My Election Prediction
by Steven LaTulippe
by Steven LaTulippe
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Every election
season, various pundits and politicians declare the upcoming contest
to be the most important one of our lifetime. The very future of
the universe, they claim, hangs in the balance. But given the enormous
inertia of American statism and the fuzzy distinctions between the
major parties, that assertion is usually pure hyperbole. No matter
which side wins, the erosion of our liberties and the growth of
government continue more or less unabated.
Nevertheless,
in the particular instance of the upcoming 2006 midterm elections,
I think this cliché is spot-on. In all probability, the Republicans
will suffer a crushing defeat this November, most likely including
the loss of at least one house of congress.
Before I get
reams of nasty email from those unhappy with this forecast, let
me make one point absolutely clear: Predicting that the Republicans
will lose is not the same thing as believing that the Democrats
deserve to win. The Democratic Party has inflicted unconscionable
damage on our republic. Their history is replete with militarism,
statism, and socialism. They lied us into WW I, WW II, Korea, and
Vietnam. They’ve been indefatigable in their promotion of ever-bigger
government. They’ve overseen the creation of several gargantuan
and unsustainable entitlement programs, and they’ve inflicted the
plague of mindless political correctness on our culture. The Democrats
are, in short, a pack of shameless, government-worshipping charlatans.
That said,
due to the realities of our two-party political system, the only
way the Republicans can lose is if the Democrats win, and numerous
facts surrounding the upcoming election point to a decisive Democratic
victory.
I base my prediction
on three assertions:
#1 The American
people will demand accountability
If the neocons
should win this election and retain control of congress, it would
set an appalling precedent for future generations. The administration
engaged in a conscious policy of lies and deception designed to
fool the American people into supporting their wars. They stoked
the people’s fears and manipulated us in the most cynical ways.
These wars have left much of the Middle East a smoking ruin and
have caused the deaths of thousands of innocent people. In the process,
the neocons have run our nation to the brink of bankruptcy and have
soiled our reputation before the rest of the world. And if that
were not enough, they have exploited the situation to enrich themselves
and to gut the Constitution with a myriad of shady policies and
programs (e.g., NSA email monitoring, extra-judicial wiretaps, torture,
renditions, etc.).
It is inconceivable
that they could get away with this, that there should not be a day
of reckoning. It is unimaginable that they should maintain control
of the government and win yet another election.
The American
people, for history’s sake, will issue a verdict from the court
of poetic justice. They will hand the Republicans a crushing defeat
this November. To do otherwise would be to reward the neocons’ schemes
and set a horrifying example for future generations of aspiring
demagogues.
#2 The virtues
of divided government
Describing
the Republicans and the Democrats as political parties is somewhat
of a misnomer, since it implies that they harbor some sort of transcendent
philosophy that guides them in their policies and programs.
Nothing
could be further from the truth. The Republicans and Democrats are
actually more like carrion birds, like two vultures fighting over
the eyeball of a dead wildebeest. They serve as bagmen for two antagonistic
sets of special interest groups. Their sole purpose is to wrest
control of the government’s machinery from the opposite party so
as to siphon as much money as possible into the pockets of their
patrons.
When viewed
from this perspective, it becomes obvious why divided government
works better than one-party rule. During the 1990s, when Clinton
was president and the Republicans ran congress, the growth of government
spending was much slower than it has been in the era of Republican
dominance (despite their alleged belief in small government and
fiscal conservatism). Over the past several years, the Republicans
have embarked on a feeding frenzy of pork-barrel spending, no-bid
contracts, and outright fraud. They’ve used their power to suppress
investigations of malfeasance, undermine the Constitution and give
free reign to the necons’ irresponsible foreign policy.
Since these
excesses are becoming more apparent, even to mainstream conservatives,
I believe that the voters will return to their preference for divided
government this November.
#3 Apocalypse
now
As unimaginable
as it might sound, it’s looking more and more like the neocons are
planning to attack Iran sometime after the next election. Yes, our
military is overstretched. Yes, we’re losing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Yes, we’re heading over a financial cliff. Yes, we were cynically
manipulated into the last war. And yes, public opinion has turned
decisively against the Iraq occupation.
But President
Bush is, by all accounts, in the grips of a messianic dream in which
he stars as the new Winston Churchill. He is the savior who will
one day be proven right. He is willing to endure vilification (or,
given his messiah complex, even enjoy it) as the personal price
of saving the world from a nuclear Iran.
The consequences
of such an attack would be catastrophic. The Middle East would explode.
Our soldiers in Iraq would be engulfed in a massive Shia uprising.
Hezbollah would enter the conflict by attacking Israel. Iran would
aid the rebels in Afghanistan. The Persian Gulf’s oil could be blocked
from the marketplace, causing a cataclysmic spike in oil prices.
There is no
sane reason why Iran’s nuclear program should threaten us or prompt
us to attack them. Iran is wedged between several nations with more
powerful militaries than itself (such as Russia and Turkey). Nuclear-armed
Israel and Pakistan are close-by as well.
This issue
is simply none of our business, and we’re in no position to fight
Iran even if it were. The American people are growing weary of endless
war in the Middle East, and they’ll conclude that only a Democratic
victory in November has any chance of stopping it. A Democratic
House or Senate might launch ugly and contentious investigations
into the events surrounding the Iraq War. They could expose the
neocons’ lies and the propaganda campaigns, which might even lead
to the indictment of a few of the more loathsome villains.
If this happened,
it might...might...stop the administration’s march to war
against Iran.
Conclusion:
In many ways,
our republic stands at an historic crossroads. I do not claim that
a Democratic victory would signal a return to limited government
or a saner foreign policy. Rather, I predict the people will decide
that a government divided between two warring parties would freeze
the system and avoid some of the nastier excesses of single-party
rule.
That is not
exactly the same thing as having a government committed to individual
rights and the rule of law, but it offers a hope that I believe
voters will seize decisively come Election Day.
September
29, 2006
Steven
LaTulippe [send him mail]
is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in
the United States Air Force for 13 years.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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