves the interests of political trilateralists like Mrs. Clinton. If American forces have not been able to secure the capital with the current number or past number of forces, then what good could come from smaller numbers? If we’re going to withdraw regardless of the situation there, why not just do it all at once? If we’re to assume that smaller numbers of American troops equals more chaos and killing, then why would we leave any Americans there to wrestle with that situation, putting their lives at greater risk? This is yet another example of Mrs. Clinton and other political opportunists trying to straddle the fence with a foot on each side of the debate.  It’s very similar to Mrs. Clinton voting in favor of the Iraq war and subsequently saying she did so with faulty information and would not do so again. As the 2008 presidential election approaches, it should be remembered that both Clintons have a long history of trying to be all things to all people, an impossible state that usually results in nothing. At least John Edwards in this case, regardless of what you think of him or his positions, stands for something based in logic rather than pure political opportunism.

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Where Are the Moderate Muslims?

            President Bush held a private meeting at the Pentagon last Tuesday that included members of his war cabinet and several outside experts. The president expressed his frustration with the level of popular support in Iraq and searched for ways to get the people of that country on board with the U.S. mission to build a democracy. Bush also noted his perplexity at the lack of appreciation within Iraq for the U.S.’s efforts and sacrifices. Bush’s decision to hold such a meeting reflects a key aspect to one of the more troubling aspects of the war on terror.
         The major events of the last two weeks in the broader war – Israel’s aborted military action against Hezbollah, the foiled airliner plot, as well as the continuing violence in Iraq – has brought a disturbing reality to the surface. Success in Iraq has always been contingent on the assistance and cooperation of the people within that country and within that region as a whole. We know who the enemies of freedom and democracy are. We know that there are Sunni and Shiite extremists alike who despise the U.S. and the Israelis and will use any means at their disposal to frustrate our efforts to bring a freedom-based system of governance into that region. We know that there are religious fundamentalists who can’t wait to get U.S. forces out the way in Iraq so that they can plunge the country into a sectarian civil war and ultimately establish a new caliphate.
         We also know that there are Muslims living amongst us in the West who are intent on destroying the systems of freedom under which they currently live. These are young men (and women) who migrated to or were born and raised and even educated under the systems of a free society and who now think that these very societies that have brought them opportunity should now be punished for their influence in the world. These terrorists continue to attempt to strike fear into the hearts of westerners and are bent on destroying our economy in the name of their religion.     
         What we do not know is where the Islamic voices of moderation are, or whether they exist at all.
         When Israel invaded Lebanon last month in an attempt to root out Hezbollah once and for all from the border region, there were still a few voices within Lebanon and the broader Muslim world who did not denounce the Israeli action, understanding that the extremist group was a provocateur for more violence and were simply bringing more war to a country that has struggled in its grip for years and was finally beginning to rise above the cycle of bloodshed. After weeks of war and Israel’s bungled efforts, this extremist group is now considered as mainstream and legitimate as the Red Cross. The U.N. negotiates with Hezbollah as though they were a legitimately recognized nation. Hezbollah currently funds the relief and reconstruction effort (with money from Iran and Syria) within the war-ravaged neighborhoods of Lebanon.
         The events of the last couple of weeks have shown that we in the conservative, pro-war camp have been wrong on one fundamental point: we have overestimated the Muslims. When the Iraq war began in 2003, it seemed logical that the U.S. forces would be greeted as liberators from the tyranny of Saddam Hussein. Even when it became apparent that the vast majority of Iraqis wanted U.S. forces out of Iraq, it could be assumed that they were still better off than they were under Hussein’s rule and that many of the “mainstream” Iraqis would value the opportunity at their feet and use their voices and muscle to drown out those in the violent opposition and establish a free and democratic system of governance, and could perhaps begin the process of becoming a beacon of hope and opportunity within a troubled sea.     
         That was the hope, and it seemed more than plausible. The reality, however, has been a slap in the face. There are indeed those within that country who are trying desperately to build a strong and democratic central government and a security force with teeth. What seems to be lacking is popular support. We can throw the weight of the U.S. around only so much, but without that support, what is it worth? So far, the U.S. has paid a price of billions of dollars and, more importantly, over 2,500 lives.  Not that the U.S. Army should ever play the role of martyr, but where is the thanks? The U.S. has spilled so much blood for a people who seem not only unwilling to use that sacrifice for their own opportunity, but who can’t seem to muster anything but the slightest hint of appreciation.
         This entire war has been built on the notion of helping people help themselves; of ridding their countries of the forces of tyranny and hate so that they can build something positive in its place and perhaps begin to join the modern world. This applies not only to Iraq, but to Afghanistan and to any other neighboring country close enough to feel the winds of change.  It seems more and more that this thinking is flawed, that the term “mainstream Muslim” may be a misnomer; that a “moderate, free-thinking Islamist” may be a figment of a neo-conservative imagination.
         Such hawkish hand-wringing may sound like excusing a failed U.S. policy in Iraq. Maybe we should have employed the Powell doctrine instead of the Rumsfeld doctrine and used overwhelming force and shock and awe to destroy the insurgency (and kill many more innocent civilians than have died already) after destroying the Hussein regime. Then would the moderate voices have felt safe enough to rise up from within? Would more mainstream Iraqis harbor terrorist insurgents in their home if they feared an American cruise missile through their window? Maybe we should have done nothing and simply stayed home after 9/11 and hoped for the best – hoped that someday forces of moderation would rise up in the Middle East and overthrow the dictators and the theocrats that threaten the modern world to which they are now so inextricably linked. Based on recent events, the latter seems like the biggest pipe dream of all.
         What will it take to bring a fundamentally religious society out of the dark ages and into the world of ideas and moderation? Perhaps there really are no moderate Muslims who will speak up and denounce the killing of those who do not subscribe to their brand of religion. Perhaps there is no one from within who will stand up and say that blowing up commercial airliners and killing thousands of people in the process and damaging economies that provide opportunities to millions more (including Muslims) is wrong and only serves to send Muslims and non-Muslims alike into a state of regression.
         It’s hard to imagine a Christian or a Jew or a Hindu or a Buddhist not renouncing someone who would kill thousands of innocents in the name of their religion. One can only imagine an outpouring of anger at the distortion such acts would bring to their basis of spirituality. There’s something unique about the Muslim religion that makes such denouncements virtually non-existent. The reason could be fear – those moderates may fear the wrath of the militant elements, thereby allowing only those militant voices to be heard. It may be easy to be silent if the cost of speaking up is death. If that were true, then where are the Muslims within relatively safe countries like the United States and Britain? Do they too fear members of the militia showing up at their doors if they speak up? The other explanation is sympathy for the militant cause.  Perhaps non-violent Muslims are content to let the militant sects do the fighting and the dirty work for them. Perhaps they hate Israel and the U.S. just as much as their militant brethren do, even if they consider themselves to be non-violent.
         We’ve watched the vast majority of the Muslim world stand idly by over the years as others have done the hard work of expelling forces of tyranny and repression and violence from that region. Israeli operations aside, the Muslim world watched as the U.S. expelled Saddam Hussein from Kuwait in 1991 and when we overthrew the Taliban from Afghanistan a decade later. In each of these instances, including the current war in Iraq, the U.S. -- while protecting it’s own interests -- provided the bulk of the blood and sweat that freed populations of Muslims from repression at the hands of other Muslims. The only time in recent history that a Muslim population has risen up to overthrow a leader was the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979 when Iranian Shiites took to the streets and overthrew the Shah and put a fundamentalist theocracy into power – a move toward an even greater religious fundamentalism that continues to threaten free societies today. Those moderate voices in Lebanon that expelled the Syrian army last year and the purple-fingered Iraqis who voted for a voice, those seeming harbingers of revolution, are being washed away by the tide of extremism.
         The American revolution had Thomas Paine and Patrick Henry; the French had Rousseau. Perhaps we don’t hear from the Muslim equivalent because there isn’t one. We may believe that freedom is the condition that the human spirit naturally yearns for, but maybe this is indeed a concept that uneducated masses who have a fundamentalist religion at the core of their being are unable to grasp. If this is true, then it still doesn’t explain the silence of Western-educated Muslims – those who have used free societies and superior universities to improve their lives, only to turn around and deride them as objects of hate.  Instead we heard British Muslims denounce as racism the profiling at airports, as though offense to one’s feelings take priority over the denouncement of those who aim to kill in the name of Islam -- those who make profiling an unsavory necessity in the first place. Even the Chief Superintendent of the Metropolitan Police in London, Ali Desai, a Muslim, said “What you are suggesting is that we should have a new offense in this country called ‘traveling whilst Asian.’” It’s hard to understand how some could be so angered by the scrutiny applied to Muslim men, while at the same time there’s no recognition given to the fact the only people currently trying to blow up buses, trains, and airplanes are young Muslim men (and the occasional Muslim woman).
         History may show that the greatest mistake made by the Bush administration and the so-called neo-conservatives was in believing that Muslims would stand up and fight to be free – that they had a desire to join the modern world instead of retreating into a theocratic hole while progress and ideas passed them by.  Maybe it’s time we recognized that we’ve sacrificed too much for a people that don’t wish to help themselves. Countries like Turkey and the U.A.E. have demonstrated that moderate voices can be a factor in a Muslim country, but where have those countries been in this war on terror?

         Imagine if Israel was wiped off the map and no longer existed. Then what? Would Hezbollah and Hamas lead legitimate countries and integrate themselves into the rest of the world? Or would they more likely find a new oppressor to blame for whatever economic and social ills still ailed them? As long as Islam has an overriding sense of victimhood at its core, whether it be victims of Israel, U.S. foreign policy, western civilization, or other sects of Muslims, they will never accept freedom. They will never denounce those who lash out in violence and terror at their perceived oppressors. They will never create their own opportunities, nor will they ever take those opportunities handed to them on a silver platter.

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