'Vote
For Me, You Jerk!'
(… and then shut up!)
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
"Bigotry,"
according
to Frank Sheed, "does not mean believing that people who differ
from you are wrong; it means assuming that they are either knaves
or fools."
If Sheed is
right, then we might very well have to conclude that the Republican/neocon
party leadership is flirting with bigotry.
To be sure,
they have every reason to be concerned about next week’s elections.
After all, there are millions of one-time Bush supporters who are
failing to report for duty in the war on Democrats, which is Mr.
Bush’s domestic version of the Global War on Terror.
As one longtime
conservative and Republican (in that order) – a high-ranking, senate-confirmed
official in the Reagan and Bush 41 regimes, put it:
"I ask
myself these days if the Republican Party is pursuing a political
program or a rank fraud. This is virtually the first time
in recent memory where I’ve done nil volunteer work ‘on the ground’
for the GOP going into an election."
And how does
the Bush league respond to the concerns of this key conservative
intellectual and part builder?
Tony
Blankley calls him a dunce. Dick Cheney considers him an Al
Queda sympathizer. Wielding a lighter touch, Dennis
Prager merely calls him irrational (at least he didn’t say "deranged").
And George Bush, of course, considers him simply as the enemy.
Millions of
true conservatives are tired of being treated like cattle – herded
into the corral every two years, but never fed by the rustlers they
helped to get elected. Eventually, these folks manage to wake up.
"Don’t assume that I’m an imbecile," a savvy gal from
my Indiana hometown told Frank Herbert of the New York Times
– referring, of course, to you-know-who.
My genuinely
conservative friend wonders whether the whole thing has been a fraud.
After all, most neocons are former leftists, many in the tradition
of Leon Trotsky. Did they perceive a generation ago that conservatism
would be in the ascendant for a generation? Having at heart their
own agenda, they donned their conservative costumes and rode the
conservative horse for all it was worth – all the while treating
it with contempt even as they rode it to death.
When 9-11 came
along, they jumped at the opportunity to promote and to control
the Iraq disaster. Their reasons were simple: (1) the war would
make them very powerful and very rich, and (2) the war would turn
the country against the GOP and against "conservatism,"
something the neocons could not do on their own, since the rank
and file have never trusted them. Destroying conservatism and, if
necessary, the GOP was high on their list of priorities, but they
had to do their destructive work from the inside.
And so they
have. Whether it was the result of a deceitful fraud or an inexorable
stage of Marxist-Leninist history, the neocons have destroyed conservatism.
Meanwhile, the intellectually bankrupt Republican Party has sunk
into a corruption so steep that it is now indistinguishable from
the Democrats.
So how is the
GOP to woo back the disaffected rank-and-file?
Why, insult
them, of course!
One thing these
strangers to conservatism understand is fear, and they’ve been pushing
it for all it’s worth.
Take George
Bush. He tells his conservative, pro-life, pro-traditional marriage
religious conservative base that "terrorists win and America loses"
if you don’t vote for the candidate who is pro-partial-birth abortion,
pro-gay-marriage, pro-nationalized-health-care, anti-strict-constructionist
judges, John-Kerry-running-mate Joe Lieberman.
Now, there’s
a rational argument!
Lieberman,
who stands for everything the religious right is supposed to hate,
has probably been the premier recipient of the most steady, strong,
even strident support from the White House and the RNC, who probably
don’t even know the name of the Republican candidate whom they’re
supposed to be supporting (neither do I).
"Vote
for me, not your principles," says the prez.
Defeat threatens.
Contradiction thrives.
Enter Dick
Cheney. If "big-government conservatism" has made you
mad as hell and you’re not going to take it any more, why – you’re
soft on the war on terrorism, and a rank "defeatist" to
boot.
Rick Santorum,
who betrayed pro-life, pro-family conservatives in the critical
2004 Pennsylvania Senate primary, now pounds the podium demanding
virtual all-out war against Iran. Vote against him and you’re giving
"solace" to Al Queda.
How nice of
him not to call it "aid and comfort"!
So listen up,
disgruntled conservatives. Come back to the fold! Vote for us! If
you don’t, Tony Blankley says you’re "stupid." Gary
Bauer says you hate western civilization but Al Queda loves
you. And that one-issue wonder Michelle Malkin says that, if you
don’t vote for the war party, you are embracing "the anti-military
animus of the Left."
Finally, Ben
Stein, whose oozing, self-congratulatory treacle is the closest
thing the neocons have to Oprah, will just sit down and cry all
over your keyboard if you don’t vote for his power-lunch pals and
all their endless wars. No doubt he’ll use that flag he’s wrapped
in to dry his crying eyes.
Applying Sheed’s
definition, these neocon wolves in conservative clothing are nothing
more than a condescending bunch of contemptible bigots. They can’t
even stand to extend a hand to "the folks that brung’em"
– even when they need them desperately. Instead, they give them
the back of the hand.
For generations,
the Democrats have taken blacks for granted. In like manner, party-hardy
Republicans have taken conservatives for granted, and then tossed
them aside when the elections are over. Like the wife-beater who
knocks the old girl around for her own good, the Bush team thinks
that conservatives will "come home" when they vote next
Tuesday if it bashes them good and hard right now. In the words
of the Washington Post, circa 1985, Bush treats the religious
right as though it were "poor, undereducated, and easily led."
So should we
vote for the Democrats?
Not necessarily.
In fact, there
is one good reason why a conservative who is fed up with Bush, Cheney,
and Rumsfeld should not vote for the Democrats.
It is simple.
The Democrats
won’t impeach them.
Far from it.
If the Democrats’ believed their own attacks on the Bush administration,
you would fully expect Speaker Pelosi to inaugurate her term as
Speak of the House next January 3 by immediately commencing inquiries
that would inform subsequent impeachment proceedings.
After all,
impeachment is constitutional, unlike most of what has gone on in
the past five years regarding the Iraq invasion, illegal immigration,
and the rest of the big-government neocon agenda.
So why won’t
Pelosi’s Democrats embrace their constitutional duty? After all,
history indicates that Republicans react differently than Democrats
when a president of their party is under the impeachment microscope.
While Democrats were bused to the White House lawn to show their
unswerving support for Bill Clinton after his impeachment, Republicans
have historically been much more willing to look at the evidence.
Consider, for
instance, that famous line that marked the turning point in the
inquiry into President Nixon’s Watergate scandal. "What did
he know, and when did he know it?"
The Republican
who uttered that death knell for Nixon’s presidency was none other
than Howard Baker. For his sin of turning against the president
of his own party, Baker was punished by being made Senate Majority
Leader in 1981, White House Chief of Staff in 1987, and Ambassador
to Japan in 1989.
In the meantime,
Earl Landgrebe, the down-home Hoosier who defended Nixon to the
end is remembered primarily in jest, if not outright contempt, for
his famous line at the Watergate hearings: "Don’t confuse me
with the facts."
So Speaker
Pelosi could easily find Republicans to join in an impeachment inquiry,
once those stubborn facts start emerging – and it’s remarkable how
they tend to, when White House staffers can no longer claim "executive
privilege" and when they raise their right hand and have to
testify under the penalty of perjury, instead of a mere bad press
cycle.
Speaker Pelosi
could easily begin with Cheney, as the Democrats did with Nixon’s
veep, Spiro Agnew. With Cheney gone, Democrats in the Senate could
simply refuse to confirm a new Vice President while the House turns
its impeachment focus to President Bush. (In contrast, the prospect
of a Vice-President Gerald Ford posed no problem for the Democrats
of his day, a sentiment which he confirmed by appointing as his
sole Supreme Court nominee Mr. Justice Stevens. To this day Stevens
is the bane not only of the religious right but of a much greater
portion of the national population. For the record, the White House
Chief of Staff responsible for the Stevens nomination was Donald
Rumsfeld, and his Deputy Chief of Staff was Richard Cheney).
So Speaker
Pelosi could easily become President Pelosi, and, for a change,
it would all be constitutional.
But she won’t.
And it’s easy to see why.
After Richard
Nixon lost the 1962 California governor’s race, he famously declared
that "you won’t have Dick Nixon to kick around any more."
The Democrats realized that Nixon, ever the astute politician, was
on to something. A punching bag is a very valuable asset. And now,
with the most nationally unpopular Republican president since Nixon,
the Democrats realize that their party (forget the country) will
benefit much more from having George Bush to kick around – major
league, big-time. And it is quite obvious that they will.
On the other
hand, if Pelosi were to pursue her constitutional responsibilities
and give impeachment proceedings her blessings, she might well become
president – and her accession to that post would immediately make
the election outcome of 2000 seem like a landslide. Bush being gone,
Pelosi would become the issue. And Ms. Pelosi does not want to be
the issue. For her, Bush is the best thing that has happened to
the Democrat party since she was in Congress, and she is not going
to let him go softly into the night. She wants to be able to kick
Bush around – and you can bet that she will – for two more years.
By 2008, it
will seem like an eternity. For the Democrats, it will be all upside,
no downside. Except, of course, if you take them at their word,
then they will have shirked their fundamental constitutional duties
in the same order of magnitude as they say that Bush and the Republicans
have shirked theirs.
No matter.
"Power corrupts," as the saying goes, and power has indeed
corrupted the Republican Party beyond its fondest dreams (i.e.,
they have finally caught up with the Democrats). If Pelosi becomes
Speaker of the House, it will corrupt her even more, and she will
wink, and evade, the most profound and fundamental (and, if we are
permitted to mention it, constitutional) duty of her office.
So, while the
other neocon party-line "reasons" for not voting for the
Democrats are as bogus as Saddam’s WMD, this argument is unassailable:
Don’t bother. They won’t impeach them.
Karl Rove,
call your office. This could be a winner.
November
4, 2006
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2006. All Rights reserved.
Christopher
Manion Archives
|