Hoping
Against Hope for No Signs of Life
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
DIGG THIS
We now have
Obama/Biden and McCain/Palin. If you are a voter, you will be thinking:
"There are some great things and some awful things about both
tickets, so how do I know which team will be best for the country?"
In case you
missed it – the country is filled with 300 plus million people,
many of whom are deeply in debt. Before they can even start to pay
off that debt, they work 113
days each year to pay off their local, state and federal taxes.
This legal plunder
supplements local, state and national borrowing which has produced
a kind of snowballing catastrophe, bankrupting municipalities and
cities across the country, and creating a
nation that owes an astounding $100 trillion dollars that it
has little intention and less capability of paying back.
That’s pretty
overwhelming. But there’s more! This same nation lays claim to an
unsustainable military empire, and in pursuit of easy living and
glory has warped its national culture and economy into an ungodly
union of Spartan machismo and Bismarckian
pre-fascism.
The icing on
the cake is not that electoral systems are generally untrustworthy,
as are the politicians themselves. The icing on the cake is that
over 100 million Americans will actually show up to vote this November
with a fervently held idea that the vote means national change of
any kind.
Keeping this
in mind – which pair of presidential hopefuls would be better? If
it is true that a government that governs least, governs best, we
need to choose the weakest, least imaginative and laziest candidate.
We want a president and vice president who are able to happily accomplish
the limited executive duties as set forth in Article II of the Constitution,
and then lie back utterly exhausted, without a single creative idea
about what they could do next.
In addition
to a weak, unimaginative and lazy candidate, we need someone who
will have difficulty working with the idiot Congress. This difficulty
could be the result of different political views (the fantastical
split-party idea), real earnestness on the part of the executive
branch to serve the Constitution (unlikely), or a personality type
that will forestall the "governing" process.
Let’s examine
the choices. Obama is weak (good!) – but he is imaginative in a
socialist utopian way. Sadly, he is also not lazy, and he appears
to be a cooperative team player. Obama gets one point.
Biden is better
on this scale. He is also weak, and better yet, he seems unimaginative
and somewhat lazy! But like most in the Congress, he has a penchant
for working with others to grow government, and is a loyal nurturer
of the warfare-welfare state. Notwithstanding his liberty-destroying
neoconservatism, Biden gets three out of four.
McCain is not
weak, but like Biden, he is lazy and unimaginative. And if he really
was a maverick – going his own way instead of following the herd
– that would be a plus. But he is a deal-making compromising class
clown, secretly yearning for approval and constantly fearing he
won’t get it. But for being lazy and unimaginative, McCain gets
two points.
Palin is not
lazy – a big negative in my book. She is also not weak, another
negative. But she is unimaginative, and given her apparent willingness
to fire people, threaten to fire people, and her failure to fall
into line with the GOP network in Alaska, I’d have to say she isn’t
really a team player, past basketball career aside. So Palin gets
two points.
|
Candidate
|
Preferred
Presidential Qualities
|
|
Weak
|
Unimaginative
|
Lazy
|
Non-cooperative
|
|
Obama
|
x
|
`
|
`
|
`
|
|
Biden
|
x
|
x
|
x
|
`
|
|
McCain
|
`
|
x
|
x
|
`
|
|
Palin
|
`
|
x
|
`
|
x
|
If we look
at these presidential teams, both have an equal number of points,
but the McCain-Palin team has extra dullness (!) and provides the
only example of combativeness with governing institutions and the
fat cats who live in them with the inclusion of the Alaskan.
Comedian Lewis
Black is surely correct, and this country really could use a
dead president (n.b. foul language). If we cannot have a dead
president, Black outlines another presidential selection process,
one with real possibilities. We take the latest winner of American
Idol (popular democracy at its best!), blindfold the winner, and
have them throw a dart at a large map of the United States. Then
we fly a monkey over the area marked by the American Idol winner,
throw the monkey out of the plane (wearing a parachute, of course),
and the first person the monkey touches is the next president.
For many observers,
this was McCain’s strategy in selecting his running mate, but the
Palin choice was predictable, given McCain’s internal polling data.
One need read only Richard
Land’s advice to McCain on August 11th to understand
McCain’s gamble.
The
happy fact is it doesn’t matter who is elected. The tenor of the
fake Washington whine about "free trade and market access"
will stay the same. The annoying Washington complaints and military
threats over how some foreign country isn’t treating its people,
its minorities, its churches, synagogues, mosques or temples, its
women, its neighbors, its resources, its prisoners, its poppy plants
and its puppies the way we think they ought will continue. Waste,
fraud and abuse – native to all governments, will continue at a
Bushian pace. We should certainly expect a continued, even accelerated
erosion of freedom and liberties in the next decade.
On election
day, it will be exciting to watch, and it might be fun to place
a bet, and throw your chips down on this or that hand. But when
we are ready to truly change the country’s direction, we won’t wait
for an appointed day and month, and we certainly won’t line up,
ID cards in hand, implicitly legitimizing the criminal empire as
we "choose" its next rulers.
September
1, 2008
LRC
columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send
her mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on
defense issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com,
hosted the call-in radio show American
Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com
and Liberty and Power.
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Copyright ©
2008 Karen Kwiatkowski
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