Saturday, October 30, 2004

Walter Cronkite: Left-wing kook

David Limbaugh posts this excerpt of a Walter Cronkite interview on Larry King last night:
KING: OK, Walter. What do you make of this (the Bin Laden tape)?

CRONKITE: Well, I make it out to be initially the reaction that it's a threat to us, that unless we make peace with him, in a sense, we can expect further attacks. He did not say that precisely, but it sounds like that when he says...

KING: The warning.

CRONKITE: What we just heard. So now the question is basically right now, how will this affect the election? And I have a feeling that it could tilt the election a bit. In fact, I'm a little inclined to think that Karl Rove, the political manager at the White House, who is a very clever man, he probably set up bin Laden to this thing. The advantage to the Republican side is to get rid of, as a principal subject of the campaigns right now, get rid of the whole problem of the al Qaqaa explosive dump. Right now, that, the last couple of days, has, I think, upset the Republican campaign.


Just damn.

If this isn't enough, after hearing "the most trusted man in America" make such an outrageous statement, Larry King didn't even blink. He just went right on to the next question.

It's getting harder and harder not to conclude that a significant percentage of our population is insane.

Update: Ann Althouse thinks Cronkite was joking. It doesn't sound like she saw the segment. I didn't either. I hope she's right.

Frank draws his own conclusions...

Frank at IMAO offers his endorsement up in picture form. His conclusion? "We need four more years of tax cuts and dead terrorists."

[via Ann Althouse, guest blogging at Instapundit]

Friday, October 29, 2004

More recommended reading...

Wizbang has an article on the Global War on Terror that is simply outstanding. It may be the best summation of it that I’ve read. I hope you’ll take the time to read it, and to share it with everyone you know.

[via Dean’s World]

Required reading...

Charles Krauthammer's recent column is powerfully on target. I can't do justice to it by excerpting or paraphrasing. Take two minutes to read it.

Another war that must be won...

MSNBC files a heart retching report from Afghanistan where women are setting themselves on fire to escape unbearable circumstances. Despite newly won political freedoms, Afghan women have yet to escape their cultural plights. Many are sold into violent marriages that amount to little more than servitude. Seeking to break free, and unaware of other methods of committing suicide, women resort to pouring cooking oil on their bodies and setting themselves on fire.

This is truly gruesome, and the only solace I can find is that Afghan women now have the political power to fight for change. No matter what else can be said of our response to the 9/11 attacks, no one can deny that we’ve given hope and an avenue for self-determination to millions people who gravely needed it.

Thursday, October 28, 2004

Navy SEAL interview...

Captain Ed has an interesting interview with a Navy SEAL who has recently returned from Iraq.

Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

Another kick in the head...

The second time I was unconscious was when I was about twelve. I was playing with Tony and Pete, two brothers who lived across the street from me. Tony and Pete were trouble. Seems they were always up to something stupid or dangerous. I was lucky enough to avoid getting seriously hurt by the stupid stuff , and smart enough to stay out of the real dangerous stuff (though I witnessed a lot of it).

Pete, the younger of the two brothers and about my age, was the one who usually got hurt. He got hurt when we had a contest to see who could jump out of the tree from the highest branch. He got hurt when we spent a summer afternoon setting various things on fire. He got hurt when he and Tony took turns throwing darts at each other at twenty paces. He got hurt when he and Tony had a “knife” fight with knives fashioned out of sharpened wooden sticks. He got hurt trying to prove how tough he was by letting fireworks go off in his hand. Pete’s dead now. Seems he met a guy who had a little more to prove than he did.

One night we were playing in Tony’s and Pete’s bedroom. I think the name of the game is Blind Man’s Bluff. You’ve probably played it. It’s where one person is blindfolded, the lights are turned out, and the person has to catch one of the others. Tony and Pete had a bunk bed, and we’d made a rule that the top bunk was out of bounds—a very sensible rule as it turns out.

So, it was my turn to be the Blind Man. We turned off the lights, I put on the blind fold, and I proceeded to flail about the room in search of Pete and Tony. My hearing was pretty good back then, and I could hear them moving around, sometimes giggling or whispering. As I closed in on one of them, I heard feet on the bunk ladder followed by some creaking on the top bunk.

“No fair,” said I. “The top is out of bounds.”

“I’m not on the top,” laughed Tony, his voice clearly coming from on high.

So, I did the only sensible thing a young boy can do. In the dark, wearing a blind fold, I located, then climbed, the ladder. I pulled myself up to the foot of the bed, then waited silently on hands and knees, straining for the slightest hint of movement.

When it finally came, I crept cautiously toward it, one arm extended. More movement. I advanced. Still more. I advanced further, certain I was about to connect with Tony and expose his trickery. But instead… the abyss. I remember shifting my weight forward onto my leading arm, and the shock as my hand found only air and my weight simply continued to shift. Then I remember… nothing.

I don’t know how long I was out on the hardwood floor, but it was a while. I awoke stunned, completely disoriented. My head hurt too much to hurt, the way your tongue hurts when you just about bite it in half. I can still feel the dull, thick-witted struggle to comprehend where I was and what had happened. I later learned that our mothers, who had been visiting in the living room, came to investigate the thundering boom, but somehow Tony and Pete had convinced them that all was well.

I really don’t recall much else about that night except for the pain and the numbness that wouldn’t go away. I went years without thinking about it. But now when I do, it seems like I can still feel the effects of that fall. And I wonder whether the four times I’ve been unconscious, but particularly this time, have had anything to do with the various problems I have today—the extreme depression that continues to baffle the doctors and their treatments, the trouble focusing, the disconnect.

Winning the peace...

President Bush is often criticized for not having a plan to “win the peace.” I’ve always found that phrase elusive--mostly because it doesn’t mean anything. You don’t “win the peace.” You win the war. Once you’ve done that, peace will take care of itself. Those who talk of “winning the peace” are really just grasping at straws, inventing something to criticize because they can’t find anything of substance to attack the President about.

These same people are fond of pointing to any negative aspect of the war and declaring it “a mess.” I always want to ask them to name just one war that wasn’t. Still, I have to admit, they have a point. If we could just find a way to stop all that messy fighting and violence, this would be a pretty swell war.

And I’m sure that if we put John Kerry in charge, he’ll not only fight a more sensitive war, but a much tidier one as well. I bet even Howard Dean and Michael Moore could support that kind of war: Give ‘em hell, John—just don’t get any on ya!

Look. It’s a war, folks. It’s not pretty. It’s not nice. People are trying to kill each other and, yes, that gets messy. But another 9/11 would be pretty messy too.

You want peace? Win the war. Kill the bad guys. Make a real mess of them, in fact. Once that’s done, we can scrape them off the rocks and let John Kerry negotiate with them if you think it’ll help.




The death of shame...

Orson Scott Card says some things that needed to be said. Go read it.

[Via Walt Anthony]

Update: To which I'll take the opportunity to add one of my favorite quotes:

"It is coming to be denied that anything counts, not logic, not objectivity, not even intellectual honesty, that stands in the way of the "correct" political outcome." -- Robert H. Bork

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

Voting inertia...

In part three of his series called “Stop and think”, Thomas Sowell talks about what he calls voting inertia. Voting inertia is when a large block of voters continues to vote a certain way regardless of the ill effects it may have on them. Sowell notes that
Blacks have voted for every Democratic candidate for President from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Al Gore… There is probably no group that has been hurt so much when they voted by inertia. The reason is that the Democrats' most influential constituencies have interests and agendas with major negative impacts on blacks.

Sowell goes on to cite examples of core liberal policies that work directly against Blacks. I won’t recount them; it’s a short column; you can read it for yourself. What I find interesting is why a group would continue to act against its own interests in election after election.

The image that keeps coming to mind is that of a herd of cattle stampeding off the edge of a cliff. Blacks, I think, have fallen into a similar trap. It begins with fear and panic, stoked by “Black leaders”—those whom Booker T. Washington dubbed the “Problem Profiteers”--who traffic in racism. The natural response to panic is flight. And so the charge begins, away from the perceived threat and toward the promise of deliverance. Movement is mistaken for progress, and it matters not that the threat is largely illusory, or that the destination itself is suspect.

I wonder if certain groups are more susceptible to this phenomenon than others. Of free peoples, we can make a rough division between those who fought for their own independence and those whose freedom was won by the efforts of others. As a nation, Americans are members of the former group. What we have, we won through our own labors. We fought for our land, our freedom, our very right to exist. We are a self-made people, whose emergent character is one of confidence and self-reliance.

Can the same be said of American Blacks as a sub-group? Having been brought here against their will, placed into slavery, and then freed of that servitude by the blood and goodwill of others, American Blacks, to a large extent, have been “granted” their circumstance, and by extension their disposition. Though they have been much empowered by their subsequent struggle for equal rights, even that effort came with no small assistance from the host culture.

How can such a history not have given rise to sentiments of resentment, dependence, and self-doubt within the American Black culture? Indeed, I suspect that within the dynamics of the “black pride” movement of the ‘60s and ‘70s was some degree of shame at having to have been rescued. Sadly, we’ve yet to learn the lesson, as we continue to compound the problem with programs like Affirmative Action which promise to “empower” Blacks.

The truth, of course, is that it’s not possible for one group to empower another. Empowerment comes from within. The gravest injustice inflicted upon the modern American Black is not the residue of slavery. Nor is it the lingering racism and discrimination that accompanies it. The greater injury, the lasting damage, visited upon Blacks in America is that they have been robbed of their political autonomy. We have instilled in them a sense of dependency, and have perpetuated a Culture of Victimhood.

This has resulted in a particularly insidious brand of Group Think and voting inertia that Blacks are only beginning to challenge. We would have done well to heed the advice of Booker T. Washington when he argued nearly a century ago that the best way to “help” the Negro is to simply leave him alone and let him make his own way.

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

Mandatory health care...

Reason Online has a fine discussion of our health care system and some proposals for improving it. I still don't know enough about health care to evaluate and discuss the finer points, but I'm reading, and I'm learning.

[via QandO]

Explaining the war to our kids...

Parts four and five of Captain Ed's series of letters from a Navy SEAL to his young kids explaining what daddy is doing in Iraq are available.

I guess I wasn't a fluke...

A few weeks ago, I posted about my experience voting in the primary election here in New Hampshire. I was upset that I was allowed to both register and vote without ever having to show ID. The election officials didn't seem to care whether I was really who I said I was or lived where I said I did.

Ann Althouse, guest-blogging at Instapundit, says the same thing happened to her son in Wisconsin. I have read similar accounts elsewhere, and I have a growing feeling that this is the norm--that our elections are wide open to fraud and abuse. It's imperative that we fix this. It undermines our entire system of government both directly and through the perception of corruption.

Time to write some letters to newspapers as well as national, state, and local representatives.

Monday, October 25, 2004

This makes no sense...

John Kerry is constantly talking about how he has a plan for Iraq and how he would have done everything differently from the President. Odd, then, that he is refusing to answer these questions from Bob Woodward. I’m only being a little sarcastic. I really do find it odd. Many of these questions are 20/20 hindsight questions that Kerry should be able to hit out of the park. Others ask for Kerry’s opinions on various Bush policies—again, something Kerry should be eager to blast away at.

It’s true that some of the questions would require Kerry to be specific and actually take a stand. For example, one question asks, “What are the acceptable conditions for preemptive war?” Still, these questions were submitted in writing, presumably giving Team Kerry ample time to frame his answers and avoid using terms like “nuisance” and “global test.” It’s just hard to fathom why Kerry would pass on a chance to trash Bush’s past actions with hyper-calculated answers.

[via Neil Boortz]

Update: I forgot to add that Kerry's advisors assured Woodward that if Kerry had decided to answer the questions, those answers would have been both "strong" and "compelling."

Really.

Ain't that a kick in the head...

Have you ever been unconscious? I have—four times.

The first time, I was playing street football with some guys at my friend Gordon’s house. I must have been about ten. When we played football, we didn’t do much in the way of strategy. We’d huddle up before each play and the quarterback would say something like, “get open and I’ll hit you.” (Are all little boys this unsophisticated in their play-calling or did I just hang out with a particularly pathetic crowd?)

On the day in question, I was playing receiver. I remember getting open on a little crossing pattern, and looking back at the quarterback as I ran toward the curb. As he spotted me and delivered the ball, I remember rehearsing my actions in my mind: clean catch, quick spin, head down, run fast! I remember making the catch. I remember the making the spin. I remember putting my head down, starting to run, and then… nothing. The next thing I know I’m on my back in the grass by the side of the road. The guys are standing around me in a circle, just staring at me.

It might surprise you, as it did me, to learn that though we were playing “touch” football, I was hit—tackled, in fact… by a blue Volkswagen van. Now I’d like to say the van was responsible, but as it turns out it was legally parked.

I’d made my catch, spun my spin, put my head down, and plowed right into the back of the damned thing. I must have hit it pretty solid because I was out for several minutes—enough to give the guys quite a scare. They had the good sense to drag me out of the street so I wouldn’t get hit by a car. Apparently they spent the rest of the time debating just how much trouble they’d be in if the fetched a grown-up. They were pretty relieved when I woke up.

You’d think such a bonehead move as running head first into a parked van would make me the butt of jokes and lower my stock with the guys, but it had entirely the opposite effect. How many ten year olds have knocked themselves out? I was tough. And I was tougher still because of the large dent I’d left in the back of the van, and because of the matching bump on my head.

But the thing that made me the toughest in the eyes of my friends, and the thing of which I am the most proud today, is that I never let go of the football.

Not-so-serious arguments...

John Leo’s recent column begins this way:
On his popular blog, Andrew Sullivan made this case for John Kerry: “9/11 has changed things—even within the Democratic Party”; the war on terror “has to be a bipartisan affair”; Kerry clearly says he won’t relent in that war; electing Kerry “would deny the Deaniac-Mooreish wing a perpetual chance to whine and pretend that we are not threatened.” These are serious arguments.
Are they?

“9/11 has changed things—even within the Democratic Party”

While it’s fair to say that the September 11th attacks changed some Democrats, my sense is that they did little to change the Democratic Party, at least in the way Sullivan or Leo mean. There is a difference between being shocked and being changed. The Left, like the Right, was shocked. They fell in line behind the President for a time, but when the shock wore off, they rapidly returned to form. Liberal philosophy is alive and well. Democrats still don’t take the threat of terrorism seriously. As far as they are concerned, this was nothing more than a global drive-by shooting. You find the guys that did it, pronounce the “crime” solved, then wait for the next one. This isn’t change. This isn’t understanding. It’s an old way of looking at a new world.

To the extent the Party has changed, the movement has been in the other direction. The far Left have been emboldened. The tempered voice of people like Joe Liebermann can no longer be heard above the rants of Howard Dean, Al Gore, Ted Kennedy, and the Democratic masses that embraced “Fahrenheit 9/11” as “fair and factually based.” If they have “seen the light” it is merely the light of the moon at which they bay.

“The war on terror has to be a bipartisan affair”

Democrats are not going to support the Bush Doctrine. They have an entirely different philosophy on what the threat is and what should be done about it. To say that the effort needs to be bipartisan is to say that the Bush Doctrine is to be abandoned. If that happens, this war will take much longer and will cost many more lives. This war, like the Cold War, will be won in spite of liberal philosophy, not because of it. Americans have a choice: they can reelect a proactive president who will keep the pressure on the terrorists, or they can play kick the can until the problem grows larger and more deadly—and then elect another proactive president to resume the fight in earnestness.

“Kerry clearly says he won’t relent in that war”

In all seriousness, what does what Kerry says have to do with anything? Even his proponents can’t reconcile all the statements he’s made about the war. What matters is what Kerry is going to do, and the best indicator of that is what he’s done in the past. Over his 30-year Senate career, we’ve seen Kerry support fascist dictators over U.S. interests. He held unauthorized meetings with the enemy in conflicts like Vietnam and Nicaragua. He favored cutting weapons systems and intelligence funding throughout the Cold War. He even voted against the first Gulf War, despite it’s passing the “global test.”

Now recall that Kerry said in a recent interview that the September 11th attacks “didn't change me much at all," and that his advisors are on record as saying we are not in an actual war on terror. Just last January, Kerry declared that the terrorist threat has been exaggerated. It’s simply foolish to believe that John Kerry will execute the war with the same verve and resolve as Bush.

“Electing Kerry would deny the Deaniac-Mooreish wing a perpetual chance to whine and pretend that we are not threatened.”

This is perhaps the most absurd argument of all. A Kerry victory will simply encourage the far left wing of the Democratic Party. They will take a Kerry victory as validation of both their extreme beliefs and their vile tactics. They will claim credit for electing an inferior candidate and take it as a mandate for their practices. More moderate Democrats will be heard, of course. But come next election, precedence and pragmaticism will rule the day and we will see far worse than we’ve seen in this election.

Ultimate John Kerry Ad...

I don't know how many people these internet ads reach, but this one is quite powerful. The tag line is "John Kerry: More positions than any other candidate, and with the courage to stand by all of them."

The ad reminded me of a recent Dennis Prager column, which is worth reading if you haven't already.

Note: It might take a few moments after the page loads for the ad to begin.

[via Betsy]

Saturday, October 23, 2004

Things I wish I wrote...

A bit more perspective, via Lorie Byrd et al.

Sowell: "stop and think!"

Thomas Sowell:
While many people are urging us to vote -- regardless of for whom, for what, or for what reason -- there are very few urging us to do what is far more important: Stop and think!
Read the rest.

Stolen Honor

I just got through watching the controversial documentary Stolen Honor. The experiences of Vietnam prisoners of war and how they were personally impacted by John Kerry and the anti-war movement are very powerful. It's easy to see why Kerry supporters are trying to supress this film. It can be viewed online here.

[via Instapundit]

Friday, October 22, 2004

Sowell on "tax cuts for the rich"

Thomas Sowell clears up some "sloppy thinking" about "tax cuts" and being "rich."

Why didn't Bush listen?

Max Boot says the reason President Bush didn’t listen to the war critics is because they were all wrong:
Sen. John Kerry: "I do not believe our nation is prepared for war. If we do go to war, for years people will ask why Congress gave in. They will ask why there was such a rush to so much death and destruction when it did not have to happen."

Columnist Robert Novak: "It is probable that after Bush orders the first shot fired, anything that looks American throughout the Middle East, North Africa and Europe could come into the cross hairs of a rifle sight or be blown up by a car bomb."

Former national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski: "The United States is likely to become estranged from many of its European allies."

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy: "It'll be brutal and ugly. The 45,000 body bags the Pentagon has sent to the region are all the evidence we need of the high price in lives and blood that we will have to [bear]."

Former President Jimmy Carter: "The devastating consequences will be [felt] … for decades to come, in economic and political destabilization of the Middle East region."

Actually there's a perfectly good reason why President George H.W. Bush didn't listen to these Cassandras: They were wrong. You see, all these gloomy predictions weren't made prior to the war of 2003. They were made before the war of 1991.
Is it possible to have too much perspective?

[via Boortz]

Laura Bush is a real First Lady...

Is it at all surprising that Laura Bush responds with grace and dignity. I repeat, the woman is a national treasure.

Thursday, October 21, 2004

Ramifications and recalculations...

I don’t link to Dean’s World enough, mostly because when he writes something that truly resonates with me, I rarely have much to add except “Yeah, what he said.

Kerry versus his record...

During the debates, John Kerry repeatedly invoked the name of Ronald Reagan, holding up Reagan as a model of how U.S. foreign policy should be conducted. But as Larry Elder documents, Kerry consistently opposed Reagan’s policies and worked actively to undermine them.

This is the problem. In addition to his efforts to weaken our military and intelligence infrastructure over the past two decades, Kerry’s assessment of virtually every major national security issue has been wrong. And rather than admit and defend his dismal record, Kerry is attempting to revise history and align himself with those he has consistently opposed.

Update: Neil Boortz quotes this passage from the Washington Post:
Kerry's belief in working with allies runs so deep that he has maintained that the loss of American life can be better justified if it occurs in the course of a mission with international support. In 1994, discussing the possibility of U.S. troops being killed in Bosnia, he said, 'If you mean dying in the course of the United Nations effort, yes, it is worth that. If you mean dying American troops unilaterally going in with some false presumption that we can affect the outcome, the answer is unequivocally no.'

Sowell: plans vs. reality

Thomas Sowell, as always, provides some much needed perspective.

Teresa Kerry opens her mouth...

The more Teresa Heinz Kerry opens her mouth, the harder she is to like. Asked in a USA Today interview if she would be different from Laura Bush as First Lady, she replied,
Well, you know, I don't know Laura Bush. But she seems to be calm, and she has a sparkle in her eye, which is good. But I don't know that she's ever had a real job - I mean, since she's been grown up. So her experience and her validation comes from important things, but different things.

This woman truly has a warped view of the world. Let’s set aside the fact that Laura Bush was a teacher and a librarian for 10 years. (Teresa Kerry later apologizes for forgetting this—see below.) What is frightening are the underlying values revealed by such a comment. On what criteria does Teresa Kerry determine a person’s worth? Does she look to their character? Their values? Their wisdom? No. She is more concerned about whether they have had a “real job,” whatever that means.
I'm older, and my validation of what I do is a little bit bigger - because I'm older, and I've had different experiences. And it's not a criticism of her. It's just, you know, what life is about.

Oh, I get it. Teresa Kerry isn’t actually criticizing Laura Bush (good thing she pointed that out, because that’s precisely what I thought she was doing) it’s just that Kerry’s experiences are a little “bigger,” a little more “valid.”

How superior can you get? Poor little Laura, so unfortunate not to have done anything truly meaningful in her life. If only she could have had a “real job” so she could be as worldly and wonderful as me. Life just isn’t fair, you know. Pity, that.

I doubt Teresa Kerry will be called on this condescension, particularly now that she’s issued an “apology:”
I had forgotten that Mrs. Bush had worked as a school teacher and librarian, and there couldn't be a more important job than teaching our children. As someone who has been both a full-time mom and full-time in work force, I know we all have valuable experiences that shape who we are. I appreciate and honor Mrs. Bush's service to the country as first lady and am sincerely sorry I had not remembered her important work in the past.
The apology is as telling as the original remarks. Notice the complete reversal of tone now that Laura Bush is remembered as having actually worked. Suddenly Mrs. Bush is “validated.” Suddenly she is valuable, honorable, and important. Suddenly she is worthy. It really says a lot about Teresa Heinz Kerry and how she classifies people to see how much value she puts on work experience rather than character.

Laura Bush is one of the brightest, most charming, and classiest women ever to hold the office. Along with wisdom and natural charm, she has brought dignity to the White House. She is a natural treasure. Teresa Kerry, for all her self-validation, has only made herself look small by comparison.

[via Betsy]

Update: Jim Lileks has more, as does Power Line, and Captain Ed.

Update 2: Still more from Barbara Comstock. Do John Kerry’s kids really refer to Teresa as “Step Money?” Man, that’s harsh.

Kerry should make staff appointments quickly...

According to reports, Team Kerry has decided that if the election results are at all close, even if Bush is in front, Kerry will simply declare victory and proceed as if he has won. “While the lawyers litigate, political operatives will try to shape public perception. Their goal would be to persuade voters that Kerry has the best claim to the presidency and that Republicans are trying to steal it.” This strikes me as a dubious strategy and one that is likely to put off many voters.

That aside, I want to comment on a specific element of the strategy. The reports say that Kerry will be ready to name a national security team shortly after the election. This strikes me as a good thing under normal circumstances and especially important given that we are at war.

In 2000, George Bush received a lot of criticism for beginning to assemble his White House staff before the election had been officially resolved. I never understood this criticism. In fact, Al Gore should have been harshly criticized for not failing to do so. Each of these men had a fair expectation of assuming the presidency a few weeks later. Each of them should have been preparing for that eventuality by getting a staff in place to allow for a smooth transition and a fully functional executive branch upon arrival. To not do so was irresponsible.

Ideally, all candidates should begin naming key staff members well before the election. After all, these choices are arguably more important than the selection of a running mate, which we seem to demand take place months in advance. And getting a head start on a process that takes thousands of man hours in completing paperwork, interviews, and security checks can only be a good thing.

I realize this is not done for practical reasons: it’s expensive; the more people appointed, the higher the exposure to criticism of the candidate; it’s sometimes difficult to get commitments from people so far in advance; etc. But the goal is a good one, which is why, in the event of a disputed election, I would strongly approve of Kerry immediately going to work on assembling a staff.

[via Jim Geraghty via Betsy]

Propaganda 9/11...

Dr. Kelton Rhoads, an expert in the field of propaganda, dissects Fahrenheit 9/11. This is a different approach than the one taken by Dave Kopel, who documents 59 deceits in the movie. Professor Rhoads discusses the techniques Michael Moore uses to lead viewers to the conclusions he wants. It’s an interesting read, both from a political and a psychological perspective. [via Walt Anthony]

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

Sowell on NIghtline on SwiftVets...

Thomas Sowell isn't impressed with Nightline's recent attempt to discredit the SwiftVets.

Lessons we keep learning...

Donald Rumsfeld has an opinion piece in The Australian. In it, he draws a parallel between the War on Terror and the Cold War, and makes some of the same points I made in my “Reagan, on Peace” post. These are points that need to be made again and again.
It has been said this global war against extremism will be the task of a generation, much like the Cold War, which lasted for decades.

We look back now at the Cold War as a great victory for freedom. But nothing was certain or preordained.

The 50-year span of the epic battle between the free world and the Soviet empire was filled with division, uncertainty, self-doubt, setbacks and failures.

Even with our closest allies, there were disputes over diplomatic policy, weapons deployment and military strategies. In the 1960s, France pulled out of NATO's military organisation altogether.

In the US, columnists and editorialists questioned and doubted US policies. There were even instances where US citizens saw their own government challenged as being warmongers or aggressors.

But the US – under leaders of both political parties – and our allies showed perseverance and resolve, year after year. The strategies varied, from coexistence to containment to detente to confrontation. Our leaders continued to stand up to what many thought an unbeatable foe, and eventually the Soviet regime collapsed.

That lesson has had to be relearned throughout the ages: the lesson that weakness is provocative, that a refusal to confront gathering dangers can increase, not reduce, future peril and that victory ultimately comes only to those who are purposeful and steadfast.

Have there been setbacks in Afghanistan and Iraq? Of course. But the enemy cannot win militarily. Their weapons are terror and chaos. They attack any sort of hope or progress to try to undermine morale. They know that if they can win the battle of perception, we will lose our will and leave.
Indeed. Our military might is not in question. Our most potent weapon in this conflict is, and will remain, our resolve. The enemy’s only hope is to outlast us, to break our will. They know this, but I’m not convinced that we do.

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

Kerry is a liberal flip-flopper

Dick Morris explains that President Bush has changed tactics in his attacks on John Kerry. Bush got a lot of mileage out of the “flip-flop” charge, but has now transitioned to the more tried and true “Big Liberal” assault.

Morris attributes this to the Bush Campaign’s recognition that Kerry would approach the debates on domestic policy by trying to buy votes by “promising the moon.” Morris praises this decision, noting that the “flip-flop” charge became far less effective during the debates, where Kerry showed consistency and a firm commitment to his views.

I think there is some truth to Morris’ observations, but I disagree with him on several points. To begin with, while Kerry projected consistency and resolve during the debates, when you examine what he actually said the illusion quickly melts away.

For example, in the second debate Kerry said that he believed Iraq was a threat, and that he had always believed it was a threat. Yet a few minutes later, he attacked Bush for being preoccupied with Iraq “where there wasn’t a threat.” Dennis Prager wrote a column quoting several more “flip-flops,” all within the confines of a single 90-minute debate.

On the domestic side, some of Kerry’s statements during the debates can only be described as convoluted. In the third debate, He said, “My faith affects everything I do… everything you do in public life has to be guided by your faith.” He claimed that’s why he fights for equality, justice, the environment, and to end poverty. So presumably he relies on his faith to guide his votes in the Senate. Yet a few minutes earlier, he defended his consistently pro-choice voting record (while claiming to oppose abortion) by explaining that it wouldn’t be right to allow his faith to direct his vote. This is simply not credible, and his statements on issues like litmus tests for judicial nominations and same-sex marriage are equally tortured.

So, there is plenty of material, both from before and during the debates, to continue to highlight Kerry’s inconsistencies. I don’t know whether the Bush Camp has decided to abandon the “flip-flop” label in favor of the “Liberal label,” but there’s no reason why they have to. Morris and some of the other talking heads have been making the point that the two approaches are inconsistent—that you can’t accuse Kerry of being consistently liberal while at the same time calling him a “flip-flopper.” I don’t see why not. The case is easy enough to make:

Kerry is indeed a liberal, and his 20-year Senate record proves this quite clearly. He’s “flip-flopped” throughout the campaign in order to hide his liberal record. He will take any side of any issue in order to get elected, and once elected, he will revert to form and govern as the liberal he has proven himself to be.

This is the approach I think Bush should take.
[via Besty]

Mock the Vote...

Cal Thomas reports on a new Cato Institute study showing how uninformed, and misinformed, voters are.
  • 70 percent don’t know about the passage of the Medicare prescription bill
  • 58 percent know “nothing” or “very little” about the USA Patriot Act
  • 61 percent believe there has been a net loss of jobs in 2004
  • 58 percent believe the administration sees a link between Saddam Hussein and 9/11
  • 70 percent cannot name either of their senators

This really isn’t all that surprising, I suppose, but it is depressing. Yet what can we expect when most people get their “news” from The Daily Show, and late night talk shows? It certainly explains why people are so easily swayed by emotional arguments, attack ads, and misleading sound bites. They simply don’t know any better. Even someone with common sense can’t make an informed decision without the facts.

For those of us who pay attention and try to stay informed, it’s exceedingly frustrating. You know you’ve all thought it: that jerk’s vote is worth the same as mine! Every time I hear someone say, “There’s really no difference between the candidates,” I just want to stamp a big red “IDIOT!” across their forehead. Forget “Get Out The Vote”—just get out of my face. Go home; stay home; go back to sleep.

We can’t do it, of course, but we really ought to raise the voting age to around 25, and make people pass a test before they can vote—nothing elaborate, just a simple zombie filter. How many branches of the government are there? Oh, so close! Thanks for voting. See the man with the stamp on your way out. Next!

You want a serious solution? Okay. For starters, let’s stop making it so easy to vote. None of this “motor voter” nonsense. No registering at the time you vote. And no spreading out the voting period like it’s some kind of TV mini-series. Aside from cutting down on voter fraud, it’s simply not too much to ask that someone register ahead of time, find their way to the right polling place, and cast their vote on election day.

This won’t solve the problem, of course, but it’s a start. People who are willing to actually make a little effort are much more likely to be serious voters. Unfortunately we’re going in exactly the opposite direction. You watch. Soon we’ll be voting on our cell phones, our TVs, and over the Internet. They’ll be having Ms. Cleo voting for you if you’re not careful. This is not a good trend.

The only other suggestion I have is to improve our education system. People who can read and write are better informed. Bring back government and civics classes. Teach kids the constitution and get them discussing current events.

I spent years being an uninformed zombie, and I’m not proud of that. But at least I had the common sense not to vote.

Update: George Will asks, "Should the right to vote require a smidgen of responsibility? Should the electoral system be twisted in knots, paralyzed and exposed to vast fraud just to accommodate people too clueless to show up at the proper polling place? Never mind."

Update 2: Mona Charen discusses the Cato study and remarks about uniformed voters: "But why oh why must the chattering classes ceaselessly urge them to inflict this ignorance upon the rest of us?"

Yep, exactly.

Prager criticizes Teresa Kerry...

I’m a huge fan of Dennis Prager and I respect him a great deal, but his latest column gave me pause. He begins his list of reasons why he can’t vote for John Kerry with this:


1. John Kerry was described by Lynne Cheney as "not a good man" after Kerry used the Cheney daughter's sexual orientation to score political points. She may be right. As William Safire writes, "The sleazier purpose of the Kerry-Edwards spotlight on Mary Cheney is to confuse and dismay Bush supporters who believe that same-sex marriage is wrong, to suggest that Bush is as 'soft on same-sex' as Kerry is, and thereby to reduce a Bush core constituency's eagerness to go to the polls." Even the press, Safire notes, has respected Mary Cheney's right to privacy.

As I read this, I thought, “She may be right” is a little understated, but okay, he made his point—one with which I agree. A little later Dennis writes:


3. Normally even partisan observers of elections say nothing about the wives of presidential candidates. Aside from propriety -- the families of candidates should remain off-limits to political attacks -- every wife of every presidential candidate and of every president in living memory has been an asset to the country. It brings me no joy to say that Teresa Heinz Kerry is not worthy of being the first lady of the United States of America. From her public utterances -- such as young American men and women dying in Iraq because of American "greed for oil" -- and her many years of financial support for radical groups, it is clear to me and many others that this woman does not particularly care for this country. Her primary identity is that of world citizen, and her values are those of France and anti-American Europe.
Wow—“not worthy of being the first lady.” That’s harsh, and I reacted to it very much the same way I reacted to John Kerry’s remark about Mary Cheney: “that’s wrong.”

I’ve been sitting here for several minutes trying to digest the juxtaposition of these two passages, trying to understand why it might be okay to say such a thing about Teresa Kerry while being critical of a reference to Mary Cheney. Here are some of the things I considered:


  • Mary Cheney (MC) isn’t running for anything. If she’s a public figure it’s only to the extent that she is related to the Vice-President. Teresa Kerry (TK) is “running” for something in that she is actively campaigning to become First Lady.
  • The reference to MC was entirely gratuitous; the reference to TK is directly relevant to the point being made.
  • The reference to MC was not “harsh” in content, but rather in context—i.e. it was an intrusion into her personal life for the purpose of scoring political points against her father and his running mate. The reference to TK was harsh in content, but very much in context—i.e. it relates directly to her political activities, which are relevant to the campaign.
  • The reference to MC was made by a candidate for President of the United States; the reference to TK was made by a radio talk show host and columnist.
  • The reference to MC regarded private and personal activities; the reference to TK regarded public and political activities.
  • Dennis says himself that First Ladies are off limits, yet he proceeds to criticize TK anyway. That adds even more sting to his remark.
After walking through these considerations, I’m slightly less bothered by Dennis’ remark than I was initially, but I’m still uncomfortable with it. Intellectually, I feel these differences are enough so that I should be okay with the remark. But emotionally it still feels wrong--perhaps wrong is too strong a word. Still, I wish he hadn’t said it.

Perhaps it's simply my respect for the "office" of First Lady that is making me uncomfortable. Perhaps I'll feel differently tomorrow.

I'll be curious to see if this receives any attention.

Monday, October 18, 2004

Bush's record on jobs...

Rusty Shackleford takes on John Kerry’s charge that President Bush is the only president in 72 years to have lost jobs. I don’t know what to make of this. Rusty seems to make the case quite easily using Bureau of Labor statistics. On the other hand, as he points out, no one in the media seems to be calling attention to what has become a Kerry mantra—not Team Bush, nor even those “crazy right-wing nuts” at Fox News. [via Dean’s World]

Then there’s the question of whether Bush has actually lost jobs at all. An analysis by the Heritage Foundation suggests that the “payroll survey,” the traditional method of tracking employment, isn’t giving us a very accurate picture anymore. One reason is because it counts workers twice if they change jobs, and workers are changing jobs at a much slower rate than they used to. This phenomenon alone may account for between 400,000 and one million “lost” jobs. Another reason is because the “payroll survey” doesn’t count “a growing but hard to define class of new economy workers such as part-time consultants, eBay entrepreneurs, and even real estate agents—people who are not on payrolls.” The Census Bureau’s “household survey,” which does take these factors into account, indicates a net gain of 1.8 millions jobs since Bush took office.

Of course this all ignores the fact that presidents don’t create jobs to begin with; businesses do. About all a president can do is offer a little stimulation and get out of the way. This takes the form of increased spending, tax cuts, and deregulation. Bush has done all three, and the economy is chugging along nicely.

Sunday, October 17, 2004

Re-importing drugs...

I mentioned that I’m collecting ideas on health care. The New York Times looks at the drug re-importation issue and concludes that it won't work. This makes sense to me.

Countries like Canada use price controls to keep the cost of their drugs down. As Thomas Sowell often points out, changing the price of something doesn’t change its cost. Our drug companies make up for their lost revenue by charging more for drugs sold in the U.S., meaning we are paying to for Canada’s cheap drugs.

If we start buying these “cheaper” drugs from Canada, something will have to give. Drug companies may decide they can’t afford to spend so much on discovering new drugs. That means those drugs won’t be there to save lives and make life better for those who are ill. As someone with Diabetes, I’m glad drug companies have spent money to invent the medications that keep my blood sugar under control today. I’m grateful that previous generations paid more for their drugs so that I could get some of the feeling back in my legs and feet.

Drug companies might also respond by selling fewer drugs to Canada, so Canada wouldn’t have a enough to export. This would probably be accompanied by an increase in U.S. drug prices to make up for decreased sales to Canada. This would also create shortages in Canada. As the article points out, such shortages are already a problem, even without reselling drugs to the U.S. Canada obviously wouldn’t be too happy about this, and would be forced to take corrective action of its own. Perhaps they would put a heavy tax on drugs resold to the U.S. in order to keep the drugs on their side of the border. It’s hard to predict how all the ripples would interact, but it’s easy to see that simply shifting costs around isn’t a good solution.

That said, I’m wondering whether we shouldn’t allow re-importation anyway. I generally believe that artificial “solutions” tend to create more economic problems than they solve. Often the best thing to do is simply get out of the way and let market forces seek out the most efficient route. Canada’s price controls are an artificial solution. Laws that prevent Americans from buying drugs from Canada are an artificial solution. We can’t overturn Canadian price controls, but we can free things up on our end. And maybe that would put enough pressure on Canada to loosen things up on theirs.

I’m still chewing on this.

[via Just One Minute]

Update: It looks like Canada isn’t going to wait for the U.S. to make up its mind about re-importation. From the Financial Times:
More than 30 Canadian internet pharmacies have decided not to accept bulk orders of prescription drugs from US states and municipalities.

The move delivers a potentially serious setback to US politicians most notably Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry campaigning to give Americans easier access to cheap drugs from Canada...

With pharmaceutical manufacturers seeking to restrict supplies and the US Congressional Budget Office recently saying that reimportation from Canada would have a “negligible” impact on US drugs spending, the internet pharmacies have already had difficulty meeting demand from south of the border…

Canadian Treatment Action Council, a lobby group representing pharmacists and patients, is due to speak out today against drug exports to the US.
[via Instapundit]

Saturday, October 16, 2004

Explaining the war to our kids...

Captain’s Quarters is posting a series of letters written by a soldier to his young children as a way of explaining to them what their daddy is doing in Iraq and why. The letters are moving and thoughtful and contain information and background not covered in the media—a good read for children and adults.

The first two letters in the series can be found here and here. I’ll link to the others when they’re up.

Update: Part 3 of this series is now up.

Update 2: Part 4 and Part 5.

Epilogue to "Unfit for Command"...

John O’Neill and Jerry Corsi have written an epilogue to their best selling book “Unfit for Command.” The epilogue is not available in printed form, but can be obtained by e-mail for free from Human Events Online. In it, the authors give a nice summary of their main allegations against John Kerry, and document Kerry’s responses to the allegations. If you are interested in getting to the heart of these controversies, but don’t want to read the entire book, I recommend reading the several key chapters that are available for free online, as well as this epilogue.

[via David Limbaugh]

Kerry (partially) releases records...

This is an update to a previous post where I talked about the various records that candidates traditionally release, but which John Kerry has kept hidden. His wife Teresa Heinz Kerry has now released a “small part” of her income tax returns while making statements which can’t be verified about the remainder.

[via Betsy]

Reagan, on Peace

This is the first of what will be a series of posts contemplating the ideas of Ronald Reagan which appear in “Reagan, In His Own Hand.”

In 1975, Ronald Reagan gave a cautionary radio address on the topic of peace. In it, he drew parallels between the gathering storm that was Nazi Germany prior to WWII and that of the Soviet Union in the mid ‘70s.

Reagan asked whether it would be said of his time, as it was of the WWII generation, “they were better at surviving the catastrophe than they were at preventing it.” He noted that WWII didn’t happen because the free world engaged in a massive military buildup, but rather because they tended the brewing threat with “anguished passiveness.” He cited examples of how perceived U.S. weakness emboldened the Japanese to strike at Pearl Harbor.

The central lesson, Reagan concluded, is that “to abdicate power is to abdicate the right to maintain peace,” or as Laurence Beilenson put it, “Peace is purchased by making yourself stronger than your adversary.” It was upon this “peace through strength” philosophy that Reagan forged the policies that ultimately ended the Cold War.

It’s tempting to look back on Reagan’s policies and rationalize the obviousness of them. The Soviet Union was choking on its own economy. It was a simply a matter of time before it succumbed to its own structural deficiencies. Reagan, we’re told, didn’t slay the Soviet giant; he simply gave it a little shove as it toppled under its own weight.

The reality is that the logic of Reagan’s policies wasn’t so obvious at the time. These were controversial ideas that were highly criticized. Reagan was attacked as being dangerous, insane, a war monger who was sure to lead us to nuclear annihilation. A certain Senator from Massachusetts once referred to the Reagan years as a time of “moral darkness.” So why was Reagan able to see clearly what so many can only claim to have seen in hindsight?

Part of the reason, I believe, is that Reagan had unique insights into the Communist mind. During his years in Hollywood as president of the Screen Actors Guild, he stood strong against attempted Communist takeover. Experiencing it first hand, he came to know Communism as evil and to loathe its principles. Reagan was referring to Communism as a disease that must be eliminated years before he dubbed the Soviet Union an evil empire.

Reagan must also have benefited from watching world events. As his writings and speeches attest, he was fluent on the issues of the day. With his anti-Communist sentiment firmly in place, he certainly must have tracked Soviet responses during the Korean and Vietnam wars, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and other volatile incidents. He must have noted how the Russians reacted to shows of U.S. strength, passivity, and indecisiveness.

I believe Reagan’s convictions, built on decades of attention to these matters, combined with his “peace through strength” philosophy, and assisted by his background in economics (his college major) placed him in a unique position to evaluate Soviet strength, character, and motivation. While many assumed that the Russians thought and sought the same things we did, Reagan understood that U.S. and Soviet interests were not only different but opposed. He knew that safety and peace were illusions as long as the Soviets rivaled the U.S. militarily. He recognized that treaties and appeasement weaken rather than strengthen one’s position.

So, Reagan eschewed the conventional wisdom, disdaining calls for “détente” and “coexistence.” He committed the U.S. to an all out arms race, one which the Soviet economy had no hope of sustaining, and he realized his vision of relegating Communist Russia to “the ash heap of history. As Reagan would say, not bad, not bad at all.

It’s difficult to avoid seeking parallels between Reagan’s victory in the Cold War and today’s War on Terror. I won’t strain the analogy by suggesting that George W. Bush is the second coming of Ronald W. Reagan. He is not. Still, I think some similarities are instructive.

By acting on a doctrine of preemption, Bush has tried to apply Reagan’s first lesson: that’s it’s better to prevent the catastrophe of continued terrorism than to try to survive it. Bush also grasps the principle of purchasing peace through strength—at least on a large scale. He has strayed from this principle in the micro, in places like Najaf and Fallujah. This was apparently done for political considerations, and time will tell if this was wise.

However, I’m well satisfied that Bush, like Reagan, understands the nature of his enemy. He too has bucked popular opinion, abandoning illusions of “control” and “containment” in favor of a more decisive strategy. I’m equally satisfied that Bush is guided by a clear vision. He has spoken eloquently of the momentousness of establishing a free and vital Afghanistan and Iraq in the heart of the Middle East. He sees past the painful costs of battle, beyond the stark consequences of failure, and on to the implications of success: two freed nations, a foothold in the midst of an unstable region, and a large down payment on the purchase of a durable peace.

Time will tell if President Bush’s vision is as true as President Reagan’s. In the meantime, Bush will continue to be called dangerous, insane, a war monger, and worse. But my suspicion is that Bush, like Reagan, will one day be vindicated.

Update: Though it's not specifically about Reagan, I wanted to link to this post by Cassandra because it strikes a similar theme.

Things I wish I had written...

Daniel Drezner is hosting one of the more substantive discussions about the election that I’ve read. Daniel, who is leaning toward Kerry, begins by explaining why and invites readers to change his mind. I disagree with many of the assumptions and arguments Daniel uses to make his case. However, it is a very thoughtful post and it would take a considerable amount of time to address each one. I was very relieved to find this post, which expresses most of my thinking in a far better way than I could.

[via Betsy]

Friday, October 15, 2004

SwiftVets revisited...

It still amazes me that so many smart people continue to dismiss the SwiftVet allegations as smears when they obviously haven’t taken the time to do their homework.

ABC’s Nightline produced a story that purports to interview Vietnamese witnesses of the mission for which John Kerry received his Silver Star. Andrew Sullivan is impressed:
Nightline did an excellent reporting job on Vietnamese memories of the incidents under dispute from the Swift Boat anti-Kerry vets. No big surprise that the evidence there comports with the bulk of the evidence here: that the Swiftees are simply wrong.
Except it doesn’t comport with the bulk of the evidence here. As Wizbang and Captain Ed explain, this new account “not only differs from the account given by the Swiftvets who were on the scene, it also differs from Kerry's version in his reports, in his biography, and in his autobiography.” There’s more. Go check it out.

Speaking of the SwiftVets, their latest ads could do some damage.

And finally, Thomas Lipscomb files a new investigative report which calls even more of Kerry's military record into question. I'm skeptical, but this is yet another mystery that could be solved if Kerry would only release his records as he promised.

Update: Just One Minute has a couple of great posts on this.

Sullivan's at it again...

Andrew Sullivan (scroll down for more) is doing his usual bit on the Mary Cheney episode, running around calling everyone hypocrites, homophobes, and bigots because they disagree with him. He makes some fair points, but predictably he sees everything through his gay lenses and misses the larger point. I was going to make that larger point, but a handful of folks over at Instapundit have already done so. The short version:
  1. It’s not nice to use someone’s daughter to score political points against him;
  2. It’s not nice to call attention to someone’s personal life in order to score political points against her father;
  3. It’s not nice to put words into someone else’s mouth to score political points against her father;
  4. It’s not nice to suggest that a mother is ashamed of her daughter.


Note: My original post on this is here.

Charles Krauthammer...

Charles Krauthammer's latest--excellent, as always.

Kerry takes the low road...

There is a lot of discussion going on about John Kerry’s reference in last night’s debate to Mary Cheney, Dick Cheney’s gay daughter. The Republicans are obviously going to make as much of this as they possibly can. That said, I just can’t take seriously those who argue that Kerry intended this as anything less than an attempt to embarrass the Bush/Cheney ticket. Why else would he bring it up?

Let’s be honest. Kerry’s whole purpose for being on that stage was to make Bush look bad and himself look good. Kerry did not give up precious seconds of his rebuttal time simply to compliment Mary Cheney and her parents for being swell folks. (“I was trying to say something positive about the way strong families deal with this issue.” Give me a break.) Neither was it necessary for Kerry to single out the Vice-President’s daughter to make his point, that he believes gays don’t choose their lifestyles. No, it was entirely gratuitous, and entirely calculated (we saw John Edwards use the same tactic in his debate with Cheney). He did it entirely to score political points.

So what was Kerry’s goal in invoking Mary Cheney in this way? Who knows. Maybe he thought that viewers who approve of the way the President is defending traditional marriage would be outraged to learn that Cheney’s daughter is gay. Maybe he was trying to paint the Bush administration as uncompassionate, even when it comes to one of their own daughters. But regardless of what Kerry’s message was, or who it was directed at, there is no question his gambit boiled down to this: “Neener, neener, neener, Cheney’s got a gay daughter!” And this in itself is very telling. For if Kerry felt that he could embarrass the Bush/Cheney campaign by pointing out that Cheney’s own daughter is gay, might it be because Kerry himself feels there is something belittling or embarrassing about being gay?

And of course it’s a cheap tactic. Not cheap in the way that Kerry repeatedly invokes the name of John McCain. That’s an obvious poke in the eye: “One of yours is (apparently) on our side, so there!” But this is far worse. McCain is a senator. His statements are on the record on behalf of himself. It’s an entirely different matter to attack a candidate through his own daughter, who is not running for anything, and who didn’t ask to have her sexuality used as a political football. Kerry’s campaign manager Mary Beth Cahill said last night that using Cheney's daughter to get to Bush is “fair game.” She couldn’t be more wrong. Such tactics are utterly classless and unbecoming a presidential candidate.

But Kerry was wrong to invoke Mary Cheney for another reason. He presumed to speak for her. He has absolutely no authority to represent what she would say on any matter, let alone something so personal, let alone as a way to attack her own father, let alone before the nation and the world. He simply has no right or justification for putting words into her mouth to make a political point. Period.

And so Dick and Lynne Cheney have a right to call foul. To be indignant about having their daughter dragged into the spotlight to be used against them. And to call Kerry on what Lynne Cheney rightly labeled a “cheap and tawdry political trick.”

And Republicans have a right to use what was a stupid and classless maneuver on Kerry’s part to whatever benefit they can make of it. And while they are at it, they should really go after this remark by Elizabeth Edwards as well:
“I think that it indicates a certain degree of shame with respect to her daughter's sexual preferences,'' Mrs. Edwards said. ``It makes me really sad that that's Lynne's response.''
This is entirely contemptible. You simply do not, under any circumstances, make such statements about a woman and her daughter. This is a personal, private bond that no one has a right to call into question.

John Kerry took the low road, and for that he should feel ashamed. But Elizabeth Edwards showed something equally loathsome today. I can’t imagine many mothers (or fathers, for that matter) hearing her words and not being extremely offended.

Update: More from Betsy, Lorie Byrd, Captain Ed, Just One Minute, and Mona Charen.

Update 2: More on this here.

Update 3: Oops. I sent a trackback out to Sean Gleeson then accidently left him off the link list. Bad form. My apologies to Sean. Please go check out both his post on the debate and his his entire site.

Thursday, October 14, 2004

John Edwards is intellectually dishonest...

John Edwards is on Hardball right now proving that he is the epitome of a sleazy trial lawyer. He continues to imply that Dick Cheney improperly assisted Halliburton in securing its contracts in Iraq. Yet when Chris Matthews tries to pin him down, Edwards has to admit that he has no evidence of any wrongdoing. He insists that Halliburton should have had to bid for its contracts, but when Matthews points out that there are no other companies capable of doing the type of work Halliburton is doing, Edwards says that’s all the more reason why they should have had to compete with other companies for the contract. This is idiocy. Is the man incapable of logical thought, or is he simply dishonest?

Keeping tabs on voter fraud...

Bill Hobbs is cataloging evidence of voter fraud. This has become a very serious problem. Bookmark this page and refer back to it often.

[via Instapundit]

I heard right...

In my comments about last night’s presidential debate, I wondered aloud whether John Kerry had actually said that Arizona’s property taxes were higher because George Bush didn’t fully fund No Child Left Behind (NCLB). Well, I checked the transcript, and he did say it. Here’s the quote:
Now right here in Arizona, that difference would have been $131 million to the state of Arizona to help its kids be able to have better education and to lift the property tax burden from its citizens. The president reneged on his promise to fund No Child Left Behind.
This is dishonest on a couple of levels. First, it’s a myth that NCLB isn’t fully funded. The claim is fabricated on the fact that not all the money that is earmarked for NCLB has been released to the states. This is by design. Federal funding for these types of programs is released in installments. The reason the remaining money hasn’t been released is because the states haven’t spent they money they’ve already been given. Far from being short on funds to enact the provisions of NCLB, states are having trouble spending the money fast enough to trigger the next installment.

Second, it’s ludicrous for Kerry to suggest that additional NCLB funds would “lift the property tax burden” from Arizona’s citizens. NCLB funds are not general funds to be used in place of state and local education dollars. NCLB funds are designated specifically to fund NCLB provisions; they cannot be used for other purposes. Remember that NCLB is a separate, voluntary program, designed primarily to monitor and evaluate student achievement. Using NCLB funds to defray other education costs is illegal. Kerry must know this.

Quote of the day...

"It's unfortunate to see a once-great party that was led by Franklin Roosevelt who said, 'We have nothing to fear but fear itself,' reduced to a motto of ,'We have nothing to offer but fear itself.'"
-- Ed Gillespie, Republican National Committee Chairman.

Closet Bush supporters...

A good friend of mine is a teacher and an officer in her local teacher’s union. In her words, she doesn’t support John Kerry, doesn’t like John Kerry, and doesn’t trust John Kerry.

Several months ago, she attended her union’s national convention in Washington, D.C. It’s no secret that teachers overwhelmingly support Democrats, and this was in evidence as my friend attended the various speeches and activities at the convention. There was clearly an informal dress code at these events, with attendees abundantly clad in all manner of Kerry paraphernalia—shirts, buttons, hats, signs, the whole bit. My friend, concerned about how her peers would react to her lack of Kerry trappings, opted for union-wear. She hoped a strong expression of pro-unionism would be enough to keep them at bay. It was not. She had Kerry materials thrust at her, was challenged on her lack of support for Kerry, and was made to feel physically uncomfortable by complete strangers, all because she didn’t outwardly express support for their candidate.

I bring this up to make a point that has been on my mind for some time. My friend is a strong lady, not the type to let others tell her how to think or act, but she was intimidated. Having been a teacher, and having weathered union pressures myself, I know what that feels like. I can only assume that many others--teachers, students, lawyers, entertainers, union members of all walks—experience these pressures daily. Some of these people are tough and assert their minority views in the face of intimidation. Others simply try to keep their heads down and not make waves. Still others are so intimidated that they compromise. They will put on the Kerry shirt, laugh at the anti-Bush joke, go along with the crowd.

And that, of course, is why we hold secret ballots. The voting booth is a sanctuary where we can escape external pressures and be true to the beliefs we often dare not express publicly. My sense is that this mechanism is more important in this election than it has been in many years. There is a large amount of vitriol in this campaign, particularly coming from the Left. Because of this, I believe there are many voters who will not support the President publicly—in the workplace, in social settings, even in the polls—but who will walk into that booth on November 2nd, and pull the lever for the George Bush.

No, not that debate...

John Hawkins of Right Wing News and Jeff Seemann, Democratic candidate for Congress from Ohio had their own debate. The topic was national, not Ohio, politics. It's worth a read.

More on the debate...

I really enjoyed Dale Franks' liveblogging of the debate.

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

Thoughts on the debate...

For the first time, I score Bush ahead on both substance and style. I don’t think he won this debate by as wide a margin as Kerry won the first one, but I think Bush clearly was the winner.

Bush was very week in the first debate, but got stronger with each one. Kerry was strong in the first debate and got weaker with each one.

Kerry didn’t connect tonight. He was well prepared, rattling off facts with ease, but I don’t think it helped him sell his points. He was dull and hard to listen to. Bush was more upbeat. He used his facts to support his points rather than to make them.

I was very impressed with the way Bush answered the Social Security question, explaining what is wrong with it and why not taking action is the more expensive solution. He used his answer to educate on the issue, and did it about as well as one can in two minutes. He actually reminded me of Ronald Reagan for a couple of minutes.

Bush was also strong on education, same sex marriage, and securing the borders. I have large problems with his approaches on some of these issues, but he made his case very well.

Unfortunately, he didn’t do the same on the questions about minimum wage, gun control, and affirmative action. I thought he dodged all three of these issues. I understand that he did it for political reasons—to appeal to swing voters—but I’d rather have seen him take a principled position and educate on it the way he did on Social Security. He clearly didn’t remind me of Reagan in these answers.

Kerry… I’m thinking and thinking and nothing stands out. I paid attention to what he said, but the only thing I can remember is that he finally got the $120 billion figure right on Iraq. Bush did well early on in saying that a plan isn’t a litany of complaints. After he said that, it was hard to listen to Kerry without being reminded of it.

I always try to step back and ask how someone just coming to the campaign would view the debate. My guess is that they’d like Bush. I don’t think this will have much immediate impact on the polls, but as I said after the previous debate, Bush wins on the subtle believability index. He’s just more convincing and I think lingering doubts about Kerry’s sincerity will eventually tip the scales toward the President.

Okay, I’m off to see what everyone else thought.

Update: I just remembered one other thing about Kerry, though I'm not sure I heard him right. Did he actually say that if Bush had given more NCLB money to Arizona, their property taxes would be lower? Doesn't he know that NCLB moneys don't replace local education funds? They are provided to pay for the measures required by the NCLB act. These programs have actually been overfunded; there is money left in the bank because the districts haven't been able to spend it fast enough. Anyway, I'll have to check the transcript on this to see if I heard correctly.

Update 2: I forgot to mention how good Bush was on health care. Explaining that having third parties pay for health care interferes with the natural economic dynamics is highly substantive for a debate. Again, this is the type of thing Reagan did with ease. It's good to see Bush doing some of it, and doing it effectively. I just wish he'd do it more often and on more issues.

Update 3: Regarding the first update, I checked the transcript. I did hear Kerry correctly. More here.

Monday, October 11, 2004

The relevance test...

Instapundit draws on the statements of Rudy Giuliani, Powerline, Eugene Volokh, James Lileks, and others to explore what John Kerry is thinking in regard to the war in Iraq. Take a minute to read it. It’s quite good.

To which, I add the following:

Regardless of what Kerry thought or felt before or since 9/11, regardless of his intentions in Iraq, he has utterly failed the relevance test. For all his tough talk and peddled plans, not once has John Kerry clearly and passionately articulated exactly what we are fighting for in Iraq. Not once has he given an accounting of why we must win this war, in this time, in this place. He understands only that war is bad and must be stopped. He speaks of achieving stability and winning the peace rather than establishing a bastion and winning the war. He lacks the vision of what a free, democratic, thriving Iraq means to the region, to the war on terror, and to the future.

Einstein said, “In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity.” John Kerry sees the difficulty; George Bush sees the opportunity.

Saturday, October 9, 2004

This should be a commercial...

An e-mailer to Rich Lowry catches Kerry in a real-time flip-flop:

When speaking about Iraq Kerry said:

”Well, let me tell you straight up: I've never changed my mind about Iraq. I do believe Saddam Hussein was a threat. I always believed he was a threat. Believed it in 1998 when Clinton was president. I wanted to give Clinton the power to use force if necessary.”
A few minutes later, now speaking about Iran, Kerry said:

”I don't think you can just rely on U.N. sanctions, Randee. But you're absolutely correct, it is a threat, it's a huge threat.

”And what's interesting is, it's a threat that has grown while the president has been preoccupied with Iraq, where there wasn't a threat.”
Heh.

[via Wizbang via camedwards]

More on the debate...

Here’s a point I made as a comment over on Betsy’s Page:

What I found interesting is how Kerry criticized Bush for being the only President to cut taxes during a war. Then, a few minutes later, he promised he would cut taxes for the middle-class. One can only conclude one of the following:

1. Kerry is hypocritical and will also cut taxes during a war;

2. Kerry is lying and will not cut taxes;

3. Kerry plans on bailing on the war.

Brooks on media handling of ISG report...

David Brooks echoes my thoughts on how the media has misrepresented the ISG report:
[I]n the 1990's, the world was arrayed against [Saddam] to deprive him of [WMD]. So Saddam, the clever one, The Struggler, undertook a tactical retreat. He would destroy the weapons while preserving his capacities to make them later. He would foil the inspectors and divide the international community. He would induce it to end the sanctions it had imposed to pen him in. Then, when the sanctions were lifted, he would reconstitute his weapons and emerge greater and mightier than before.

Saddam worked patiently to undermine the sanctions… Saddam personally made up a list of officials at the U.N., in France, in Russia and elsewhere who would be bribed. He sent out his oil ministers to curry favor with China, France, Turkey and Russia. He established illicit trading relations with Ukraine, Syria, North Korea and other nations to rebuild his arsenal.

It was all working. He acquired about $11 billion through illicit trading. He used the oil-for-food billions to build palaces. His oil minister was treated as a "rock star," as the report put it, at international events, so thick was the lust to trade with Iraq.

France, Russia, China and other nations lobbied to lift sanctions. Saddam was, as the Duelfer report noted, "palpably close" to ending sanctions.

With sanctions weakening and money flowing, he rebuilt his strength. He contacted W.M.D. scientists in Russia, Belarus, Bulgaria and elsewhere to enhance his technical knowledge base. He increased the funds for his nuclear scientists. He increased his military-industrial-complex's budget 40-fold between 1996 and 2002. He increased the number of technical research projects to 3,200 from 40. As Duelfer reports, "Prohibited goods and weapons were being shipped into Iraq with virtually no problem."

And that is where Duelfer's story ends. Duelfer makes clear on the very first page of his report that it is a story. It is a mistake and a distortion, he writes, to pick out a single frame of the movie and isolate it from the rest of the tale.

But that is exactly what has happened. I have never in my life seen a government report so distorted by partisan passions. The fact that Saddam had no W.M.D. in 2001 has been amply reported, but it's been isolated from the more important and complicated fact of Saddam's nature and intent.

Read the whole thing.

Update: More from Michael Barone.

Friday, October 8, 2004

Debate impressions...

Once again, my impressions prior to knowing what anyone else is saying:

This was an enjoyable debate. The questions were responsible and drew clear distinctions between the two candidates. The exchanges were sharp, but civil. There really isn’t a good reason for anyone to be undecided at this point.

I score a very slight edge to Kerry on style and a very slight edge to Bush on substance—so overall, a draw. However, Kerry didn’t do as well as he did in the first debate, and Bush did enormously better than he did in the first debate. That favors Bush. Support softened for Bush after the first debate and voters needed to be reassured by seeing him turn in a solid performance. They were.

There’s one thing that I think will eventually tip the scales to Bush: credibility. Substance and style aside, I think Bush simply comes across as more credible. Truly undecided voters will like some of the things Kerry said, but they won’t be convinced in their bones that he’s being straight. This is a visceral thing that will grow over the next several days and I expect the poll numbers to edge up for Bush.

Bush missed some opportunities. He didn’t use the ISG report as effectively as he could have. He really needed to make the case that the sanctions were not working and that Saddam was poised to resume producing WMD as soon as they ended. He should have made better use of the Afghan election. Sure this isn’t a point of difference between the two candidates, but Bush is the one who brought it about. That shows leadership and competence which voters will transfer as hope to Iraq.

Kerry was noticeably incoherent on a couple of questions. On the abortion question in particular he seemed to be flailing. When Bush responded by saying he was trying to decipher what Kerry said, I suspect a lot of people were thinking, “me too.”

For the next debate, Bush needs to come up with some strong answers about health care. He’s got to explain his plan and why it’s a good thing or he will lose on that issue. Also, he can’t keep letting Kerry say that NCLB is under funded. It’s not true, but Bush hasn’t been correcting him.

Diplomacy trumps politics...

Baseball Crank makes a point that had occurred to me as well. John Kerry has consistently attacked President Bush for not getting France et al to support the war in Iraq. Kerry has claimed that, as president, he could convince them to do so.

Bush could destroy this line of attack by simply pointing to increasing evidence that our “allies” were bribed by Saddam Hussein to actively undermine both sanctions and the U.S. war effort. Unfortunately, Bush has to tread very lightly on this issue. He still has to work with the leaders of these countries, so sound political tactics have to take a back seat to diplomacy.

Too weird...

Check this out.

[via Dean's World]

The little election that could...

Afghan elections. So very cool. Not many are noticing, but this is a huge deal. Take a moment to reflect on what an monumental accomplishment this is.
[via Instapundit]

Interview with Joanne Jacobs

Normblog does a nice interview with Joanne Jacobs, author of one of my favorite blogs.

Bremmer sets the record straight...

John Kerry, and the news media, recently seized on some remarks made by Paul Bremmer, administrator of the Coalition Provisional Authority, to criticize the President and the war in Iraq. In today’s New York Times, Bremmer takes exception to the way his remarks have been represented and sets the story straight:
In recent days, attention has been focused on some remarks I've made about Iraq. The coverage of these remarks has elicited far more heat than light, so I believe it's important to put my remarks in the correct context…

It's no secret that during my time in Iraq I had tactical disagreements with others, including military commanders on the ground. Such disagreements among individuals of good will happen all the time, particularly in war and postwar situations…

The press has been curiously reluctant to report my constant public support for the president's strategy in Iraq and his policies to fight terrorism. I have been involved in the war on terrorism for two decades, and in my view no world leader has better understood the stakes in this global war than President Bush

Mr. Kerry is free to quote my comments about Iraq. But for the sake of honesty he should also point out that I have repeatedly said, including in all my speeches in recent weeks, that President Bush made a correct and courageous decision to liberate Iraq from Saddam Hussein's brutality, and that the president is correct to see the war in Iraq as a central front in the war on terrorism.

A year and a half ago, President Bush asked me to come to the Oval Office to discuss my going to Iraq to head the coalition authority. He asked me bluntly, "Why would you want to leave private life and take on such a difficult, dangerous and probably thankless job?" Without hesitation, I answered, "Because I believe in your vision for Iraq and would be honored to help you make it a reality." Today America and the coalition are making steady progress toward that vision.
[Via Instapundit, who doesn't find the press's reluctance at all "curious."]

One question Bush should ask...

President Bush can do himself a lot of good by showing up for the next couple of debates. He took a pounding in the first one. He's also taken hits from recent remarks by Rumsfeld and Bremmer, and from the irresponsible media coverage of the Iraq weapons inspector report. It's time for him to step up to the plate and take control of his own destiny. He doesn't need a homerun, but a solid double would be very welcome.

If I could put one statement in Bush's mouth for tonight's debate, it would be this:

Fellow Americans, ask yourself this simple question: Are the terrorists better off than they were four years ago?

Media misleads on WMD report...

Yesterday I expressed skepticism at the way the media—the AP in particular--was covering the recently released report on Iraq WMD. After reading the “Key Findings” section of the report I can say that my skepticism was well placed.

Media reports clearly create the impression that the main conclusion of the CIA report is that Iraq had no WMD. The media seem intent on hammering home that point, but casting the report in so narrow a fashion is entirely misleading. Indeed, while the report notes the absence of WMD, it does so in the context of examining Saddam’s overarching strategy and goals. That's the real focus of the report, and it's not being reported that way.

As I said yesterday, the media is predictably irresponsible on such matters. I strongly encourage everyone to read at least the “Key Findings” section of the report, which begins with these observations:

Saddam Husayn… wanted to end sanctions while preserving the capability to reconstitute his weapons of mass destruction (WMD) when sanctions were lifted…

He initiated most of the strategic thinking upon which decisions were made…maintaining WMD as a national strategic goal…

He sought to balance the need to cooperate with UN inspections… with his intention to preserve Iraq’s intellectual capital for WMD…

By 2000-2001, Saddam had managed to mitigate many of the effects of sanctions and undermine their international support. Iraq was within striking distance of a de facto end to the sanctions regime, both in terms of oil exports and the trade embargo, by the end of 1999.

Saddam wanted to recreate Iraq’s WMD capability—which was essentially destroyed in 1991—after sanctions were removed and Iraq’s economy stabilized, but probably with a different mix of capabilities to that which previously existed. Saddam aspired to develop a nuclear capability—in an incremental fashion, irrespective of international pressure and the resulting economic risks—but he intended to focus on ballistic missile and tactical chemical warfare (CW) capabilities.
Saddam’s basic strategy was this:

  1. He hoped to ride out the sanctions, which he expected to be short term and ineffective.
  2. When the sanctions proved more robust than he hoped, he put his WMD plans on hold and concentrated on ending the sanctions. He maintained his infrastructure so that production of WMD could resume on demand.
  3. Through bribes and other corrupt dealings, he greatly undermined the sanctions and persuaded several members of the U.N. Security Council to support ending sanctions.
  4. With the sanctions melting away, he was prepared to resume production of WMD.
The WMD report isn’t yet available in HTML format. When it is, I intend to provide more extensive excerpts.

Update: Kudos to The Washington Times for getting the story right:
Saddam Hussein's goal through the 1990s and until the 2003 U.S. invasion was to end U.N. sanctions on Iraq, while working covertly to restore the country's ability to produce weapons of mass destruction, a report by the chief U.S. weapons inspector says.

"Saddam wanted to re-create Iraq's WMD capability — which was essentially destroyed in 1991 — after sanctions were removed and Iraq's economy stabilized, but probably with a different mix of capabilities," the report said.
[via Betsy]

Update 2: More at I Love Jet Noise.