Archive Listing
February 24, 2005 - February 17, 2005
Friday, September 19, 2003
Enough is enough.
It's time to recognize what Democrats call political debate for what it
is: vicious, unprincipled demagoguery that provides aid and comfort to
the enemies of the United States. I am by no means a kneejerk defender
of the policies of the Bush administration. I believe there are many
issues about which reasonable people can disagree, and I believe the
country would benefit from a civil airing of competing ideas about how
best to deal with the challenges we face. That is not what is occurring
now.
If there was a straw that broke the camel's back, it was Andrew
Greeley's column in today's issue of the Chicago Sun-Times. You can
read the full text here:
He's a Catholic priest. He's also a disgrace.
He begins his polemic with a reference to Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi
minister of propaganda who propounded the concept of the "Big Lie," the
one which will be believed if it is repeated often enough. As a priest,
he's far too diplomatic to put the words "Bush" and "Hitler" in the
same sentence, but we'd have to be idiots to miss his intent. It's not
as if this odious comparison originated with him. It's been repeated so
often that it's become a motif of the left - the very same left which
claims to own a monopoly on tolerance and which continually accuses
itself of being "too nice" in its dealings with the Republican
opposition.
Jonah Goldberg has written a brief and rather restrained analysis of
the Bush-Hitler theme, which you can read here: CLICK HERE. His essay
makes the obvious (though evidently still necessary) point that such
rhetoric is not only insulting to the nation and the president but also
serves to trivialize the monstrous horror of the holocaust. He seems to
think that identifying this fact might deter so-called liberals from
persisting in their dishonest comparisons. Unfortunately, Mr. Goldberg
is giving his opponents more credit than they deserve.
The truth is, Greeley and his kind cannot let go of the Hitler motif.
There are several reasons why, and they are all revealing. In fact,
they are so revealing that it's worth digging into them in considerably
more detail than Jonah Goldberg probably felt necessary.
The History of an Evolving Falsehood
One of the most longstanding fallacies in American political culture is
the identification of Nazism as a right wing phenomenon. The term
"Nazi" is essentially an acronym for National Socialism, which was a
political movement that positioned itself in opposition to what it
regarded as weak representative democracy. Hitler's notion of the ideal
state was as far away as it could be from the principles of limited
government, personal liberty, and individual rights which typify
Republican/conservative views in this country. He believed in big
government, secular government (else why oppress and silence the
churches), intrusive, controlling government embodying all the moral
ideals of the nation. Does this not evoke more comparisons with
American left/liberal ideology than with American right/conservative
ideology?
Historically, it has been a clever trick of American Democrats to sneak
Nazism's position on the so-called right wing of the Weimar Republic
into a left-right spectrum of American politics defined by entirely
different factors. Hitler was right wing in a German context because he
was opposed to the brand new 'liberal' experiment with democracy in a
country which had been ruled by a monarchy throughout its history. He
was reactionary in wanting a government that returned to the strong
controls of the past. At the exact moment that he was engineering his
rise to power, however, the reactionary thrust in America was in the
opposite direction: to return to the weaker, less intrusive central
government which had obtained in America prior to the 1932
quasi-revolutionary turn toward big government known as Franklin
Roosevelt's New Deal.
Lots of additional Democrat sleight of hand parlayed this initial
misrepresentation into an accepted cliche. Hitler's opposition to
Communism helped American liberals to reinforce his position as a
rightwinger. But this was also a spurious inference. Hitler opposed the
communists not because his totalitarian approach to government differed
in any material way from that of Lenin and Stalin, but because
communism was internationalist by definition, which was incompatible
with the mission of German empire. Still, with this double layer of
falsehoods in place, it became easy for Democrats -- long after the war
-- to depict Republican antipathy to communists as fascism, i.e.,
Nazism, and subsequently to equate Republican resistance to sweeping
federal Civil Rights legislation with Nazi racism and genocide.
All such associations were primarily rhetorical devices; Nazism/fascism
was a convenient bucket of tar that could be used to smear any
Republican or conservative who opposed Democrat positions on social and
foreign policy matters. The continuing fringe existence of the Ku Klux
Klan enabled canny Democratic politicians to characterize all
Republican positions as veiled manifestations of Hitlerian
supernationalism and racism. Lost to us now in these days of historical
ignorance and amnesia are the original contexts for a variety of
post-WWII Republican positions.
The symbolic rite of passage for 20th century American liberals was the
period they have succeeded in labeling the "McCarthy Era." If
Republicans had been half as rhetorically astute, we would in all
likelihood know this time by a different name, as "The Era of Soviet
Infiltration." The end of the Cold War has almost universally
vindicated the charges by Republicans in the late 1940s and 1950s that
Soviet espionage agents occupied critically compromising positions in
multiple agencies of the U.S. government and the military. Despite the
villainization of Richard Nixon, his target Alger Hiss was, we now
know, guilty. The Rosenbergs were guilty. FDR's Chief of Staff Harry
Hopkins was guilty. Staggeringly important secrets were passed by
American citizens to the Soviets, including plans for both the atom and
hydrogen bombs. There is simply no way to deny the truth that the
communist conspiracy claimed by the Republicans did, in fact, exist and
was consistently denied, dismissed, or provided cover for by the
Democratic party.
Nevertheless, the liberal/left elite in this country has succeeded in
perpetuating a dramatic myth that is flatly contradicted by the facts.
The anti-communist crusade of Joseph McCarthy, by reason of its
impoliteness and its incompetence, has become the secular Passion of
liberalism, its sanctifying crucifixion, the basis of its arrogant,
continuing, and utterly unjustified claims of moral superiority over
the conservative opposition. (Lest you regard this as overstatement,
please read "The Crucible," Arthur Miller's play about the McCarthyism
of the 17th century Salem witchcraft trials -- as we all know, there
were no witches/communists . . .) We are supposed to overlook the
enormity of the fact that at the very dawn of the nuclear age, American
citizens conspired to transfer the deadliest technology ever developed
to the mortal enemies of their country. This terrifying event is
supposed to pale beside the prospect of a Hollywood screenwriter whose
career was damaged by his membership in the 'party' that led the
conspiracy. It doesn't -- except in the minds of those who have never
quite understood, and probably never will -- the sickening, murderous
evil that was the Soviet communist state.
Yet the Democrats won the word war. The term 'McCarthyism' entered the
language and has been kept vigorously and determinedly alive. It is, by
usage, synonymous with fascism, because it has come to mean the
ruthless persecution and demonization of an imaginary enemy for purely
political purposes. And ever since the great Democrat Passion of the
1950s, this word has been hurled at every concerted Republican attempt
to uncover any kind of wrongdoing in the left/liberal establishment.
Another shoe dropped during the Civil Rights movement. Almost no one
now remembers that many Republicans opposed the 1964 Civil Rights Act
for reasons that had nothing whatever to do with racism. Partly this is
occasioned by the fact that almost no one remembers where the core of
virulently racist opposition to the Civil Rights Act reposed -- in the
Dixiecrat (i.e., southern) wing of the Democratic Party. Republicans
who entirely agreed with the ultimate aims of the Civil Rights movement
as they were then described -- the G.O.P. was proudly the party of
Lincoln, after all -- nonetheless opposed the scope of proposed federal
legislation that would dramatically reduce the rights of individual
states to write their own laws. Thirty years of virtually uninterrupted
transfers of power to the federal government gave Republicans pause;
they opposed subsequent Medicare legislation for much the same reason:
fear of a central government growing too big, too powerful, too
intrusive, too expensive. Of course, to the most enlightened social
progressives of the time it was impossible to allow that anyone might
hold such a contradictory view; all opponents of the legislation had to
be regarded as racists and were branded as such.
Once again, the tarring worked. How many American citizens know today
that a higher percentage of Republicans voted for the 1964 Civil Rights
Act than did Democrats? From this point forward, the Republicans were
racists by definition (and by repetition) and were forever to be
associated with a KKK whose most prominent members had been Democratic
politicians.
A further subtle transition was accomplished during the antiwar
movement of the late 1960s. The baby boomer leftists who opposed the
Vietnam War traded the term 'McCarthyism' for the more general purpose
'fascism.' This was the period when it was impossible to walk across an
elite university campus in America without being handed a smudged
mimeograph denouncing the "fascist imperialist U.S. pigs . . ." Vietnam
had started as Lyndon Johnson's war, but it fell to Republican Richard
Nixon to find the way to end it. The fascist label was accordingly
transferred to him in the blink of an eye, and it was precisely during
this phase of the war that the antiwar movement migrated from
opposition to treason, meaning open alliance with the North Vietnamese
enemy, hysterical accusations of war crimes against U.S. soldiers, and
even some cheering of the death and suffering of American troops. This
was also the timeframe within which the left/liberal wing of the
American political spectrum began to employ the term 'genocide' and
proclaim it an instrument of American foreign policy. Not
coincidentally, the same people transformed 'patriotism' into a term of
opprobrium.
If the McCarthy Era was the left/liberals' crucifixion, Watergate was
the resurrection. How serendipitously easy it was to caricature Nixon
aides Haldeman and Ehrlichman as storm troopers . . . how remarkably
convenient it was to conceal the repudiation of the left represented by
the crushing defeat of George McGovern in the 1972 election underneath
the mushrooming scandal . . . and how lucky it was that the
consequences of the left's 'principled' stand against the war -- i.e.,
the massacre of 2 million or more Cambodians -- disappeared into the
opera of Nixon's downfall. Yes, despite the Cambodian holocaust,
American left/liberals now regarded themselves as wholly vindicated,
and to this day they cling to the memory of Richard Nixon as if he were
their own Shroud of Turin, the incontestable (if fraudulent) artifact
of their self-anointing to political divinity. Nixon became the
American Hitler they implicitly opposed in all Republican opponents,
the one most evident incarnation of the demon they would always see and
attack in every strong Republican leader -- corrupt, conspiratorial,
racist, and perversely opposed to every ideal treasured by the morally
initiated, including the rights of women, children, minorities of every
stripe, and specifically including all foreign enemies.
The Contemporary and Obsessive Uses of Falsehood
This entire history collapses into a single article of faith which can
be transmitted to young recruits without much explication of the
formative events. The article of faith is that the Republicans,
especially conservative Republicans, are fascists at heart, ever slyly
in search of ways to rob less privileged people of rights,
opportunities, freedoms, and money. Thus, the image of Hitler springs
easily to mind for people of so-called liberal persuasion. It is a
deeply satisfying image, one they have used to considerable advantage,
and (the dirty secret) they have learned much from their long
association with it.
What have they learned? Precisely what Andrew Greeley references in the
first sentence of his column: the efficacy of the Big Lie. This is a
recurring theme in Democrat rhetoric precisely because they have used
it so routinely and effectively for their own purposes. A more familiar
term for it is the "spin" perfected by the Clinton administration,
which consists of "talking points" to be used verbatim by every
conceivable spokesman for the party. The mechanism is not truth, but
repetition. If Republicans oppose automatic budget increases, they are
"seeking drastic cuts in services" for needy men, women, and children.
An increase in the school lunch program that is not as large as desired
can be compared to "genocide." Concern that affirmative action programs
may promote more resentment than genuine opportunity can be branded as
"racism." All that's necessary is to repeat the charge ad nauseam, see
that it spills out of every mouth that has access to a microphone, and
eventually a significant percentage of the population will believe it.
More recently, Democrats have employed the Big Lie to carry Clinton
through the disgrace of impeachment. For months, every available mouth
repeated the mantra that "lying about sex isn't a crime because
everyone does it," "lying under oath isn't necessarily perjury," and
"breaking the law isn't necessarily an impeachable offense."
After the 2000 election, the Big Lie that has been repeated often
enough to be believed by too many idiots is that "George Bush stole the
election." Never mind that Al Gore broke an incredibly important
precedent which even Richard Nixon was too principled, too patriotic,
to defy. Even when confronted with strong evidence of vote fraud in
Cook County during the 1960 presidential election, Nixon decided not to
contest Kennedy in the courts for the good of the country. It was the
feckless ambition of Al Gore which resulted in the electoral ordeal
which will now, undoubtedly, be repeated in every close election from
here on out. Yet who has stepped forward to imagine for us the
implications of protracted legal battles in every state decided by
fewer than several thousand votes, in perpetuity? The very first
decision to contest the outcome in a single state inevitably awakened
the possibility that all future national elections will end precisely
where they never should, in the hands of politically appointed judges.
We have Al Gore to thank for that. But where is the Republican attempt
to use the "Big Lie" to drive home this dire fact with the American
electorate? It doesn't exist. This particular tool has been transformed
into a nuclear weapon only by the Democratic party and its leftist
minions.
The appalling ugliness of the current debate about world affairs can
only be understood in these terms. The actual situation of the country
and the Bush administration is simple to the point of near
transparency. The United States was attacked in September 2001 by an
enemy whom we -- i.e., Democrats, Republicans, and ordinary citizens --
had not taken seriously enough. We were compelled to go to war -- not
metaphorical war, as Greeley vilely postulates, but real war -- for
multiple unassailable reasons. The tradition of personal liberty in
this country means that there will never be a surefire way to detect
and thwart terrorist threats within our borders. The only alternative
to creating a police state is to go where the terrorists originate and
kill, imprison, or frighten enough of them to reduce the threat to
manageable proportions. The enemy is an amorphous worldwide entity,
incarnated as individuals, schools, charitable organizations, mosques,
paramilitary units, political parties, and nations. Because of our long
inattention, our intelligence about the enemy is alarmingly poor. Were
it otherwise, we would not have been devastated so unexpectedly on
9/11. In a single moment, all foreign policy assumptions were turned on
their heads. Before 9/11, it seemed reasonable to assume the best case
until events proved otherwise. After 9/11 it became absolutely
necessary to assume the worst until events proved otherwise. Make no
mistake: it is not just the American economy but the world economy
which cannot afford a mass destruction event in the United States,
however shortsighted individual nations may be in their policy making.
Iraq was an avowed enemy of the United States, a proven aggressor, a
proven developer and user of chemical/biological weapons. Our
frighteningly scarce intelligence about Iraq could not prove to
anyone's satisfaction that Saddam was not an imminent threat, was not
in possession of an immediately usable stockpile of weapons of mass
destruction, was not directly in cahoots with the other major Arab
entity which insisted on calling us 'The Great Satan.' Much of the rest
of the world was far less concerned about this, because their tears
about 9/11 were crocodile tears from the start.
It is vital to understand that the key to the current situation is the
very lack of intelligence that is now being used to assault both Tony
Blair of the U.K. and George Bush. This is not the same as saying there
was no intelligence. It is that the intelligence which did exist was
piecemeal, contradictory, not at all reassuring, and more out of date
than any potential combatant in a war wants the enemy to know about.
Did George Bush and Tony Blair lie? By the standards of global
politics, they were as carefully, nitpickingly candid as they could
afford to be without rendering themselves impotent to eliminate the
threat. This is a situation that requires the judgment of grownups, not
whining children.
Time out for a quick review. The enemy is fundamentalist Islam, whose
relation to so-called mainstream Islam and Arab ethnocentrism features
boundaries so tenuous and subtle as to be invisible. Thus, all
decisions about how to proceed against the enemy are fraught with risk
and destined, regardless of which alternatives are chosen, to result in
at least some negative consequences. Yet the greatest risk in the face
of an unknown threat is inaction, the willingness to wait until a
determined enemy makes its own choice about the next arena of conflict.
Therefore, the "unilateral" American invasion of Iraq. Astoundingly, a
swift and brilliant military campaign with essentially no U.S.
casualties and a remarkably fortunate (meticulous?) dearth of civilian
casualties and infrastructure damage. The result? Occupation of a
nation whose experience of war was so brief as to have left almost no
scar, precious little appreciation of the hammerstroke that had been so
deliberately left undelivered. That undelivered hammerstroke in part
consisted of the absence of military mopping up, which in most full
scale wars results in vividly ugly incidents. The desire to be humane
resulted in the decision to leave too much of Saddam's military and
political apparatus in the field. This was, of course, a deliberate
gamble, and it was a gamble whose consequences were aggravated by an
unanticipated (lack of intelligence again) decrepitude in the
infrastructure of Saddam's Iraq. All the care taken in not destroying
waterworks and electrical plants was wasted; these vital components of
nationhood had already been destroyed by neglect.
Now it is four months later, and what is the situation we face as a
nation?
By all rational standards the occupation is proceeding extremely well.
To view the results of an in-depth poll of Iraqi citizens which I have
nowhere seen reported in the mass media: CLICK HERE
Yet polls in our own nation suggest that the people are growing
increasingly concerned about whether or not their president has done a
good job. Why are they concerned? Because of an unending series of "Big
Lies" being propounded by left/liberal citizens of the United States of
America.
BIG LIE 1: America's unilateral action in Iraq turned the will of the
world against us. (Click here for an outstanding analysis of this
falsehood)
BIG LIE 2: George Bush lied us into a war with Iraq for no reason,
unless it was about oil or lucrative business contracts for Republican
political donors. Right. From the moment they take office, American
Presidents are living in the history books. It's absurd beyond
responding to to suggest that a man who is already rich and well
connected would plunge himself into the cesspool of history by
betraying the national interest in favor of a few business contracts.
BIG LIE 3: There were never any weapons of mass destruction, and Bush
and Blair almost certainly knew and covered it up. Recall if you are
able, the incontestable fact that even our whiniest foes in the U.N.
never claimed there weren't WMDs in Iraq; their opposition consisted of
not wanting to do anything about them. Even the Clinton
administration's eight years of pronouncements about WMDs were squarely
in accord with what the Bush administration and the U.N. believed.
BIG LIE 4: The occupation of Iraq has been irretrievably botched and
has become a Vietnam-like quagmire. This is an absolutely ridiculous
assertion. 60,000 Americans died in Vietnam over a 10-year period.
Throughout that time, American troops faced a fully armed and centrally
organized military opposition in the field. No comparison is even
possible. Remember, too, that it took years to establish the conditions
for self rule in both Germany and Japan after World War II. The only
way our current situation can be viewed negatively is to insist,
childishly, on no ill consequences for any of the gambles we take in
combating terrorism, in which case we will do nothing until the dirty
bomb at the Sears Tower kills 10,000 in Chicago.
BIG LIE 5: It's proof of American imperialist ambitions that the Bush
administration has gotten along so poorly with the U.N. and still
persists in hindering the U.N.'s right to oversee the rebuilding of
Iraq. Again, an utter absurdity. The only consistent features of U.N.
policy are its tacit support for Palestinian terrorists and its
determination to poke a stick in America's eye at every opportunity.
There is no seat of wisdom or benevolence that anyone can point to in
this corrupt organization. Libya and Cuba occupy seats on the U.N.'s
human rights commission. Who could ever trust this organization to
administer any situation competently, fairly, or honestly? Every single
reference by an anti-Bush politician to "the U.N." is a proof that
there is no one at the U.N. worthy of the deference so fraudulently
accorded that organization.
BIG LIE 6: The war on terror is now more dangerous than ever because
terrorists are flocking to Iraq; the war, on balance, has made the
situation worse. This "Big Lie" can be true only if the terror threat
against America consists purely of al Qaida remnants in Afghanistan. To
postulate this means assuming that Syria is not a terror threat, Iran
is not a terror threat, and that Saddam's Iraq was never a harbor,
training ground, organization site, weapons supplier, or financier for
terrorists. All of these are demonstrably ridiculous and dangerous
assumptions. It bears repeating that prudent foreign policy now
consists of assuming the worst until it can be entirely disproved.
BIG LIE 7: The best evidence for believing all the darkest implications
of numbers 1 through 6 lies in the extreme right wing policies pursued
by the Bush administration in every area (because we all know what that
means). Now, all of the lies are absurd, but this one is downright
comical. By every standard but national security, George Bush is the
most liberal Republican president in living memory. Indeed, he has
supported and passed so many watered down versions of Democratic
legislative programs that without the overriding national security
concerns, he would in all likelihood be facing a conservative
challenger for the 2004 nomination. Any Republican you speak to outside
of New York, California, and New England is guaranteed to be hopping
mad about multiple ways this President has steered to the left of his
party's historical positions on limited government, education policy,
entitlements policy, immigration policy, and perhaps most importantly,
on the need for fighting back against liberal slanders and the
liberals' low strategems in matters of legislation and judicial
nominations.
What can be proved is that all of these purported lies are, in fact,
lies. The proof consists of the utter absence of rational proposals
from Democrat politicians or liberal media pundits about what might be
done next, given the current set of circumstances, as opposed to what
has already been done wrong in the reinvented past. The purposes the
lies serve are: 1) to undermine the president's popular support at
home, his credibility abroad, and his effectiveness in convincing our
enemies -- Iraqi resistance and Islamic terrorists both -- that it is
futile to hope for Americans to quit. (All of these outcomes are
directly contrary to the interests of the American people, our troops
in the field, and our ability to act in concert with even our allies);
and 2) to conceal the fact that the left/liberal character assassins in
the Democratic party have no ideas of any kind about how to prosecute
the war on terror -- unless you count it an idea to transform the
dismembered victims of the twin towers and the murdered marines in
Tikrit into casualties of a purely "metaphorical" war.
If Hitler is anywhere on the scene in today's world, he resides in the
persona of Saddam Hussein, who, in the eyes of all the rabid, lying
Bush haters, can't hold a candle to George Bush for tyranny, duplicity,
inhumanity, and selfish ambition. And what, may we ask, is this if it
is not simply a monstrous joke? It is, we suggest, "the ruthless
persecution and demonization of an imaginary enemy for purely political
purposes." That's right; it's classic McCarthyism. The Democrat
obsession with fascism is a triumph of narcissism, an unconscious
self-indictment projected onto every adversary who obstructs their
sense of entitlement to rule.
The lies I have enumerated here are stated or implied in every diatribe
of the sort promulgated by Andrew Greeley and his despicable
accomplices. The indignity and damage such lies wreak on the nation at
this critical time in our history are so huge, so indefensible, and so
far beneath contempt that it staggers the mind to try seeing them
whole. Every one of the Democratic candidates for president has given
at least lip service to multiple of these lies, and all of them should
be treated to the scorn of the American public and a one-way ticket
back to whatever hate-filled lair they call home. We should all demand
that the remainder of the Democratic party field a list of replacement
candidates capable of debating policy alternatives at home and abroad
without impugning the motives of a president who has had to make
innumerable difficult decisions in a time of unprecedented national
crisis, with an unprecedented lack of support from the "loyal
opposition." Any American who can sneer at the man who has had to bear
this burden of transition into a brand new kind of world war is, to put
it bluntly, stupid and undeserving of respect.
Mr. Greeley, if you have an ounce of personal integrity in you, you
should remove that collar and mail it back to the pope. You're no
Christian in any sense of the term. And I do mean that as an insult.
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