War Is a Conservative Entitlement Program
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
DIGG THIS
Like many Americans
inclined to believe that the news is important, I used to worry
that too many of my fellow citizens were getting their news entirely
from the late-night comedians. Now I worry about those who don’t
get at least some of their news from those midnight merchants of
mirth.
They don’t
give you the full day’s news, of course, but neither do those smooth-talking,
blown dry anchors and stylish "anchorettes" who supposedly
give us "the world" in 22 minutes. And neither do the
all- news channels that essentially give you the same 22 minutes
of news and celebrity gossip over and over again. The world is a
good deal bigger than that.
What the late-night
joke jocks do is give you perspective. Jay Leno can give a news
story more perspective with a good one-liner than all the solemn
talking heads on the various news panels can in a day. There are
many examples to choose from, but one will suffice. Take Leno’s
observation that America has to stay in Iraq "until Iraq has
a government that’s responsive to the voters."
The irony is
delicious and immediately apparent. Ours is a government that does
not, at least in the executive branch, respond to the will of the
voters. If last fall’s election showed anything, it was that the
voters were disgusted with George W. Bush and his war in Iraq. So
like the groundhog who sees his shadow and gives us six more weeks
of winter, Bush has emerged with a "new way forward" that
gets us deeper into the Iraq wars and guarantees that it will be
up to the next president, who will not take office for another two
years, to clean up the mess that Bush and his brain trust have created.
By the way,
can there be a less dubious honor in public life than to be part
of the Bush "brain trust." That must be like what one
reviewer said about Sabrina Duncan, played by Kate Jackson in the
once popular TV series, "Charlie’s Angels." Sabrina was
the intellectual of the trio, the reviewer noted, adding that in
such company an "intellectual" need only be able to count
past ten without taking off her shoes. It’s "all relative"
as they say.
I know it’s
easy, too easy in fact, to ridicule the opposition as a bunch of
dolts. In fact, it’s hard not to when it seems so true. But their
IQ’s are not the problem. I have no doubt Dr. "Condelusional"
Rice could ace all the exams designed by those busy little beavers
at Princeton for measuring school progress under the No Child Left
Behind Act. And I am well aware that it was "The Best and the
Brightest" who got us into the war in Vietnam, or "quagmire"
for short.
So intellect
is not the problem. A conspicuous lack of common sense is. This
is the gang that not only cannot shoot straight, but knows not which
end of the gun is the barrel. And it relies on faulty intelligence
to determine where the targets are located. As the immortal CIA
chief, George Tenet, said: "It’s a slam-dunk, Mr. President."
But listen
to the Bush team and its supporters in your community, if you can
still find some, when they try to defend this war. You can still
hear them falling back on the argument that before the invasion,
Iraq was firing missiles at our aircraft —aircraft enforcing a "no
fly zone" in Iraqi air space. And I concede they have a point.
After all, we didn’t fire any missiles at Iraqi aircraft flying
in U.S. airspace. And U.S. airspace is quite extensive now, since
Bush has lain claim to pretty much the entire planet.
Some months
ago, I heard someone seated at the lunch counter at a local diner
argue that Saddam Hussein "had been thumbing his nose at the
United Nations for 12 years." Wow! That’s a serious offense.
Or is it? It sounds to me like Saddam may have been auditioning
for a prime time speech at the last Republican National Convention.
But think about this: Here was, to all appearances at least, an
average Joe American, most likely not a member of the Council of
Foreign Relations or the faculty at Harvard. Yet he was more willing
to commit American armed forces to enforce United Nations resolutions
than the United Nations was. Is that the Bush legacy?
Here’s another
thing about arguing with the supporters of the Iraq War, which,
by the way, is not good for your blood pressure. If you ask them
straight out, they will admit that Iraq was not behind the 9/11
attacks. But it’s not long before they start arguing as though just
the opposite were true: "They took out two of our buildings!"
Yeah, but you just admitted Iraq didn’t do that.
"I don’t
care! We had 9-11!"
Okay, let’s
see now. The folks who attacked us on 9-11 were Arabs from the Middle
East. Iraq is in the Middle East and it’s populated primarily by
Arabs. Close enough for government work.
"I don’t
care! We had 9-11!"
That means
I guess that we are entitled to attack and invade and occupy wherever
we want, because, aw, hell, it’s Bush’s planet, anyway. (The Bush
theme song: "It’s my planet and I’ll bomb where I want to…").
Bush’s warmongering is not without its compassionate side, so in
addition to more troops for Iraq, the Great Decider has decided
we need to spend $1 billion on a jobs program for Iraq. And the
liberals thought Bush wanted to destroy liberalism. Hell, he just
wants to export and "outsource" it.
Indeed, the
whole Bush war-making operation is an expression of a couple of
features of liberalism that conservatives have been scoffing at
for decades. One is the entitlement mentality. Let’s face it folks,
war has become the conservatives’ favorite entitlement program.
We are entitled to a war of our own choosing. Why? Because we were
attacked on 9-11. (Besides, isn’t good for the old economy?)
Which brings
me to the second feature of liberalism that conservatives have clasped
to their bosoms. America is entitled to all the status and then
some of victimhood. We were victimized on 9-11 and therefore we
are entitled to make any claims we wish. Other nations have been
attacked, often by America, and suffered far worse devastation than
we, but we are special. Our suffering is more authentic than theirs.
If we want a war, we’re entitled to have one. Thousands of Americans
will never return and thousands more have already been maimed for
life. Tens, perhaps even hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis
have been killed and maimed by this war. So what?
"I don’t
care! We had 9-11!"
January
13, 2007
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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