Lott’s
Comforters
by
Brian Dunaway
When
Job loses his family, fortune, and health by reason of things he
cannot perceive, he is visited by those who would reason with him,
those who would presume to discern the mysteries of the cosmos in
order to explain his tribulation. They pursue: "Maybe you did
this, or that – perhaps your sorrow can be explained
thusly. Maybe if you had done this, or that
– perhaps your sorrow would not have come to pass."
Have
you ever had such "comforters" during times of tribulation?
Unlike many of us, Job had no trouble telling his comforters what
he thought of them: I
have heard many such things: miserable comforters are ye all.
Shall vain words have an end? or what emboldeneth thee that
thou answerest? I also could speak as ye do: if your soul were
in my soul’s stead, I could heap up words against you, and shake
mine head at you. But I would strengthen you with my mouth,
and the moving of my lips should asswage your grief. Though
I speak, my grief is not asswaged: and though I forbear, what
am I eased? When
Trent Lott’s "comforters" spoke "on his behalf,"
their utter lack of sympathy reminded me of the above passage.
But
beyond that, all similarity ends. Job’s miserable comforters, albeit
obtuse and without any apparent sympathy, were perhaps at least
sincere. Job clearly recognizes their callousness, and tells them
so, but he certainly doesn’t apologize for sins he did not commit.
With
Friends Like These …
Every
demagogue that can divine the smell of a struggling victim of political
correctness has been teased out of his lair, and their reactions
have been unsurprising; but no less surprising are the reactions
of those who one would expect, in perhaps another time and place,
might come to his defense.
Our
brave and wise president affirmed that "Recent comments by
Senator Lott do not reflect the spirit of our country. He has apologized,
and rightly so. Every day our nation was segregated was a day that
America was unfaithful to our founding ideals." Another chapter
of Profiles
in Courage.
But
I don’t want to give the impression that I think the president is
only a fool, or coward – there seem to be fairly clear motives for
his statement.
On
the 22 December 2002
Meet the Press, David Broder of The Washington Post
observed, This
was a coup, and it was brilliantly executed on the part of the
White House because, so far, nobody has actually been able to
find White House fingerprints on this. But the president ends
up with the very person that he most wanted as majority leader,
Bill Frist, in the job. Broder
later added that "we [the press] allowed anonymous sources
from the administration to use us to take down Senator Lott."
Cut
to Frist, with no apparent sense of propriety, or at least not able
to hide his glee, beams for reporters as he exits the gated protection
of his home.
Colin
Powell chimes in, "I was disappointed in the senator’s statement.
I deplored the sentiments behind the statement. There was nothing
about the 1948 election or the Dixiecrat agenda that should have
been acceptable in any way to any American at that time or any American
now." In case anyone is in any doubt regarding the Secretary
of State’s feelings, there were four superlatives in that last sentence.
Among
the profane things that were included in the 1948 Dixiecrat platform,
those things about which "nothing … should have been acceptable
in any way to any American at that time or any American now,"
were "protection of the American people against the onward
march of totalitarian government [that] requires a faithful observance
of Article X of the American Bill of Rights," resisting "the
gradual but certain growth of a totalitarian state by domination
and control of a political minded Supreme Court," opposing
"the totalitarian, centralized, bureaucratic government and
the police state called for by the platforms of the Democratic and
Republican conventions" and the "usurpation of the legislative
function by the executive and judicial departments,"
and support of "home rule, local self-government, and a minimum
interference with individual rights."
Aren’t
these the principles that all freedom-loving Americans cherish?
But
we don’t need to be selective in the voices of those who verbally
stabbed Lott in the back. "When his comrades spoke, they spoke
with knives, and when there was silence, the silence was deafening."
The
Washington Post reports that "longtime friend and ally,
former housing secretary Jack Kemp, called Lott’s remarks ‘inexplicable,
indefensible and inexcusable.’" Pat
Buchanan adds that "Not only was Lott abandoned by his
president and his old friend Jack Kemp, he must have been even more
disheartened at the sickening silence of his Republican caucus.
He was their leader, he was under savage attack, and they never
rode to the rescue."
To
be certain, I hold no brief for Lott, but the repellent cowardice
and slimy opportunism evidenced by his comrades would be almost
enough to elicit sympathy for any victim.
The
Killing Fields
The
Killing Fields recounts the horror of the 1975 Cambodian
revolution though the eyes of the impossibly heroic Cambodian journalist
Dith Pran, and his New York Times counterpart, Sydney Schanberg.
This is one of the most moving and disturbing films I have ever
seen.
(If
there is anyone who has not seen this film, I offer one caveat:
I know many serious and unsentimental people who had difficulty
seeing the film to its conclusion. One scene is reminiscent of The
Apocalypse.)
A
low point in the film is when the French Embassy hands over the
monarchy of Cambodia to the Khmer Rouge, at whose hands they will
surely meet their death. In the film, at least, the only sympathy
the French ambassador could muster was a sarcastic, "Adieu,
ancien regime."
The
U.S., in another of its brilliant play-one-against-the-other strategies,
preferred the Maoist Khmer Rouge over the stable Cambodian monarchy
because of its hatred for the Vietnamese. Even after the horror
of the killing fields the
Reagan administration backed Pol Pot in exile, so that in the
words of one U.S. official, "we can achieve a better result"
in the "last battle of the Vietnam War."
In
the film, an attempt is made at distributing blame. A fellow journalist
asks Schanberg, with the cameras rolling, "How do you respond
to the accusations that you and other journalists underestimated
the brutality of the Khmer Rouge and so share responsibility for
what happened in Cambodia afterwards?" He responds defensively
but accurately, "We made a mistake. Maybe what we underestimated
was the kind of insanity that seven billion dollars worth of bombing
could produce."
During
one six month period in 1973, U.S. B-52s dropped the equivalent
of five Hiroshimas on this mostly Iron Age culture, killing as many
as hundreds of thousands.
The
only thing that doesn’t quite ring true about the journalist’s question
appearing in the film is the astonishing complicity with which the
Western press concealed these brutal events. In How
Democracies Perish, Jean François Revel notes the
near-absence of headlines in the Western press that would give any
indication that the Cambodian terror even took place.
In
Modern
Times, Paul Johnson describes how "Sartre’s Children"
(as he refers to the intellectuals that orchestrated the revolution),
the Angka Loeu ("Higher Organization"), overtook
Phnom Penh with shocking swiftness and brutality:
On
April 17 over three million people were living in Phnom Penh.
They were literally pushed into the surrounding countryside.
The violence started at 7 am with attacks on Chinese shops;
then general looting. The first killings came at 8:45 am. Fifteen
minutes later troops began to clear the Military Hospital, driving
doctors, nurses, sick and dying into the streets. An hour later
they opened fire on anyone seen in the streets, to start a panic
out of the city. At noon the Preah Ket Melea hospital was cleared:
hundreds of men, women and children, driven at gunpoint, limped
out into midday temperatures of over 100 Fahrenheit. Of twenty
thousand wounded in the city, all were in the jungle by nightfall.
One man carried his son, who had just had both legs amputated;
others pushed the beds of the very ill, carrying bottles of
plasma and serum. Every hospital in the city was emptied. All
papers and records in the city were destroyed. All books were
thrown into the Mekong River or burned on the banks. The paper
money in the Banque Khmer de Commerce was incinerated. Cars,
motorbikes and bicycles were impounded. Rockets and bazookas
were fired at homes where any movement was detected. There were
many summary executions. The rest were told, "Leave immediately
or we will shoot all of you." By evening the water supply
was cut off. What gave this episode its peculiar Kafkaesque
horror was the absence of any visible authority. The peasant-soldiers
simply killed and terrified, obeying orders, invoking the commands
of the Angka Loeu. Nothing was explained. The intellectuals
who had planned it never appeared. One
of the journalists in the film observed that half of the revolutionaries
"were under fifteen." Surely, it is hard to imagine other
than children being as uncompromising, and as cruel.
When
the revolution was accomplished, and the "re-education"
camps were organized, the most prized souls were the very young,
those who had not been exposed to the wickedness of their fathers,
those who had not been corrupted by the former culture. Conceived
in sinlessness, only they were pure enough.
In
a monologue, Pran imagines that he is corresponding with Schanberg,
and tells him of his experience in the camp: They
tell us that God is dead and now the party they call the Angka
will provide everything for us. Angka has identified
and proclaims the existence of a bad new disease – a memory
sickness – diagnosed as thinking too much about life in pre-Revolutionary
Cambodia. He says, we are surrounded by enemies. The
enemy is inside us. No one can be trusted. We must be
like the ox and have no thought except for the party. No
love, but for the Angka. We must honor the comrade children
whose minds are not corrupted by the past. During
this recitation, a child is shown in front of a classroom blackboard,
on which is drawn in chalk the scene of a home, with family members
holding hands. The child responds to the image by drawing an "X"
through the mother and father, and erasing the point at which the
parent’s and child’s hands intersect. At that moment, the watching
students applaud.
In
one memorable scene, a little girl examines the hands of an old
man who apparently was not working hard enough. She orders him to
be taken aside, where a blue bag is placed over his head, and he
is shot.
According
to Johnson, the details of Angka’s plan had been acquired
by State Department expert Kenneth Quinn, which described "total
revolution," The
scheme was an attempt to telescope, in one terrifying coup,
the social changes brought about over twenty-five years in Mao’s
China. There was to be a "total social revolution."
Everything about the past was "anathema and must be destroyed."
It was necessary to "psychologically reconstruct individual
members of society." It entailed "stripping away,
through terror and other means, the traditional bases, structures
and forces which have shaped and guided an individual’s life"
and then "rebuilding him according to party doctrines by
substituting a series of new values."
Pran,
an educated man who knows French and English, continues his monologue,
Angka
says that those who were guilty of soft living in the years
of the great struggle and did not care for the sufferings of
the peasant must confess because now is the Year Zero and everything
is to start anew. I’m full of fear. I must show no understanding.
I must have no past. This is the Year Zero, and nothing has
gone before. A
quarter of the population perished in that revolution.
Republican
Rouge
Obviously
the heartbreaking revolution in Cambodia depicts the most dismal
conception of the State of Nature, and I don’t expect bloodbaths
any time soon on American soil by atheist revolutionaries; but I’m
always reminded of these scenes when I see the results of our own
re-education camps: the public school system, the popular culture,
and the press. There may be little carnage in our system (its insidiousness
makes it unnecessary), but its subtlety probably provides more efficient
and comprehensive results.
I
feel my gore rise whenever I hear the latest lecture on the latest
glorious step in social progress and the unmitigated evil that it
replaces. However, the putridity of L’Affair Lot has crystallized
how degenerate our "leaders" and "intellectuals"
have become.
The
Republican Party is beginning to look more like Angka than
the party of Robert Taft. And to the neocons that control it, the
"Year Zero" is 1964, and no one can spew enough bile at
their ancestors to satisfy those that were born in the purity of
time marked by the passage of the Civil Rights Act. And anyone who
disagrees with them suffers from the Memory Sickness, and must be
removed.
Bill
Clinton spewed, How
can they jump on him when they’re out there repressing, trying
to run black voters away from the polls and running under the
Confederate flag in Georgia and South Carolina? … I mean, look
at their whole record. He just embarrassed them by saying in
Washington what they do on the backloads every day. This
is to be expected from the former Slimeball in Chief, but how are
the neocons any better?
According
to The Washington Post, editor of The Weekly Standard
Bill Kristol said, "Oh G-- … It’s ludicrous. He should remember
it’s the party of Lincoln."
For
once Bill Kristol has it right: The Republican Party is indeed The
Party of Lincoln. Lincoln did the dirtiest work, murdering the infant
republic in its crib, but The Party of Lincoln tirelessly continues
the work of expanding the American State, while still taking credit
for American rights while it in fact excises them. At least in its
recent history (the last half-century), there were Republicans patriotic
enough to warn of the coming theft, but those days are long gone.
Jonah
Goldberg of National Review could
not hide the admiration of his Leftist fellow-travelers: "The
mainstream press missed the story for days and were it not for the
highly acute ears of the civil-rights establishment, the story might
have been missed entirely." Goldberg moralized that he cannot
excuse Lott’s "indefensible comments."
But
Goldberg’s admiration is disingenuous. Surely he knows that it wasn’t
the "civil-rights establishment" that whipped up this
story – it was his neocon buddies that did so. Perhaps he’s being
clever, including himself and his compadres in the "civil-rights
establishment."
On
the 22 December 2002
Meet the Press, David Broder lamented, "I think
many of us in the news media also did not acquit ourselves terribly
well. Took a long time for this story to develop. Many reporters
at the event did not write about it in the first instance."
And Robert George of the New York Post added that "…
the internet journalists and the web site bloggers and so forth
kept this story bubbling in that very first weekend."
Steve
Sailer of VDARE.com goes
further: The
fundamental fact is that this disaster was almost completely
self-inflicted by Republican pundits. It was the "right
wing" mouthpieces, not the liberals, who went hysterical.
Soon
afterwards, two of Clinton’s attack dogs, Sidney Blumenthal
and James Carville, sent out mass emails trying to peddle the
story. The websites of a few Democrats picked it up. But the
big-time liberal media still wasn't interested.
Sailer
quotes the 17 December New York Times as identifying
the real culprits:
Early,
widespread and harsh criticism by conservative commentators
and publications has provided much of the tinder for the political
fires surrounding Senator Trent Lott. … Conservative columnists,
including Andrew Sullivan, William Kristol and Charles Krauthammer,
and publications like National Review and the Wall
Street Journal have castigated Mr. Lott … The
Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz confirmed Lott’s assault by bloggers
David Frum, Andrew Sullivan, and Glenn Reynolds.
Deadly
Confession
Dith
Pran concludes, The
wind whispers of fear and hate. The war has killed love. And
those who confess to the Angka vanish, and no one dares
ask where they go. Here, only the silent survive. In
the camp, confession is encouraged. In one "meeting,"
a couple confesses their past "sins," surely expecting
salvation from Angka. They are embraced by the camp elder,
and those in attendance applaud. Later, when no one else is looking,
Pran sees them being dragged away, blue bags placed on their heads,
taken away to be shot.
Angka
always demands a confession of sins that have not been committed
– in the form of a public apology. In this perfect antithesis of
Christian confession, forgiveness and salvation is replaced by damnation
and death.
In
one of the most disgusting displays in the history of the republic,
after already confessing ad nauseam, the Senate Majority
Leader of the United States of America appeared on Black Entertainment
Television to complete the humiliation. BET host Ed Gordon asked,
"What about affirmative action?" "I'm for that,"
answered Lott enthusiastically. "Across the board?" "Absolutely,
across the board."
If
anyone believes that Angka is satisfied with confession,
Lott’s confessions are instructive.
At
the end of it all, what was gained? Was he respected by anyone for
his prolonged prostration before the high priests of egalitarianism?
Those who believed the confession wasn’t necessary certainly don’t
respect him, and those who believed it was do not believe him anyway.
In
confessing false sins, no one believes the apology of the accused,
nor waits for the forgiveness of the accuser.
And
as anyone could have predicted, the oblation was not enough to save
him, and it only spurred the pursuit of reparations and other inanity.
Poddy
Trained
The
"blue bag" that our modern leftist revolutionaries use
to suffocate anyone who is not in sync with their domestic and foreign
policy agendas is the accusation of racism, and the neocon preference
is anti-Semitism. It is meant to forever silence the victim, and
the results are usually devastating.
Goldberg
again: "Liberals were on the right side of history on the issue
of race." Neocons like Goldberg have very good reason for feeling
that way. Many of the neocon doctors are "converted" Trotskyites,
whose ideology may have changed slightly, but their methodology
hasn’t changed a whit. They play the race card with the best of
them, and play it often.
He
continues, "This event represented the death rattle of conservatism’s
racist fringe, not its reemergence. The most-prominent exception,
predictably, is Pat Buchanan, a man who had to leave the Republican
party entirely because his views, not just on race [emphasis
mine] …" In reality, Buchanan is the most prominent exception
of those who have not been utterly destroyed by hysterical neocon
finger-pointing, and they hate it.
But
even Mr. Goldberg is not that ignorant. Pat Buchanan did not "have
to leave," but left the Republican Party out of disgust; it
had nothing whatsoever to do with race; and probably the most controversial
aspect of his 2000 bid swirled over his interpretation of the events
surrounding WW II in A Republic, Not an Empire.
And
while we’re at it, Goldberg thinks, what the hell, let’s go ahead
and call the entire Old Right a bunch of racist kooks: "In
fact, prior to Trent Lott’s idiocy, most conservatives I know would
have assumed it did not exist at all – except among the fever swamps
of the so-called paleo-Right."
The
Party of … Trotsky?
But
should any of this be surprising?
In
the 13 January 2003 issue of The American Conservative, J.
P. Zmirak makes the case that "Neoconservatism owes more to
Trotsky than to Burke."
Zmirak
points out that: Because
[the Trotskyites] supported a global Marxist revolution, and
a system which had no national host on which it could feed,
they were able to function much more in the mold of Jacobins,
of "pure" revolutionaries unfettered by national interest
and realpolitik. The
Trotskyites who mutated into neocons "carried a strong tendency
towards pure abstraction" and tended to see America "not
as our homeland, as the particular place where a people and their
treasured institutions took root, but rather as the (almost accidental)
spot where certain ideas had taken hold."
Zmirak
quotes a Wall Street Journal editorial writer as saying "Where
you’re born … is of no ideological significance." He continues,
"For Cold War conservatives, anyone, anywhere, who will sign
on to the Declaration of Independence is already an American."
Anything
that doesn’t fit into this neocon formula goes down the memory hole,
including …
the Anglo-Celtic roots of the Founding, the specifically Christian
(mostly Protestant) identity of America, the very existence
of the Confederacy, and the profoundly Western roots of our
culture. For this reason, [historian David] Gress argues, Cold
War conservatives have rendered themselves helpless against
multiculturalism – and undermined the concrete foundations upon
which the edifice of American freedom stands. This
is the intellectual heritage of the neocons – they have no real
nation, no real roots. And the younger seem to know very little
even about their own immediate predecessors – they stand on the
shoulders of no one.
God
Is Dead
According
to Paul Johnson, Friedrich Nietzsche saw the "death of
God" as a casualty: Nietzsche
saw God not as an invention but as a casualty, and his demise
was in some important sense an historical event, which would
have dramatic consequences. He wrote in 1886: "The greatest
event of recent times – that ‘God is dead,’ that the belief
in the Christian God is no longer tenable – is beginning to
cast its first shadows over Europe." Among the advanced
races, the decline and ultimately the collapse of the religious
impulse would leave a huge vacuum. The history of modern times
is in great part the history of how that vacuum has been filled.
Nietzsche rightly perceived that the most likely candidate would
be what he called the "Will to Power," which offered
a far more comprehensive and in the end more plausible explanation
of human behaviour than either Marx or Freud. In place of religious
belief, there would be secular ideology.
In
Nietzsche’s Also
Sprach Zarathustra, he envisions the letzte Mensch
("last man"):
Everyone
wanteth the same; everyone is equal; he who hath other sentiments
goeth voluntarily into the madhouse.
"Formerly
all the world was insane," say the subtlest of them, and
blink thereby. Reading
this, it’s hard to imagine that Nietzsche never read National
Review, The Weekly Standard, or Commentary.
Goldberg
blinketh, Similarly,
this episode will no doubt be seen by younger conservatives
as a "teaching moment." They will see that the voices
of the conservative movement rejected a past best represented
by a 100-year-old man being put out to pasture and few comments
made in his defense. Yes,
another lesson for the re-education camp. David Frum
agrees: I
think one reason so many of us in the conservative mainstream
have reacted so strongly to the Trent Lott affair was our shock
and surprise – we all assumed that the attitudes Lott expressed
had vanished from our midst twenty and thirty years ago. Then,
suddenly, they ripped the door off the crypt and emerged nightmarishly
into the daylight again, rotten but undead. Shocking!
It’s hard to imagine that such times even existed – twenty,
even thirty years ago, even before Mr. Goldberg and Mr. Frum
were even born!
With
all the deep and mature perspective one might find in the films
Footloose or Pleasantville, our comrade children at
National Review don’t even seem to be aware what the intellectual
forefathers of their own magazine once believed in the dim recesses
of the latter half of the last century.
As
Paul Gottfried recently
pointed out, Throughout
the sixties, moreover, NR featured multiple pointed attacks
on the civil rights movement by James Burnham, Frank Meyer,
Will Herberg, Jeffrey Hart, and its editor-in-chief. Frum’s
attempt to associate the paleos, and more specifically The
American Conservative, with obsessive anti-Semitism because
of their criticism of Israeli foreign policy, overlooks the
willingness of NR’s editors in the old days to engage
even more forcefully in "Judeo-critical" commentary.
Burnham did so throughout the sixties; and in 1961, Buckley
himself attacked the Israeli showcasing of the Eichmann trial
for nurturing Teutonophobia and for expressing Jewish vengefulness.
In the fullness of time, Buckley would preside over a publication
that specialized in both. And
Lew
Rockwell recognized that no one was fooled about the real intent
of Civil Rights legislation: Everyone,
both proponents and opponents, knew exactly what that law was:
a statist, centralizing measure that fundamentally attacked
the rights of property and empowered the state as mind reader:
to judge not only our actions, but our motives, and to criminalize
them. What
the little letzte Menschen at NR don’t seem to understand
is that all those wicked people who warned against Civil Rights
legislation saw clearly into the future, and they have been clearly
vindicated.
Steve
Sailer concludes that racial
quotas are the inevitable by-products of our anti-discrimination
laws. When Barry Goldwater explained how the 1964 Civil Rights
Act would lead to quotas, Hubert Humphrey famously promised
to eat a printed copy of the law if it ever happened. But merely
a half-decade later, quotas were commonplace. Nunquam
Fidelis
During
the 12 January
2003 Meet the Press, Tim Russert informed Mr. Frist that
in the University of Michigan admissions process, being a "person
of color" gained one twenty points (out of a possible 150),
while a perfect SAT score was worth only twelve points.
Frist
was asked by Russert what he thought about all that. Mr. Frist said
he couldn’t comment on it because he didn’t know anything about
the Michigan admission process.
In
a party that claims to be against racial quotas, in the clearest
imaginable example of such, our Republican president (after a great
deal of time) hasn’t seemed to be able to make a decision on it,
and the Republican Senate Majority Leader pleads ignorance.
When
the president finally did make up his mind, it was in the form of
political double-talk. He and his staff made it sound as though
the president was against quotas, but also that it was awfully clear
that they had better be diverse. 1964 all over again, except that
the president is one of the bad guys – he believes diversity goals
are just swell.
In
a later piece by Sailer, he quotes Bush explaining helpful schemes
to achieve "diversity": Some
states are using innovative ways to diversify their student
bodies. Recent history has proven that diversity can be achieved
without using quotas. Systems in California and Florida and
Texas have proven that by guaranteeing admissions to the top
students from high schools throughout the state, including low
income neighborhoods, colleges can attain broad racial diversity. The
Bush brothers’ "X-percent solutions" that were introduced
in Texas and Florida are "blatant schemes for achieving quotas."
Ensuring that a percentage of students are admitted from even the
worst schools is even worse than outright quota systems, which at
least admit the highest potential students within each race.
Yet
worse, Bush continued, "Schools should seek diversity by considering
a broad range of factors in admissions, including a student’s potential
and life experiences." Even though heroic neocons like Bill
Bennett went to all the trouble of traveling clear across America
to defeat a proposition in a state that’s not his home, the Proposition
209 ban on racial preferences passed by a wide margin. But, of course,
the government ignored the people’s wishes, and found ways to sidestep
the law. The solution that Bush praises for California is yet another
subversion of Prop. 209, where applicants get extra credit for hardships,
such as receiving gunshot wounds. That’s probably taking "the
school of hard knocks" a little far.
Could
the president’s policy be any more disastrous? Isn’t this a states’
rights issue anyway? (The Bush brothers and the "conservative"
members of the Supreme Court made it pretty clear how they felt
about states’ rights during the 2000 presidential election.)
And
the president’s State of the Union address was filled with proposed
multi-billion dollar program after multi-billion dollar program
– imagined rights of every shape and size – a leftist’s dream. And
he means what he says – the president’s spending rate increase is
double Clinton’s.
I
ask my Republican friends, when they seem frustrated (which isn’t
often enough): "So, what else did you expect?" The invariable
answer comes: "What else is there – the Democrats?" This
is supposed to be the slam-dunk question.
I
tell them that there isn’t anyone else, or any other solution, nor
will there ever be as long as they continue in their miserable and
pathetic co-dependent relationship with the American State. They
believe their lover when he tells them he’ll never cheat on them
again, but not only does he continue to cheat, he has the habits
of a satyr, and to add to the humiliation it’s carried out in broad
daylight.
But
they still keep believing.
Whether
by cowardice, cynicism, or cluelessness, it’s irrefutable that both
parties are dead set at removing every last remnant of Old America.
It’s gone far beyond the possibility for "compromise"
– it’s not that our leaders’ hearts aren’t in it any more, it’s
not even that they’ve surrendered the battlefield. It’s that they
don’t even show up for battle because they’re fornicating with the
enemy.
Isn’t
it far past time to break it off?
February
1, 2003
Brian
Dunaway [send him
mail] is a chemical engineer and a native Texan.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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