Enter Wesley Clark
by
William L. Anderson
by William L. Anderson
The
recent announcement by retired general Wesley Clark that he will
seek the Democratic Party nomination for President of the United
States has been met with the usual media fanfare reserved for military
people who enter politics: A new Savior has been born. While there
was no band of angels singing "Glory to God in the Highest"
to shepherds watching over their flocks by night, a number of other
people have hailed the new candidacy of Clark as the coming of the
Messiah and have been hastening to bow down in awe, reverence, and
outright worship.
Granted,
there have been a few exceptions. One
writer noted that Clark’s entrance into the Democratic field
improved that group just as his retirement from the U.S. Armed Forces
also improved that organization’s status. No doubt, there are a
number of Serbian civilians who lost loved ones during the vicious
Clark-led bombing of Serbia a few years ago that would prefer him
to retire to Florida – or anywhere – as opposed to seeking to grab
the U.S. military machine again.
While
I have no doubts that Clark’s candidacy will fail – his domineering
and hypersensitive personality will see to that – I am fascinated
by the reaction of Americans whenever someone with military ties
decides to seek the presidency. Like John McCain, who unsuccessfully
ran for the Republican nomination in 2000, large groups of Americans
seem to believe that all it takes is for a military man to "straighten
out things" in the government, and in this country.
As
I have grown older (I turn 50 this year on Charles Manson’s and
Tonya Harding’s birthday), I have come to see that as I become more
radically libertarian, in contrast, I find that Americans have increasingly
come to despise their freedoms and are looking to give them away
to any unscrupulous politician who will take them. These are the
same folk who actually believe that a U.S. president is someone
who "runs the country," and what better person to have
at the helm than someone who gives orders – and expects his underlings
(all the rest of us) to obey quickly and completely.
As
the late Clarence
Carson so aptly noted, this idea that a president "runs
the country," is preposterous and downright dangerous. He wrote:
The
assumption is, of course, that someone should be in control of
the country. It bespeaks a passion for having everything and everyone
under some sort of central control, a passion that has been gaining
sway for most of this century, or longer. The notion that undergirds
this passion for control is that without such central human control
chaos, disorder, cupidity, and confusion will take place.
This passion for control has been most pronounced in the economic
realm: control of banking, control of the railroads, control of
"trusts," control of prices, control of electricity,
control of the stock market, controls of farm products, control
of hours of work, control of wages, control of drugs, control
of hospitals, control of interstate transport, and so on and on.
But it has tended to invade every realm of activity: formal education,
the practice of medicine, international relations (e.g., the formation
of the League of Nations and United Nations), environmental controls,
pollution controls, and such like.
And
in the minds of his supporters, Wesley Clark is just the man who
can pull off this gargantuan task, just as John McCain could have
done it, had Republicans had the good sense to nominate him three
years ago.
In
other words, Clark is "the keeper of the secret," someone
who knows how to make government (and our society) work the way
it is supposed to work. As
I pointed out following the death of John F. Kennedy, Jr. in
1999, the political classes tend to create heroes and endow them
with fictitious powers. The reality is that no one is capable of
doing these things, but that does not stop the political classes
and their media allies from believing in the political version of
Santa Claus.
I
will leave it to other writers to point out that Clark’s leadership
in the unjustified U.S. military intervention into the Kosovo conflict
was disastrous, and that he came close to becoming the caricature
of the military "nut case" who wants to bomb everyone.
(The same Hollywood set that has created these military madmen on
the silver screen now bows down before Clark, apparently not realizing
that in Clark life imitates art.) Furthermore, I will leave it to
others to point out his many personal flaws that almost certainly
will turn off potential voters long before the Democrats actually
choose their candidate.
No,
I just want to make a simple point about Clark and others who enter
the political realm as conquering heroes: in the end, they are only
people who have feet of clay. The problem is not that they are limited
like the rest of us, but that they and their supporters never seem
to be aware of those limitations, even when they lead us into disaster.
September 23, 2003
William
L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him
mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland,
and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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