The
Surge Is Working!
by
Thomas R. Eddlem
by Tom R. Eddlem
DIGG THIS
The constant
repetition over talk radio that "the surge is working"
has convinced me that the surge in Iraq has worked. No longer do
I ask: "Working compared to what?" Additional American
casualties are fewer in Iraq today than a year ago, and that’s enough
for me. No longer do I ask: "Fewer than if we pulled out of
Iraq?" or "When will the casualties end?"
No, the surge
is a rousing success.
There’s infallible
logic, there’s invincible logic, and then there’s the far more powerful
logic of repetition. Repetition is a wonderful thing, and I’ve therefore
decided to become a neo-conservative.
Here are my
new beliefs:
- I believe
the U.S. Constitution only applies to Americans … except, of course,
to illegal aliens, and to foreigners who give so much as a hangnail
to one of our embassy personnel or citizens abroad. Those foreigners
have no rights, but the Constitution does apply when it comes
to kicking their butts out of the country, or frying their butts,
respectively.
- I believe
aliens do not possess our inalienable rights under the
Constitution. God only gave rights to Americans, and Thomas Jefferson
was mistaken in the Declaration of Independence about "all
men" possessing "inalienable rights" from God.
Foreigners aren’t really "men," but rather are sub-human.
The Germans had a good word for it a few years back: untermenschen.
- I believe
terrorists don’t deserve trials or habeas corpus, even
though murderers, child molesters and rapists clearly deserve
trials and habeas corpus. The latter are so clearly a better
class of people and have obviously harmed far fewer of my countrymen.
- I believe
that if we give just one trial to some towel-headed Muqbar, Islamofascism
will take us over and impose Islam on my family. I believe this
most sincerely even though I repeat every hour – on the hour
we have the best, most powerful and most technologically advanced
military in the world, a military that sits on a pile of nuclear
weapons.
- I believe
people who oppose indefinite detention without trials want the
terrorists to win. Those people who insist upon trials will allow
the Islamofascists to impose a tyranny upon us, and the liberals
who support trials would rue the day they win because that coming
Islamofascist tyranny may not even allow trials.
- I believe
the Founding Fathers never envisioned our rights being extended
to aliens abroad, and that they had ample opportunity to explain
the rights of foreigners if they had wished. That’s because I
also believe that the liberal media has hidden from the historical
record the hundreds of foreign wars our Founding Fathers waged
abroad. You can bet the Founders didn’t Mirandize all millions
of towel-heads they detained, nor did they give a trial to the
spies they caught like John
Andre. (That’s a link to a liberal media lie, I’m sure.)
- I believe
that all of those detained by our military on a chaotic battlefield
are guilty, hardened terrorists, and those handed over to our
forces by sweet, well-intentioned bounty hunters are all equally
guilty. None of those detained are innocent,
not that we should care about those rag-heads anyway.
- I believe
that when our soldiers interrogate detainees and use
as a guide a chart which claims to explain "Communist
Attempts to Elicit False Confessions," that our interrogators
will extract only truthful information that is vital to our safety.
We should base our whole national security policy upon this information.
- I believe
the jurisdiction of the U.S. Constitution does not reach outside
of the geographic United States … except in cases where the President
wants our military to strike, which is just about everywhere.
- I believe
people who support the Bill of Rights are living in a September
10th worldview.
- I believe
the Constitution is not a suicide pact, so we must do away with
all that Constitution stuff about trials, torture, habeas corpus
and prohibition against warrantless surveillance.
- I believe
we must strike the right balance between liberty and security,
which means we should err on the side of security and strike out
liberty. Clearly, we can not have both liberty and security. Ben
Franklin was just as wrong as Thomas Jefferson.
- I believe
in the Founding Fathers’ concept of limited government, but only
when the Republican Party leadership and Fox News Channel (or
do I repeat myself) tells me to do so.
Yes, I have
evolved. I believe what I hear.
Repetition
is all. I have to end this column now, because Sean Hannity is about
to go on the air.
July
29, 2008
Thomas
R. Eddlem
[send him mail] is
a freelance writer who never thought he was that bright. But he
has been published in more than 20 periodicals, and his essays have
been re-published in five books. Recently, he has written the introduction
to William Norman Grigg’s latest book, Liberty
In Eclipse, and has also contributed a chapter to an
upcoming biography on Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, Ron
Paul: A Life.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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