At Last!!
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
DIGG THIS
The news media
are already bringing us news of candidates for president in the
election of 2008. Modesty forbade my announcing my candidacy first,
but now that there are already hats in the ring, I’ll put an end
to the suspense that was torturing so many of you and announce that
I will once again run for the presidency. (Actually, it will be
more of a stroll than a run). Yes, I’m sure you’re relieved. This
is your chance to join that mini-multitude (fifteen, actually) who
voted for me last time.
Do not expect
me to campaign, if, by that, you mean traveling about telling people
what I plan to do if elected. In the first place, I plan to do almost
nothing, and in the second, I wouldn’t spend the money traveling
even if I had it. We have TV, the press, and radio; they will have
to do. From time to time I may step onto my front porch to disburden
myself of something that may need saying. If you would like to shake
my hand, make your way to the porch, or just find some stranger
and shake his. My hand is very similar.
A platform?
I have none. The president is an administrator; he sees that things
get done the way they should be done. He doesn’t need a "platform"
to do that. If elected, I will do those things which I will have
sworn to do: I will be Commander in Chief, but the only command
I am likely to issue will be to bring American troops back home
where they belong. I will grant reprieves and pardons, emptying
our prisons of those hapless souls who have harmed no one but themselves.
I shall make very few Treaties, since they supercede the Constitution
that I am bound to uphold. I shall appoint ambassadors and judges.
I will fill vacancies in Congress that occur during recesses; and
from time to time I’ll send Congress a report on the state of the
union, and recommend for their consideration such measures as I
think necessary and expedient. This latter duty, in fact, will be
the only one requiring more than a few minutes of my time each week.
Rarely, I might convene both houses, or, adjourn them. I’ll receive
ambassadors, take care that all the laws be faithfully executed
(that might also occupy some of my time) and commission officers
of the United States. That’s all there is to it.
It’s hardly
a full-time job, and certainly not a particularly important one.
There would seem little reason for the president to fly about the
world, and I won’t. A weekly news conference? Why? As things are
now, if the president has something important to say, the news commentators
tell us what he’s going to say before he says it. If I have something
to say to the country at large, I’ll send a letter to the editor.
As far as legislation
is concerned, I will veto virtually everything that hits my desk,
since we have too many laws already, and nearly all of them, as
well as bills proposed for enactment, are unconstitutional on their
face. We’ll acknowledge defeat in the war on drugs, and get out
of that business. Federal aid of all types will end. The term "general
welfare" doesn’t mean that the general public provides welfare
for the few.
There is nothing
in the constitutional list of presidential duties that directly
involves foreign policy, but that seems to be generally regarded
as an executive function nonetheless. My foreign policy will be
isolationism. Foreign aid is a preposterous idea that will carry
no weight in my administration. There will be no "most favored"
trading partners; no foreign entanglements.
I’ll spend
most of my time pottering around in the White House gardens, taking
pictures, reading, practicing the piano and, if it can be uncovered
without undue bother and expense, swimming in the White House pool.
From time to time I suppose I’ll have to be the gracious host to
visiting dignitaries, but, unless they’ve just come as tourists,
I don’t see why there should be any visiting dignitaries. We certainly
won’t encourage them to come! And I don’t plan any foreign junkets
myself. I dislike eating with strangers, and eating with stuffy
officious strangers, at some dreary state dinner, would be intolerable.
A lesson I’ve
learned in life is that you can only plan so far in advance. Best
just to start out and take things as they come, so my proposed presidential
term may be more or less different from what I’ve proposed. I don’t
have the answers to every question, but I can pledge that, in whatever
situation I find myself, I’ll be guided by my oath to preserve,
protect, and defend the Constitution, and will do as little as possible
to disturb the free and unfettered flow of American life.
An inaugural
ball? Well, no. I’ll have a few close friends over to the White
House for dinner. A parade, with jets soaring overhead, as a military
band plays stirring music? Probably not. And I promise there will
be no Presidential library when I leave office. We’ve got enough
of those already. And there will be no state funeral. I’ve arranged
to leave my body to my alma mater, so there will be a simple private
memorial service, hopefully presided over by my son.
Oh, and one
more thing: no political party will touch me with a ten or even
twenty foot pole. So just write me in. And thanks!
January
20, 2007
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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