Who
Would Do More To Isolate America: Rudy Giuliani or Ron Paul?
by
Bill Barnwell
by Bill Barnwell
DIGG THIS
A common charge
against Congressman Ron Paul is that he does not take the threat
of terrorism seriously and seeks to "isolate" America
from the rest of the world. Rudy Giuliani, on the other hand, is
praised by Republican elites and many average voters as being "strong,"
"tough," and somebody who would "take on the terrorists."
Giuliani is seen as the candidate who will spread American greatness
and keep America safe, while Paul is portrayed as a "crazy
old uncle" who wants to ignore the rest of the world and leave
the nation vulnerable to attack. Which characterization is actually
closer to the truth?
The myth of
Rudy Giuliani began on September 11th 2001, a date he
frequently evokes and bases much of his campaign around. The events
of that terrible day resulted in his multimillion-dollar earnings,
his revived public image, and his being taken seriously as a Presidential
candidate. While Rudy entered his second term of mayor with strong
favorability ratings inside New York City (not exactly a city dominated
by traditional conservatives and libertarians), by September 10th
his popularity had imploded.
On September
10th, Rudy was seen as washed up politically. He dropped
out of his New York Senate race earlier in the year, blaming it
on an easily treatable form of prostate cancer, when in all reality
it was because of the circus surrounding his public and political
life, and all polls showing him getting stomped by Hillary Clinton.
Rudy’s sudden withdrawal significantly weakened Republican chances
at winning the seat and the party was forced to pick a replacement
candidate to rally around only six months before the general election
and only several weeks before the state Republican convention. That
election, as we all know, ultimately went to Hillary Clinton, who
is now also running for President on the Democratic ticket.
On September
10th, Rudy was perceived by many former admirers as a
bully and an authoritarian. His second term was so unfocused that
he began picking fights and drawing criticism on everything from
cracking down on jaywalkers to drawing headlines for publicly freaking
out at people about the worth or lack thereof of ferrets as pets
(I’m serious). He was seen as bossy, authoritarian, and the majority
of New Yorkers were ready to see him go as his then poll numbers
in the mid-30’s indicated.
On September
10th, nobody would have dreamed that Rudy Giuliani would
ever be a plausible contender for the Presidency of the United States.
But after September 11th, that all changed. Suddenly
the myth began that Rudy had stared down terrorists due to the fact
that he handled public relations well the day of the attacks and
put on a confident public face. This doesn’t minimize the fact that
he was indeed out in front that day when others were being shipped
off to "undisclosed locations." But how does Rudy’s marching
in front of cameras and making speeches at funerals suddenly make
him the best man to lead the free world, the best person to protect
America from her enemies, and the best and most knowledgeable person
to deal with foreign nations?
Without those
3,000 dead Americans from the September 11th attacks,
the media-assembled Rudy would not exist. He would not be as rich
as he is now. He would likely not be very popular. He certainly
and definitely would not be running for President or even be thinking
about it. If it was not for September 11th, sellout conservatives
would not be rallying around a man they once reviled. The multiply
divorced, pro-abortion, pro-gay rights candidate who not long ago
seemed to purposely flaunt his character flaws to the public would
not be getting major endorsements from Religious Right leaders like
Pat Robertson.
Is it not a
bit eerie and cynically ironic that Giuliani’s vast wealth, popularity,
and political capital can almost all be traced back to thousands
of Americans dying in one of the worst national tragedies to ever
afflict the nation? Without those dead bodies and the national fear
that resulted nobody would be taking Rudy seriously. Again, this
does not negate the fact that America was scared and wounded and
that they found some sense of strength in the New York Mayor. But
as far as polls seeing Giuliani best equipped to fight terrorism,
what in the world is that actually based off of?
Giuliani has
never served in the military and instead opted for multiple deferments.
He has never served in a capacity where he has had to make foreign
policy decisions (sorry, dealing with the NYPD is not the same as
commanding the US military or dealing with other heads of state).
His "experience" that he is credited for boils down to
a public relations campaign after September 11th, making
speeches after the attacks, and surrounding his Presidential campaign
with some of the most notorious hawks in political and journalistic
circles.
In fact, while
many are cheering Rudy’s "toughness" they are forgetting
his strong-arm style is the same thing that made him so unpopular
in NYC. A look back into Giuliani’s career shows a heavy-handed
federal prosecutor, mayor, and somebody with a quick temper and
often poor judgment. And yet this same person who couldn’t deal
with many locals in New York is now expected to deal with foreign
nationals and project America’s image abroad?
If Americans
are suckered into this "Rudy is tough and will keep us safe"
lingo they will likely be in for a rude awakening. Some of his top
advisors are frothing at the mouth to bomb Iran. Rudy will continue
to defend torture and will take the crackdown on civil liberties
to new extremes. Basically, if you are not a fan of President Bush,
or a conservative unhappy with the President, take everything you
don’t like about him, times that by ten, and that’s what you’ll
likely get with Giuliani.
And throughout
the power grabs and international belligerence, Rudy will do what
he has done all along: cloak it in September 11th speak
and rely on fear and bullying to get his way. Detractors will be
denounced as un-American, unpatriotic, and soft on terrorism. Rudy
and his backers will do as all neoconservatives do, speak with an
air of superiority and act like all dissenters are morons even though
they’ve been factually wrong on most matters related to the war
in Iraq. The same crowd that was wrong about most everything in
regards to Iraq is euphorically behind Rudy for President and they
are using the same talking points and fear-campaign to open up a
third hot war prematurely against yet another Muslim country.
We’ve seen
the neoconservative record on Iraq regarding their predictions and
factual assertions; why on earth are people continuing to believe
their horsehockey in regards to Iran? While the country can barely
keep up with the two wars it’s fighting, the Republican establishment
and neoconservatives everywhere are rallying behind Rudy to start
more wars, drop more bombs, spend more money and send more kids
to die for their already disproved vision of the world.
Just how exactly
is Rudy’s past record or his future vision going to keep America
safe? I suppose if a voter is in support of writing more blank checks
for even more wars, supports torture, public fear campaigns, blockades,
embargoes, and all the rest, then Rudy is indeed their guy. But
is this really an internationalist? Or would this go a long way
forward to further isolating America?
On the other
hand, Ron Paul is denounced as "crazy" for wanting to
do the opposite. Ron Paul seeks to actually dialogue with other
nations and use diplomacy ("dialogue" and "diplomacy"
are seen as sissy words to most Republicans these days and warning
signs that one is "soft" on terrorism). He is not anti-military
as he is actually a military veteran, unlike the great hero Rudy.
He wants a strong military; he just doesn’t want to use it for nation-building
crusades and for causes that do not further America’s interest.
Nor does he want to bomb countries for charges that are not substantiated
("Iran will have a nuke by next Tuesday and we will all die
if we don’t act NOW!"). He believes in trading with all and
spreading our values throughout the world, but without trying to
artificially force them upon other nations.
A Paul administration
would not come in with a stand-offish and hostile view towards the
rest of the world. It would seek to be proactive in establishing
America’s influence throughout the world, but it would do this without
perpetual foreign aid handouts to corrupt regimes and dependant
allies and without trying to police the world. A Paul administration
would actually leave our military in stronger shape instead of the
weakened, stretched-thin shape it is now. A Paul administration
would seek to regain America’s standing in the world instead of
perpetuating the image that it is an arrogant empire. Oh, and of
course, the Republican candidate who leads
in campaign donations from rank and file active and retired military
men and women is not Rudy Giuliani, but Ron Paul.
Again I ask,
who are really the "isolationists" here? Who are really
the ones pursuing "crazy" policies? The idea that Rudy
Giuliani is a strong hero who will protect America is almost entirely
rooted in myth. The idea that he and his neoconservative cheerleaders
offer the most coherent and proven leadership for the country is
negated by the past seven years, especially the past five years
in Iraq. What a great irony that the very people who have been wrong
about almost everything with foreign policy still want to pass themselves
off as the experts. It’s like a D student claiming intellectual
superiority over everyone else; it simply does not line up with
the facts.
If more Republican
and conservative voters actually looked at the facts, studied the
Giuliani record and compared it to the vision and policies of Ron
Paul, they would come to an unmistakable conclusion. The real candidate
who will push for policies and leadership to make America safe from
her enemies and prosperous at home is not Rudy Giuliani or any of
the other assorted candidates who are basically all saying the same
thing in slightly different ways.
As
the Ron Paul campaign ad says in New Hampshire about their candidate,
"he’s catching on." And he will continue to so long as
voters separate fact from fiction on the real record and visions
of Paul vs. the rest of his opponents. It is Paul’s opponents, and
not Ron Paul who will really isolate and weaken America if they
reach the White House.
November
21, 2007
Bill
Barnwell [send him mail]
is
a pastor and writer from Michigan. He holds both a Master of Ministry
degree and a Master of Arts in Theological Studies degree from Bethel
College in Mishawaka, Indiana. Visit his
blog. Bill is also a Mortgage
Consultant and Loan Originator who can serve clients
throughout the country.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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