Go Back   Professional Soldiers ® > At Ease > The Soapbox

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
Old 10-08-2004, 14:45   #1
brownapple
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
The Liberal Case for Bush

Great read: http://www.techcentralstation.com/100704B.html

Quote:
The Liberal Case for Bush

By Michael J. Totten Published 10/07/2004
Author's Note: I am a centrist swing voter.

The May 19, 2003, cover of Time Magazine features a black-and-white photo of an upbeat Franklin Delano Roosevelt, cigarette holder jammed jauntily between his teeth, with a headline that says They Don't Make Democrats Like They Used To.

They sure don't.

And Democrats don't build nations like they used to.

Liberation and nation-building have been crucial parts of the Democratic tradition from the reconstruction of post-war Germany and Japan to the rescue and rehabilitation of Bosnia and Kosovo.

In the 1990s and early 2000s I grew accustomed to hearing conservatives scoff at Bill Clinton's efforts as "international social work." With the honorable exception of dissident neoconservatives, post-Cold War Republicans increasingly resembled their circa 1930s isolationist counterparts.

Even after the Vietnam War -- at least when Clinton was president -- the Democrats had the right temperament for guns-and-butter liberalism abroad. The intervention against Slobo's regime in Serbia wasn't slammed as a "unilateral war." It was the Peace Corps with muscles.

But when George W. Bush implemented the Clinton Administration's policy of regime-change in Iraq, democratic nation-building morphed into "imperialism." Overthrowing a totalitarian regime was deemed "reckless." What mattered most was "stability." Just as September 11 taught George W. Bush that liberals had a point all along, liberals started to sound like... conservatives.

In his acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention John Kerry borrowed a crusty old plank from the foreign-aid-opposing America-First right as an applause line.

"[W]e shouldn't be opening firehouses in Baghdad and closing them down in the United States of America."

I didn't know we were closing down any firehouses. Did you? I'll bet you didn't. Let's say we are and let's say we shouldn't be. Fine, then, Kerry is right. But why did he have to complain about opening firehouses in Baghdad? Baghdad is burning. Baghdad has been burning for decades. Baghdad can't afford to have an American president who shrugs at its problems.

Woodrow Wilson, good Democrat that he was, fought to make the world "safe for democracy." There is no more noble or inspiring reason to fight. John Kerry is no Woodrow Wilson. In his most important speech, the set-piece of his campaign, he didn't mention freedom or democracy for Iraqis. Not even once.

Conventional wisdom says Kerry has taken every possible position on the Iraq war. But it's not true. He hasn't. There is one he has ignored all along, the very position he should have championed from the beginning: the liberal case for war, the one that gave Operation Iraqi Freedom its name.

Maybe it never occurred to him to take the liberal position. Perhaps he considered it and shrugged or thought it was stupid. In any case, he won't touch it. And that's a serious problem. It stands as a de-facto repudiation of his great party's tradition.

He did mention democracy in his speech, though. "Our purpose now is to reclaim democracy itself." But he wasn't talking about democracy in the Middle East. He was talking about America as if it were ruled by a dissent-smashing dictatorship. Democracy plainly exists in the United States. The proof of that, as if any should even be needed, is that Kerry suggested otherwise while he was running for president.

Democracy needs to be claimed alright, but not in this country. Our liberal system of government is older, deeper, and stronger than any other on Earth. To speak of democracy as if ours must be "reclaimed" while poor oppressed masses -- who are desperate to come to America -- suffer under cold-hearted brutal regimes in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, is about as blinkered and provincial a whine imaginable.

Democracy doesn't exist in Iraq. It doesn't exist in any Middle Eastern country other than Israel. Bush makes this the lynchpin of his foreign policy. Kerry can hardly be bothered to give it lip service.

He has a hard time in our own hemisphere, too. Miami Herald columnist Andres Oppenheimer, no Bush supporter, was disappointed when he asked Kerry about the peaceful citizen's revolt in Cuba:

"Kerry showed little enthusiasm when I asked him if he would seek greater international backing for the Varela Project, the petition signed by more than 30,000 Cubans on the island to hold a referendum on whether to hold free elections.

"While he has supported the Varela Project in the past, Kerry told me that it 'has gotten a lot of people in trouble, ... and it brought down the hammer in a way that I think wound up being counterproductive.'"

It was counterproductive? Is Kerry actually saying the architects of the Varela Project should not even have tried? Clearly the project wasn't effective. But that's hardly the fault of the people who backed it. Cuba lacks democracy because a half century of absolute power isn't enough for Fidel Castro. Yet Kerry has the nerve to suggest "counterproductive" Cuban liberals are somehow partly to blame.

Iraq's Ayatollah Sistani does a much better job promoting Islamic democracy than the supposedly liberal Democrats.

British leftist Johann Hari (who happened to favor the overthrow of Saddam) read Sistani's book A Code of Practice for Muslims in the West and dubbed it "a startlingly progressive text." Neoconservative intellectual Reuel Marc Gerecht described one of Sistani's fatwas this way:

"[I]t speaks the language of inalienable rights: one man, one vote; and a constitution written by elected representatives and approved by popular referendum. In this one bold stroke Sistani managed to launch, and garner popular support for, a project that Muslim progressives have only ever dreamed of: establishing a democratic political order sanctioned and even protected by the clergy." [Emphasis added.]

John Kerry and the rest of his party ought to seize and amplify this. Here is Iraq's most powerful ayatollah, arguably the most popular man in the country, who is free to speak his mind, free to champion a liberal Middle East using the Koran as his justification. And all Kerry and the Democrats can do is seethe and whine about the very operation that made it possible in the first place.

If you've been around long enough you might remember an old-left slogan: Fascism Means War. Fascism still means war, but not to the same people. The left ceded that plank to the right.

And while the Republicans are more than happy to take up the anti-fascist banner, John Kerry and a huge swath of the Democratic Party embrace a conservative, uninspiring, pessimistic "realism" that fetishizes stability no matter how oppressive it is.
  Reply With Quote
 


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump



All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:56.



Copyright 2004-2022 by Professional Soldiers ®
Site Designed, Maintained, & Hosted by Hilliker Technologies