More or less, the musings of a graduate of a Scottish university, born in New York, formerly resident in South Africa, and now living in London.
@cusackandrew: Visited Erskine Childers' old regiment in London tonight. His name on the Boer War roll of honour was pointed out with ironic pride.

Elephant Season Begins November 7

We don’t often like discussing politics because it’s such a filthy business these days, and besides, if there’s anything worth saying about politics, no doubt Daniel Larison has already said it. Nonetheless, it is interesting to see the schadenfreude developing amongst conservatives eager to see the Republican Party wreap what it hath sewn come the midterm elections of November 7 this year. The GOP has really done it this time, or so says the common wisdom, and the combined effect of conservatives staying home on Election Day and of swing voters swinging to the Democrats may very well throw the House of Representatives to the Democrats for the first time in twelve years. The glee conservatives once exhibited only for the most delightful defeats of Democrats is now, in a truly bi-partisan spirit, extended to the Republicans as well.

Why will conservatives stay home on Election Day? Well, that is not the right question, as it is the natural inclination of the conservative to be at home. The question then is: why should a conservative vote Republican? The President, for starters, is an ardent devotée of liberal internationalism abroad and wants to impose it with our military, which he has disgracefully abused as his own little plaything. In Congress, meanwhile, the Republican majorities in both houses have enacted an orgy of spending and goverment largesse as if the concept of self-restraint is foreign and irrelevant, while refusing to act on issues important to conservatives, such as border enforcement.

Voting Republican means we get liberal internationalism at our own expense (in blood, mind you, not just taxes), while at home we get porous borders (despite the terrorist threat), implicitly condoned illegal immigration (it’s good for business!), egregious spending (the ‘compassionate conservatism’ which is neither compassionate nor conservative), and the expansion of the powers of the federal government (continuing and augmenting the flagrant breaches of the Constitution which began in the 1960′s). Such being the case, the real question should be: what kind of self-respecting conservative would support such things with his vote?

But of course there is a silver lining. As much as conservatives may delight in seeing the Republicans thrown from office, in our two-party system the defeat of Republicans means the victory of Democrats. This is most unfortunate. However, with the appointments of Roberts and Alito to the Supreme Court (which will likely be remembered as one of G.W. Bush’s few conservative acts in his eight years as president), there is a feeling that sooner or later the highest court in the land will hear cases which return power to the states, as ordained in the Constitution. Having Democrats in charge, given their traditional predilection for centralization, might further spur such cases to come to the fore.

So farewell, then, GOP majority… and good riddance. Think about what you’ve done and come back in a few years. We are good Christian folk, after all, and forgiving; we will likely give you another chance in the future.

NOTE: I should clarify that we are speaking in this post only about the federal government. No doubt there are many decent conservative and conservative-leaning GOP officeholders on the state and local level.

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54 Comments so far
  1. 13 September 2006
    11:05 am

    How much more fortunate we would be, were our rulers interested in flagrant breeches instead of flagrant breaches…

  2. 13 September 2006
    11:10 am

    Bravo, Andrew.

    kd
  3. 13 September 2006
    12:40 pm

    One issue matters more than all the rest these days, and that the war against Jihadism, which aims to annihilate our way of life. This is not the time to quibble about whether or not Republicans embody conservative principles. This is a time to defend our country against our enemies. I do not see how the anti-war Democrats can do this.

    Anonymous
  4. 13 September 2006
    1:57 pm

    i have long been wanting a conservative democrat to believe in. instead i find politicos advocating atrocities such as partial-birth abortions. but nor can i support bush’s flagrant disregard for civil rights, the environment, and unquenchable thirst for oil masquerading as a fight againts terrorism. i’m sick all around & just don’t know where to turn.

    jeron
  5. 13 September 2006
    7:52 pm

    Right, so, vote Democrat, and get all the things you don’t like about Republicans PLUS pro-abortion policy.

    Ben
  6. 13 September 2006
    11:26 pm

    As God-awful as the Republicans are, the Democrats are still worse and show no signs of improvement. And with the GOP in such a shambles, why should they? They just have to stay the course, wait for the GOP to screw up, make sure they maintain there votes and gain at least a few swing voters while the conservatives neglect to vote Republican. Ta-da, they win. Unfortunate, but not much that can be done. Except wait for the Democrats to screw up.

  7. 14 September 2006
    1:00 am

    Andrew, aren’t you supposed to be delivering this speech from the hustings in your Conservative bid for the state Legislature? Is there still time for a write-in campaign?

    MCNS
  8. 14 September 2006
    7:40 am

    Don’t hold your breath, Mr. Sullivan.

  9. 14 September 2006
    9:17 am

    As bad as the Republicans, Senate and Bush administration, have been on many issues, I can not immagine how bad a Pilosi/Ried Congress would be. I will hold my nose and vote Republican as ythe lesser of two evils.

    Bob Jacobs
  10. 14 September 2006
    9:21 am

    Well your vote is your own, after all. As for myself, when presented with the options of 1) a crusade for international democracy paid for in American blood and 2) radical pro-abortion social democrats I am forced to abstain. The G.O.P. will never learn unless it takes a beating itself (and even then, who knows).

  11. 14 September 2006
    1:39 pm

    I am a foreigner, so my comments are perhaps worth very little here. But I must say that not voting at all is an excellent option, IMHO, one that I have consistently exercised. Failing that, what about building up a third party? You only have to get large enough to become a swing vote, at which point both parties will be beholden.

    Loyal Canadian Subject
  12. 14 September 2006
    1:53 pm

    Andrew -

    I really admire your website and enjoy reading it. However, as much as I may be disappointed with the Republicans, to abstain is to vote in favor of the Democrats, the party of abortion. How could you support that?

    Harold
  13. 14 September 2006
    1:54 pm

    Oh hey, great suggestion Loyalist: split the conservative vote and give the country to the Dems the way a split conservative vote in Canada gave the country to the Libs for nearly a century.

    Yes, I said CENTURY. Are you guys really ready for a century of Clinton/Kerry dynasty?

    Vote, and vote Republican, look to the north for what happens if you can’t be realistic about this.

    No one is going to restore Christendom execpt the Christians and the Muslims will be as happy to make the churches of the US into mosques as they will be Chartres.

    Sorry Andrew, but you couldn’t be more wrong.

    hilary
  14. 14 September 2006
    1:59 pm

    “A crusade for international democracy paid for in American blood.” Sounds too much like Pat Buchanan, who is swimming in the deep end when it comes to the war. How about a war against Islamism? No matter what you say about about Republicans, Bush is right on the war. If we lose that war, then it won’t matter what our political options are. Republicans have been more consistent about protecting our security than the crazy Democrats. Is punishing the GOP more important than winning the war?
    If you abstain from voting even though you have the right to do so, you might as well be a foreigner. Abstention from voting is politically naive, especially with the survival of the republic at stake. It’s not a matter of your personal endorsement of who espouses what domestic policy, but simply supporting the candidate that can see the war through to victory. It’s a version of the lesser of two evils approach, I guess, and the greatest evil would be to lose the war.

    Anonymous
  15. 14 September 2006
    2:11 pm

    I’d have to agree on the importance of voting in itself — it is a right we all should exercise. One might even say it is a duty.

    But the histrionic notion that unless one votes Republican all our churches will become mosques is absurd.

    kd
  16. 14 September 2006
    2:21 pm

    What alternatives other than appeasement, diplomacy and general America-hating have the Democrats offered? Look what they did to Lieberman. It is not the notion that the Republicans are strong on the war that is histrionic, rather it is KD’s characterization of it. If the Democrats had their way, we would all bow down towards Mecca in the name of tolerance and sensitivity, all the while beating our breasts about how bad the West is.

    Anonymous
  17. 14 September 2006
    2:31 pm

    It is not the question of who is strong on war & who isn’t I speak of. Both Bush & Kerry were “stong” on the war, as it were. The very fact that Kerry was “strong on the war”, made many Democrats leary of him. But that’s another matter. What I call histrionic is the fear mongering that claims “Vote GOP” or we’ll be overrun by Muslim hoardes etc etc. This is absurd and an insult to any thinking person, Republican, Democrat, or independent.

    kd
  18. 14 September 2006
    2:36 pm

    PS: Andrew, despite our previous discussions about Gen. Franco, I much enjoy your blog. Indeed, the more I’ve read it, the more I wish to say that the phrase “a gentleman and a scholar” fits you admirably.
    Kudos.

    kd
  19. 14 September 2006
    2:50 pm

    Enjoy the blog, too. But, I don’t think I was engaging in fear-mongering. I just wanted to say that we need to win the war, and it seems to me that the GOP is more likley to do that than the Dems. By the way, Kerry, Mr. I-voted-for-it-before-I-voted-against-it, was strong on war? He made a career of denouncing war and America, even when he served in Vietnam.

    Anonymous
  20. 14 September 2006
    2:55 pm

    i have to agree with k.d. that voting is a responsibility, and refraining from doing so is irresponsible. exercise your right to vote … or risk losing it. there’s nothing worse than apathy or sitting on the fence. didn’t Christ say something about spewing the lukewarm out of His mouth? so i’ll do as one suggests: hold my nose & vote for the current party of life.

    jeron
  21. 14 September 2006
    3:18 pm

    Mr Kerry was “strong” on the war in Iraq. He was, however, highly critical of the President’s handling of the war. Therein, was their “difference” (on that subject, at least), a “difference” that left many folks who were patently against the war disatisfied with Mr Kerry as a viable “alternative” to Mr Bush.

    Yes, Kerry denounced the Vietnam war and America’s involvement in it, but to suggest that thus he “denouced America” is, again, absurd.

    Anon, I did not mean to suggest you yourself engage in fear mongering. Another poster mentioned Muslims being happy to turn churches into mosques (which I’m sure they would, but such a scenario is, to the say the least, highly improbable), which caused me to make a general statement about the histrionic fear mongering that goes in this country, which, I believe, the current Administration does little to discourage.

    Ideology is fine, but it is best to be rational.

    kd
  22. 14 September 2006
    3:33 pm

    Furthermore, to suggest that Democrats want us to “bow down toward Mecca” is as absurd a notion as leftist commentators who suggest that Republicans want to create a “theocratic” and/or “fascist” state.

    kd
  23. 14 September 2006
    3:49 pm

    I was being sarcastic. I wanted to show the absurdity of the “sensitivity” and “tolerance” we get from the Dems, notions motivated by a cultural self-hatred. These notions do not win wars because they keep us from acknowledging the enemy. But, I see how I overstated my Kerry bit.

    Anonymous
  24. 14 September 2006
    3:55 pm

    http://subimonk.blogspot.com/
    check out the comments from this gent on the Holy Name of Mary, the middle ages battle w/muslims then, & coffee.

    jeron
  25. 14 September 2006
    4:04 pm

    I agree, “sensitivity” and “tolerance” does not win wars. Though defining exactly what a “war on terror” is and is not remains a “work in progress”, past wars against nation-states were certainly not won with “sensitivity” leading the way.

    In response to your comment, I would also have to say that traditional Democrat ideals are not motivated by “cultural self-hatred.” Both the Democrat and the Republican parties, at their best, embody what is good and true about America. The problem is that both parties have “morphed” so much, it’s hard to tell what they really stand for.

    kd
  26. 14 September 2006
    4:10 pm

    Hot dang! Seemed to have touched a nerve here. Several interesting ideas raised, of which I offer the following comments.

    First of all let me say that nowhere have I in any way suggested voting for the Democrats nor that a federal government controlled by the Democrats would be any better than the current one.

    However, as much as I may be disappointed with the Republicans, to abstain is to vote in favor of the Democrats, the party of abortion. How could you support that?

    I believe this is an entirely false argument. First of all, it is the people who vote for, finance, and sustain the Democratic party who are responsible for it, not conservatives so revolted by the abject disgrace that is the Republican party that they will not vote for it on a federal level.

    Second of all, if the Republicans are driving conservative voters away then would it not logically follow that it is the party’s fault for not presenting a clear conservative opposition to the Democrats?

    Oh hey, great suggestion Loyalist: split the conservative vote and give the country to the Dems the way a split conservative vote in Canada gave the country to the Libs for nearly a century.

    Yes, I said CENTURY. Are you guys really ready for a century of Clinton/Kerry dynasty?

    Well, that seems a little absurd. Not voting for them in 2006 and 2008 is one thing, but if they are as faithful believers in the free market as many of them claim, the Republicans will see their brand failing, retool, offer something new (or old, rather), and by 2010 things might be looking up.

    Sounds too much like Pat Buchanan, who is swimming in the deep end when it comes to the war.

    Guilt by association, eh? Would it suffice if I were to confess that I am not Pat Buchanan? I can’t really judge Mr. Buchanan since I’ve never read any of his books, nor even any of his articles to the best of my recollection.

    How about a war against Islamism?

    Indeed, how about a war against Islamism? Now I may be wrong, but invading a tyrannical secularist dictatorship like Iraq doesn’t seem to be the best way to wage a war against Islamism. Besides, I don’t believe in wars against ideas and -isms. Wars against states and groups, but “terror”? Good grief…

    If you abstain from voting even though you have the right to do so, you might as well be a foreigner.

    Insinuating I’m a foreigner won’t get you anywhere in my book. To me, a foreigner is someone from New Jersey or Connecticut. By the grace of God I was born here in New York, I live here in New York, and God willing I will die here in New York. Being as New York is (lamentably, I’ll admit) part of the United States, I am an American.

    Abstention from voting is politically naive, especially with the survival of the republic at stake.

    You’re speaking to someone who believes that the republic died one-hundred-and-forty years ago.

    As for Kerry vs. Bush on the war, I’m not even touching that with a ten-foot pole.

    But then what is “the war”? When I say the war I mean the war in Iraq. The larger “Global War on Terror”, as our government officially calls it is not really a “war” in the proper sense of the word, but rather a series of military and political engagements aimed at defeating al-Qaeda and its allied organizations. I believe fighting al-Qaeda would have been immeasurably easier had we never invaded Iraq.

    Wherever there is a real and tangible threat to the territory of the United States, then that threat should be pursued and eliminated. But so much of the President’s rhetoric has been about democracy this and democracy that. Our foreign policy should be one of overall restraint, peppered with strong military preparedness. I think American soldiers shouldn’t have to die for anything other than American freedom.

  27. 14 September 2006
    4:11 pm

    puh-leez. what do the parties stand for? power, control, complacency. i was a protocol officer in washington during the clinton administration, and like now as then as i’m sure for decades, politics has been less about helping others as helping the selfish to more $$$. when did we stop demanding purity of heart in our politicians?

    jeron
  28. 14 September 2006
    4:23 pm

    “If you abstain from voting even though you have the right to do so, you might as well be a foreigner.” I’m sorry, but I didn’t want to insinuate that you’re a foreigner or insult your loyalities. I just wanted to show that by not voting, one is in a sense making onself foreign to the whole political process. I also realize that democracy is a bad system. But, even if the Republic may have died a long time ago, isn’t it best to work with what we’ve got? As far as the war is concerned, great points, especially about Americans dying for American freedoms.

    Anonymous
  29. 14 September 2006
    4:24 pm

    Wonderful post. Exactly right. (And wonderful rebuttal to the responses, too.) If all one ever votes for are Republicans like Mr Bush all one will ever get are Republicans like Mr Bush.
    And as for abortion, Mr Bush is exactly pro-life enough to retain that portion of his constitutency for whom it important. But not pro-life enough to actually change anything substantial.

    Cheers,

    -John-

  30. 14 September 2006
    5:07 pm

    Though the Liberal Party has dominated Canadian politics in the 20th century, Canada has really not fared much differently than has the U.S. In some cases, it’s fared better–abortion, for example, took longer to legalize north of the border.

    Loyal Canadian Subject
  31. 14 September 2006
    5:12 pm

    Again, bravo, Andrew.

    kd
  32. 14 September 2006
    5:22 pm

    Republicans may be against abortion (as I myself am), but to call the Republican party the “party of life” is…well, strange, to say the least. Does that make the Democratic party the “party of death”? Absurd.

    kd
  33. 14 September 2006
    5:39 pm

    *absurd* is advocating a procedure where one pulls a child through the birth canal and, just before the head emerges, stabs it in the base of the skull with shears. partial-birth abortion … that’s absurd.

    jeron
  34. 14 September 2006
    6:16 pm

    I certainly have no argument with you about the sheer ugliness of abortion. But that’s not my point.

    An aside. I knew a prominent Republican family in Houston whose elder daughter became pregnant while in college. With her family’s help, she obtained an abortion. What the reasons were, I can only guess. Reputation, expediency. Perhaps. I won’t judge them. The last I heard, she was a successful attorney, married, with children. Her husband is a respected businessman, active in the Republican party. The abortion is still, for the most part I imagine, a family secret.

    When I was a senior in high school, I knew another family, Catholic, and politically very liberal (it was 1970; they sided with many other Catholics against the war in Vietnam, & were active in the Civil Rights movement, etc), whose youngest daughter became pregnant at sixteen. With the help of the church, she had the child and gave it up for adoption. She was happy with her decision, and though she (and her family) indeed felt sorrow and remorse over her pregnancy, they never felt shame. As Christ taught them, we are flawed beings, and forgiveness is best.

    The actions of human beings are complex, no matter their religious or political affiliations.

    kd
  35. 14 September 2006
    6:24 pm

    kd, very well expressed. thanks.

    jeron
  36. 15 September 2006
    11:47 am

    Yeah, but I don’t get it. “The actions of human beings are complex, no matter their religious or political affiliations.” Please. This is something Oprah would say. Whoever implied that human actions weren’t complex and what does that have to do with the “party of death”? Ramesh Ponnoru has written a whole book on the “party of death,” which is not as absurd a moniker as you might want to think.

    Anonymous
  37. 15 September 2006
    12:14 pm

    Both “monikers” are reactionary & absurd.

    One can (and should) have strong opinions about the Republican & Democratic parties — on the subjects of domestic & foreign policy, war & peace, welfare, the commonwealth, taxation, regulation, law enforcement, etc etc — but “monkiers” such as “the party of life” & “the party of death” are inflammatory, no more, no less. It is always best to be reasonable.

    Also, why the belittling tone? (ie “This is something Oprah would say.”) If you disagree, then simply disagree.

    kd
  38. 15 September 2006
    12:21 pm

    Moreover, as to my statement concerning the complex actions of human beings, what does it matter whether or not Oprah might say that? It remains true, and all too often forgotten in our self-righteous rush to judge others.

    kd
  39. 15 September 2006
    12:43 pm

    It is best to be reasonable, yes. How is being reasonable inconsistent with calling a spade a spade? By and large, Republicans are pro-choice, or pro-life. By and large, Democrats are pro-abortion, or pro-death. At some point, one must draw the line and take a side. The “Part of Life”/”Party of Death” distinction I think is a politically brilliant way of doing this.

    Didn’t mean to belittle, and sorry if I offended. But, that general insight into human actions does not belong in politics. Yes, human actions are complex, and if you want complexity, read novels. But, politics is relatively simple: It is war by other means and involves taking sides and acting decisively against a clearly defined political enemy.

    Anonymous
  40. 15 September 2006
    12:45 pm

    Sorry, in my rush, I mistyped the above. Should read “By and large, Republicans are pro-life. By and large, Democrats are pro-choice, or pro-death.”

    Anonymous
  41. 15 September 2006
    12:57 pm

    I appreciate your apology. No, I wasn’t so much offended, as questioning of the need, as it were, for a belittling tone. Perhaps, it’s always been part of the political debate, but it seems to me that it has become more & more prevalent these past five years. Vulgarity in debate has increased too, I’ve sadly noticed. Nasty name-calling, accusations — maybe it just comes with the territory now.

    Obviously you & I see the world much differently.
    Not to belabor a point, but I’ve read numerous articles that seek to turn the tables on the “Dems are the party of death/ Repubs are the party of life” thing. It goes on & on.

    Yes, war is relatively simple in the sense fo two sides fighting to win. But politics deals with complex issues, and in that sense is different from war. As long as one sees domestic politics as war, then “all’s fair” I guess. I’m not sure that’s a good approach.

    Thanks for your responses.

    kd
  42. 15 September 2006
    1:01 pm

    Same thing happens to me — typos, garbled sentences — when I rush!

    One thing about the “party of life/death” monikers, is that it implies that one party is essentially “good” while the other party essentially “evil.” This is troubling, and, of course, not true to life.

    kd
  43. 15 September 2006
    2:12 pm

    Well, if abortion is evil, then advocating it has to be seen as an evil, too, even if the advocate has the best of intentions. Contemporary liberals will advocate the most monstruous actions with the best intentions. If liberals (and therefore democrats) weren’t so “nice,” it would be less troubling to call them evil.

    Anonymous
  44. 15 September 2006
    2:21 pm

    Oh, enough of this jibber-jabber!

  45. 15 September 2006
    4:02 pm

    Thank you, Andrew. I agree.

    kd
  46. 15 September 2006
    9:05 pm

    Andrew, while your points about the lack of true conservatism among the Republicans is well taken, I protest your ideas on absention. As said before my other posters, to not vote Republican in this election is to grant victory to the most repugnant elements and people of our world, not just the terrorists. What about the ACLU, Michael Moore, the Communist Party, the Socialist Party, the Industrial Workers of the World, the Anarchists, the Anti-Globalists, the Anti-Capitalists, Fidel Castro, Chavez, Mugabe, Ahmenajhad et al? They all want to see the Republicans out, they want America to be humilated and defeated. And do you want to see the partial-birth abortion ban repealed? My dear friend, hold your nose and vote for the Right. Your voice will be heard much louder when we are in power, then when we are in opposition.

    C Moreland
  47. 15 September 2006
    10:43 pm

    Actually given Mr. Cusack’s particular circumstances abstaining from voting Republican probably won’t matter.

    Given:
    1) He lives in a congressional district of suburban liberals which has a solid Democratic majority.
    2) His state hasn’t gone Republican in a presidential election since the year he was born.
    3) Living in New York, he’s probably never voted Republican anyhow since New York has the Conservative Party line.

    Rob H
  48. 15 September 2006
    10:56 pm

    C Moreland, you said it! Thanks.

    Anonymous
  49. 16 September 2006
    1:33 am

    Also, as far as that mischaracterization of the war as a “crusade for international democracy paid for in American blood” is concerned, I would suggest reading Tony Blair’s speech as quoted in this weekend’s addition of The New York Sun and available here.

    Here is a quote:

    “We will not win the battle against global extremism unless we win it at the level of values as much as force.We can only win by showing that our values are stronger, better and more just than the alternative. That also means showing the world that we are evenhanded, fair and just in our application of those values.

    I am amazed at how many people will say, in effect, there is increased terrorism today because we invaded Afghanistan and Iraq.They seem to forget entirely that September 11 predated either. The West didn’t attack this movement. We were attacked.

    This brings me to a fundamental point. For this ideology, we are the enemy. But “we” is not the West. We are as much Muslim, as Christian, or Jew or Hindu. We are all those who believe in religious tolerance, in openness to others, in democracy, liberty and human rights administered by secular courts.

    This is not a clash between civilizations: it is a clash about civilization. It is the age-old battle between progress and reaction, between those who embrace in the modern world, and those who reject its existence; between optimism and hope on the one hand, and pessimism and fear on the other.

    The danger with America today is not that they are too much involved. The danger is if they decide to pull up the drawbridge and disengage.

    We need them involved. We want them engaged. The reality is that none of the problems that press in on us can be resolved or even contemplated without them.”

    Blair gets it. Indeed, Americans *are* dying for American freedoms because it is in America’s interest to vanquish Muslim extremism abroad. Blair’s speech explains why with an eloquence and lucidity that are in high demand these days.

    Anonymous
  50. 16 September 2006
    1:35 am

    And I misspelled “edition,” darnit.

    Anonymous
  51. 16 September 2006
    9:27 am

    How is vanquishinging Muslim extremism abroad aided by taking down a secularist dictatorship and replacing it with a democracy which may very well empower the Islamists? And in between the dictatorship and the democracy is a lawless period in which Muslim extremists may kill with impunity. (Every day we hear the count of dead tortured bodies found on Baghdad streets).

    “We will not win the battle against global extremism unless we win it at the level of values as much as force.We can only win by showing that our values are stronger, better and more just than the alternative. That also means showing the world that we are evenhanded, fair and just in our application of those values.”

    But what precisely are “our values”? After nine years in power, we can be quite certain that whatever Tony Blair’s values are, they most certainly are not the traditional values of the West.

    Perhaps by “our values” he means liberalism, which entails materialism and individualism, and is most unpalatable to the Christian as well as destructive towards traditional Western societies. Well if that’s what this war is about, then I’d say fight on. With any luck the Islamists will kill all the liberals and the liberals will kill all the Islamists and the rest of us could go on with out business.

    The trouble is that the liberal individuo-materialists (be they ‘New Labour’ or neo-con Republicans) aren’t fighting their own battle. They’re sitting back in their government offices and think tanks while the brave men (and, sadly, women) of the United States armed forces die every day for their loathsome ideology.

    You have to admit, it’s a brilliant strategy. Given that the Armed Forces are not generally composed of liberal individualists, they kill two birds with one stone (almost literally). They send the more-or-less conservative-leaning army to fight the Islamists and no matter who dies, the liberal individualists have won. An Islamist dies, one less enemy abroad. An American soldier dies, one less potential threat at home. Having the army fighting abroad also keeps it from getting any ideas about, er, shall we say, re-orienting the route of government at home away from the liberal-individualist-materialist project.

    “That also means showing the world that we are evenhanded, fair and just in our application of those values.”

    Yet I doubt that they (since we have established that it is ‘they’ and not ‘us’) actually are evenhanded, fair, and just in their application of their values.

    Fighting Islamic extremism is unappreciably important, which is why the mistakes of the Bush-and-Blair crowd are all the more woeful.

  52. 16 September 2006
    11:02 am

    Excellent response, Andrew.

    kd
  53. 17 September 2006
    9:31 am

    The GOP record in Congress is pretty appalling. However, be careful what you wish for.

    Committee chairs in a Democratic Congress:

    John Conyers
    Charlie Rangel
    Dennis Kucinich

    The German Communists said “After Hitler, us.” Most of them were killed.

  54. 19 September 2006
    4:06 pm

    Hmmn…Andrew, I believe that as a faithful Catholic it is your duty to vote. As well as your duty to vote for the least pro-abort candidates you can find in a sea of pro-aborts. Our votes were bought by the blood of men who came before us. It is disrespectful to their memories to not vote as well as make a mockery of their deaths. I’m sure you will have clever things to say about how you can still abstain but I have three words; Supreme Court Justices. If the Congress goes Democratic you can forget another pro-life justice. The battle for this country is in the courts. It is for that reason alone you must take your widow’s mite (in NY a Republican vote is indeed a widow’s mite) and pull the lever. Wear a clothespin on your nose if you have to. Read this from the Boston Globe if you need more convincing:

    Senator John F. Kerry yesterday called for a new national commitment to reduce the number of abortions, saying that both sides on the abortion debate can reach “common ground” on the sharply divisive cultural issue that was prominent in his defeat in the 2004 presidential election.

    In an intimate speech laced with references to his Catholic upbringing, Kerry chastised abortion-rights supporters and anti-abortion activists for the “overly partisan” tone that has polarized the nation. Despite their intense opposition, Kerry said, there are areas of agreement — such as tax credits for adoptive parents, more government aid for working mothers, and health insurance for everyone.
    “Even as a supporter of Roe v. Wade, I am compelled to acknowledge that the language both sides use on this subject can be, unfortunately, misleading and unconstructive,” Kerry, a Massachusetts Democrat, told an audience at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif. “Instead of making enemies, we need to make progress.”
    The speech is Kerry’s most extensive attempt to describe his religious views and define where he stands on so-called “values issues” since President Bush defeated him for the presidency in 2004. Bush and the Republican Party used abortion, gay marriage, and other controversial social issues to motivate conservative voters to the polls against Kerry.
    Throughout his career, Kerry has said he is personally opposed to abortion but would not impose his views on others. On the campaign trail in 2004, Kerry said he believed human life begins at conception but asserted that, if elected, he wouldn’t appoint a Supreme Court justice who would “undo a constitutional right” by overturning Roe.
    Kerry said in a telephone interview yesterday that the speech is in the same vein as his past comments about the need to make abortion safe, legal, and “rare.” He said he wanted to exhort both sides of the abortion debate to recognize the sincerity of each other’s beliefs and “be more honest about the complexity of the moral decision here.”
    During the 2004 campaign, Bush often spoke of promoting a “culture of life” to contrast himself with Kerry. Some Catholic archbishops, disturbed by Kerry’s more liberal positions on abortion and stem cell research, questioned his right to take Communion and urged parishioners to vote against him.
    According to the Pew Research Center, Bush, a Methodist, carried the Catholic vote by five percentage points, even though Kerry was the first Catholic presidential nominee of either party since John F. Kennedy in 1960. Exit polls in 2004 indicated that Bush swayed some voters by expressing his faith.
    Kerry’s close defeat caused some soul-searching among Democrats about religion and values in politics. The senator told his audience yesterday that the bruising campaign with Bush taught him that despite his reticence to talk publicly about faith, “if I didn’t fill in the picture myself, others would draw the caricature for me.”…

    If we stay home, we let them define us.

    Mrs. Peperium
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