‘Republicrats,’ Barr the Door!
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
DIGG THIS
I read with
keen interest in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that former
Congressman Bob Barr, R-GA, may be considering running for president
as the candidate of the Libertarian Party. Then I read with growing
disgust the comments posted on the AJC blog, condemning Barr for
even thinking of it. No, we have to get on board McCain’s "Straight
Talk Express." To save America. From whom? Why, from the Democrats,
of course!
You remember
the Democrats. That party of big government, big spending, always
squandering American blood and treasure on foreign soil. (Remember
Vice Presidential candidate Bob Dole in 1976: "All the wars
o’ the 20th Century have been Democrat wars!") Surely,
we must rally behind the Republican ticket to keep America safe
and strong!
As we (some
of us) have been doing for decades. It will be 40 years ago this
fall that I picked up a copy of National Review with the
cover story, "A plea to conservatives from Barry Goldwater."
Goldwater’s plea was that we not "throw away" our votes
by casting our ballots for American Party candidate George C. Wallace
of Alabama. Because many of us heeded Goldwater’s plea, Richard
Nixon narrowly defeated Democrat Hubert Humphrey.
From that time
to the present day, a Republican has been in the White House for
28 of the past 40 years. Ronald Reagan also enjoyed the support
of a Republican Senate for six of his eight years. Republicans controlled
both houses of Congress from 1995-2006, including the first six
of President George W. Bush’s eight years in the Oval Office. Jimmy
Carter made no Supreme Court appointments in his single term, so
ten consecutive nominees seated on the Supreme Court were the choices
of Republican presidents. What have we achieved with all this Republican
success?
Are you proud,
conservatives, of our great Republican annual deficits of $400 billion
(conservatively estimated) and our national debt of nine (or is
it ten now?) TRILLION dollars? Are you proud of a government willing
to go to war at the drop of a hat or the tilt of a turban? Are you
glad we are paying for our wars and our vast military empire through
our increasing financial dependence on Communist China, among others?
Aren't you glad that our wars in the oil rich Middle East have driven
oil prices above $100 a barrel?
Aren't you
happy we have established the principle under this administration
that the president has the power to lock up American citizens indefinitely,
without trial, without charges, without due process? Won't you be
delighted when the next Democratic president (Hillary Clinton?)
builds on that precedent?
Don’t you feel
so much safer now that the same administration that apparently ignored
warnings of a terrorist attack prior to 9-11 now claims that to
prevent another one it needs to listen to our international phone
calls without a warrant? Aren't you glad the allegedly conservative
party is about to nominate a candidate for president whose contempt
for the freedom of speech guaranteed in the First Amendment has
been expressed in various ways, most ominously in features of his
McCain-Feingold Campaign Reform Act?
Ah, but Obama
(or Clinton) will pack the federal courts with liberal judges! Uh-huh.
And we may be sure the Republican nominee won’t? Amnesia is fast
becoming the leading cause of mental dysfunction among Republicans.
Sure, Reagan gave us Scalia and Rehnquist as chief justice. Bush
’41 gave us Clarence Thomas and Bush ’43 nominated Roberts and Alito,
who, so far, appear pretty good. But who gave us Warren Burger and
Harry Blackmun, the author of the Roe v. Wade decision, along with
Lewis Powell? Nixon. Who gave us John Paul Stevens (Ford) Sandra
Day O’Connor and Anthony Kennedy? (Reagan) David Souter? (Bush ’41).
And once Clinton came into office, who were such good sports about
the whole thing that they whisked through the nominations of Ruth
Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer?
The Republican
members of the Senate, of course, only three of whom voted against
Ginsburg. And that was after the Democrats had "Borked"
Judge Robert Bork and nearly derailed the nomination of Justice
Thomas. If the Republicans believed a fraction of their own rhetoric
about the importance of confirming "strict constructionists"
to the high court, they would have worked to block the Ginsburg
and Breyer appointments.
Time and again,
at every turn, the Republican Party has betrayed its conservative
faithful. So much so that the name "Republican" is now
virtually synonymous with betrayal. But don’t expect lobotomized
Republican voters to notice. They are too busy being frightened
by the Democratic bogeyman.
April
7, 2008
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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