Free
the Elephants!
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
The
direct mail guru and key player in the conservative juggernaut that
began in the 1970s, Richard Vigeurie, was featured this week on the
only television news you can trust – Comedy Central’s The
Daily Show with Jon Stewart..
Vigeurie
has a book out called America’s
Right Turn: How Conservatives Used New and Alternative Media to
Take Power. He said some things on the Daily Show
that are illuminating, particularly for those who think the world
is ending because of our fire-breathing President.
Well,
the President
does seem to be on fire, what with the
glow and all. And something is ending. It’s just not what you
think.
Jon
Stewart said the new right dominated all politics, and the Democrats
and any other viable opposition were in organizational disarray.
True enough …except wait!
Vigeurie
denied that conservatives were in control of our government. Of
course, he is absolutely correct – Vigeurie, Paul
Craig Roberts and so
many others, understand the difference between un-American Jacobins
agonizing and aching for power, and plain old American conservatives.
And regular conservatives, even harnessing modern communications
technology, are not dangerous – if anything, they play a role as
a kind of national conscience, a useful function in a crazed democracy.
Always
advising us to beware of power, for it corrupts. Always reminding
us of the "rules" and our Constitution. Telling us not
always to
do what our friends are doing, save our money, pursue moderation
in all things, watch out for those seven sins. Especially pride,
lust, and gluttony that in government generate hate, empire and
war.
People
that play the conscience rarely get too organized, and usually do
not lead large groups, for this too often requires sacrifice of
principle. Like George W. Bush says, innocent as a child, "It’s
hard… It’s hard work."
Jon
Stewart gets this, too. He asked whether conservatives in delivering
the Bush Presidency had traded their conservative principles to
do it. Vigeurie said, "No, of course not!" and got one
of the biggest laughs of the night. Everyone got the joke, even
Vigeurie himself.
Richard
Vigeurie said that there were three battles, two of which the conservative
movement had already won using direct mail and modern communications
networking for message consolidation, fundraising, and getting out
the vote. The first battle for the conservatives was getting Barry
Goldwater on the ticket in 1964.
The
next was getting Ronald Reagan elected in 1980. Reagan was an early
Goldwater conservative, but as we all know, by the time he took
office, as Jon Stewart likes to say, "… ahhh, not so much."
The
third battle rages on. Vigeurie says the third battle is to get real
conservatives doing the business of government along conservative
lines, which means respect for a budget, a peaceful disintegration
of the global American military empire, and a government that is
out of your pocketbook, out of your bedroom, out of your children’s
lives, and out of your life. Real conservatives appreciate government
that provides only those basic services put forth by the founders,
and one that is properly constrained by, and wholly respects, the
Constitution. Real conservatives love the ideas put forth in the
constitution, and they like the idea of a constitutional Republic.
They really do.
The
third battle is not marked by the glorious triumphalism of George
W. Bush, with his endless wars of religion and resources and his
bottomless pit of debt. If I heard Republican rainmaker Richard
Vigeurie correctly, the third battle is against the George
W. Bush administration.
People
were surprised that conservatives
reeled when they heard young George’s liberty,
freedom and tyranny speech last week. Like Vigeurie said, true
conservatives have not yet achieved their third victory – which
is a constitutionally conservative, principled conservative government
in Washington.
He
says they are still trying, but there is a split, a terrible subterranean
seizure occurring in the new and dominant Republican/Democrat Party,
perhaps several impending rifts that only squirrels
and birds and wise
elephants can sense.
Jon
Stewart said Vigeurie’s book on campaigning and selling ideas is
like a manual, a text book approach. Vigeurie himself said it is
for anyone, "Republicans, democrats, independents, socialists,
anyone can use it…."
Books
are nice, and we should read them. But what is far more important
is to recognize that conservatives may truly be seeking higher ground.
Like the elephants in
Khao Lak, Thailand, perhaps they too are trumpeting, stomping their
feet and beginning to break their chains. One hopes real conservatives
will save their party, even while the rest of the GOP, like a tourist
on a fantasy trip, becomes bewildered and frightened by the rampage.
My
humble objective in this column is, as always, to bridge the gap,
to develop a dialogue and a build helpful understanding between
real Americans and the war-mongering salivating chicken hawk Jacobins
who have been killing people in the name of neoconservatism and
tyranny for some time now.
As
the elephants begin to drag the National Review and the American
Enterprise Institute and a host of other political tourists
in Washington kicking and screaming up to higher ground, I’ll remind
them of the terrifying words of their own god of totalitarian democracy,
Rousseau. Perhaps some people really do have to be "forced
to be free."
January
27, 2005
Karen
Kwiatkowski [send her mail]
is a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, who spent her final four and
a half years in uniform working at the Pentagon. She now lives with
her freedom-loving family in the Shenandoah Valley, and writes a
bi-weekly column on defense issues with a libertarian perspective
for militaryweek.com.
Copyright ©
2005 LewRockwell.com
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