Bush
Seals His Betrayal of the Religious Right
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
Never let it
be said that the neocons are a single-issue pro-war clique. In addition
to hijacking the country into perpetual war, and ever the aboriginal
left-wing Democrats, they have also successfully destroyed the GOP,
its conservative base, and the pro-life and pro-family movements
that propelled the Bush-Cheney ticket to victory in 2000 and 2004.
If there remained any doubts before this week, President Bush’s
appointment of retired federal judge Michael B. Mukasey to succeed
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales seals the lid on the coffin in
which the neocons buried "compassionate conservatism"
long ago.
You don’t have
to be pro-life to marvel at the breadth and depth of the betrayal
that Bush has delivered to his base on the "religious right."
Even from a distance, it is as revolting as it is revealing. The
palpable cynicism and contempt of Bush now brilliantly shines through,
while the neocons chortle all the way to the arms bazaar.
The Washington
Post celebrates,
and calls
retired federal judge Michael B. Mukasey a "law-and-order
conservative" – but the Post is lying, as usual. In fact, People
for the American Way’s Ralph
Neas let the cat out of the bag when he said of Mukasey that
"he seems like a bona fide conservative Republican, not a right-wing
ideologue." Neas, my one-time pal and classmate from Notre
Dame, has effectively led the pro-abortion forces in Washington
for over twenty years. His seal of approval says it all.
Needless to
say, neocon standard-bearer William Kristol was salivating
as he breathlessly broke the news, fulfilling my long-standing
prediction
that Bush and the neocons would betray the evangelicals again and
again and again – in fact, as long as the evangelicals would let
them. Apparently, all too many evangelicals are gluttons for punishment.
Even now a goodly number of them still support Bush because they
hope that he will expand the war in the Middle East, bomb Iran now,
and bring
on Armageddon in their lifetimes so that they can rule with
Christ over all the earth (and the rest of us) for a thousand years.
Mr. Mukasey
is also a strong supporter of the presidential campaign of Rudy
Giuliani, a longtime pro-abortion Republican who is running for
the GOP nomination as the "anti-terrorism" candidate.
As for frosting on the cake (as if we needed any), Mukasey is also
championed by none other than liberal New York Senator Chuck Schumer,
a bane (and banality) to pro-lifers for years. The Mukasey nomination
culminates a long and painful chain of betrayals of the religious
right by the man who would not be president without them.
But why would
he take the job? Why bother? Well, it should be clear by now that
Mukasey is well-positioned to serve as Attorney General for the
next ten years, if he wants to. After all, he would undoubtedly
be acceptable either to President Hillary Rodham Clinton or President
Rudy Giuliani. Either way, with Mukasey’s appointment, any lingering
hopes of a prolife Supreme Court in our lifetime are dead – as are
any chances that the Department of Justice will lift a finger to
enforce existing federal laws against internet obscenity, broadcast
indecency, and sex trafficking. Such activities are already illegal,
but Janet Reno’s Justice Department steadfastly refused to prosecute
them in the 1990s. In 2000 and 2004, Bush promised a coalition of
pro-family groups (with aggregate members numbering in the tens
of millions) that he would enforce those laws. Unfortunately, with
few exceptions, his administration just hasn’t quite been able to
get around to it yet.
Well, now the
bloom is off the rose. Mukasey’s appointment seals the deal that
Bush and Cheney made long ago with the neocons to put their pro-war
agenda first, last, and always. We have seen the last prolife judge,
Supreme Court justice, or initiative coming from the Executive Branch
for years to come.
One wonders,
does Bush even care? While the embattled president expects
to be vindicated by historians of future generations, this latest
move clearly vindicates those conservative critics who have
long argued that his portrayal as a "good Christian"
is a smokescreen to keep the religious right on board while he gaily
grows the gargantuan government and launches the country into ever
more wars, betraying his campaign promises at every turn.
While Bush
worries about his legacy, Cheney and the neocons have firmly taken
the helm and, in their dictatorial bent, now feel comfortable enough
to jettison the useful idiots who propelled them to power with Bush’s
first victory in 2000 and kept the party going in 2004. Jim Baker,
Bush 41’s hatchet man, directed the same kind of operation in 1989,
removing every possible Reagan supporter from the Executive Branch
(with as little grace as he could muster), even though Reagan had
virtually bestowed the presidency on the unworthy Bush, gratis.
Jim Baker was a major-league scofflaw when it came to Knute Rockne’s
cardinal rule: "You don’t spit on a man’s head if you’re standing
on his shoulders."
But what now
for the Christian right? Well, years ago the Washington Post
wrote
that the religious right was "poor, undereducated, and easily
led." Immediate outrage poured forth. But why? After all, we
could also say that the atheist left is rich, overeducated, and
firmly in charge, and not an eye would blink. The neocons, the scions
of the well-to-do left and the grandchildren of Trotsky, have never
thought in terms of limited government. The Laws
of Nature and of Nature’s God that
form and inform true conservatism have no claim on them. They are
interested in only one thing, as their heroes Leo Strauss and Machiavelli
taught them all too well: power.
Well, now they
have it. They got it by lying all the time – and, let us recall,
they deflected criticism early on with a good deal of name-calling
(do you remember how they squealed "Anti-Semite" at anyone
who called them neocons? Now they wear the label proudly), but I’m
sure they would assert that they won it fair and square.
It was all
too predictable. Well, here is another prediction. The handwriting
is on the wall, and it does not bode well for the neocons long term.
The neocons are revolutionaries, and they have taken power in a
classic dialectical combination of war and subterfuge. But when
revolutionaries are secure in their power, they turn on their own.
They always do. Who will go first when the time comes? Perhaps they
will turn on the hot-tub profligates who financed the neocon rise
to power, in the way that their heroes, the French Revolutionaries,
turned on the French aristocracy at the end of the XVIII century.
In classical Trotskyite fashion, the neocons allowed the profiteers
to prosper, while the revolution was still consolidating its gains
and getting the funding it needed to do so.
But once that
consolidation comes, the die will be cast. And the neocons should
go gently into that dark nightmare. They know their Lenin. They’d
better re-read it. As Richard Weaver wrote, "Ideas have consequences."
And for the neocons, the consequences of their ideas are grim indeed.
"If every
bourgeois in town is not hanging from a streetlamp when I arrive,
YOU will be hanging there when I leave," Lenin warned
his revolutionary commissars whom he put in charge of cleansing
the New Russia of its capitalist deadwood.
In revolutionary
practice, once the dictatorship is advanced to the proper "correlation
of forces" (with adequate deadwood removed), the surviving
strongman will inevitably turn
on "them that brung’im." First, he will turn on the
super-rich, who thought that they were the "masters of the
universe." For them there will be show trials and a bullet
in the back of the neck in the basement of the Lubayanka. But eventually
the time will come when, tired of the neocon prating, puffery, preening,
and private agendas, our new Leviathan will deal with the neocons
in the same way Stalin dealt with their hero Trotsky: they will
get a pickaxe in the head. The Revolution devours its own children.
So long, Weekly
Standard. Hello, Robespierre.
And what will
become of Bush? Well, we have learned from this Mukasey affair more
about the measure of the man. The boastful, brazen taunter who once
bellowed at the Iraqis to "Bring’em on," has exited, stage
left. It was apparently easy for him to bray about "evil madmen"
when Saddam was far away and Bush was high on the swagger factor.
But now, the shriveled peacock shrinks from a confrontation with
– of all pygmies – none other that Chuck Schumer, known on the Hill
as "Chuckie Cheesecake" for his affinity to television
cameras. As they say in the halls on the Senate side, Bush has been
"Shumed" – major league, big time.
Yes, Bush has
shriveled, but he need not worry. The "good Christian"
Bush who betrayed the Christian right will never again have a care
– after all, he has helped make many people billionaires, and that
will not hurt. Just in case, however, he will have a 100-man taxpayer-funded
permanent Praetorian Guard to surround him in his cocoon for the
rest of his natural life. He will never again have to come into
contact with an average person not of his own choosing. As he retires
in regal splendor, he will no doubt continue to espouse "democracy"
and rule "by the people, of the people, and for the people."
He will invite sundry fawning admirers who will assure him that
his legacy is intact. Someday, "history" will vindicate
him.
Sic semper
neoconus.
September
20, 2007
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 2007. All Rights reserved.
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