Liberty
Pups and Mass Hysteria
by
Ryan McMaken
Now
that Bush has safely brought our soldiers back from China, it seems
that the Republican primary season has already begun. Gary Bauer
is already out there acting like anyone cares what he says and insinuating
that Bush should have nuked the Chinese rather than the chosen route
of not being "firm enough" with the Chinese. Republican
members of Congress who are beholden to the defense industry are
sure to keep Bush’s anti-bloodbath agenda in mind and threaten his
domestic agenda behind the scenes.
If
Bush keeps up this behavior, it looks like he will be in a unique
position for a Republican president. Unlike Bush the First who was
loved by hawks, but despised by social conservatives, Bush the Second
will be facing a war party coalition who will probably spend the
next three years trying to force him to the right in his foreign
policy agenda. Congressional Republicans have already spent the
last week whining about how Colin Powell is too moderate for their
tastes. It seems they would rather clone Douglas MacArthur and storm
the Yalu River.
If
Republicans think they are going to increase their popularity by
impugning Powell, one of the most popular men in America, they might
want to reconsider. Perhaps they know something I don’t. Who knows,
it could be that they have done some internal polling and have decided
that a bloody and protracted war with one billion Chinese people
is a winning issue for the Congressional Republicans. It should
astound one that while the Congress should be doing everything it
can to hold onto it’s slim majority in the Congress, it is doing
everything it can to be known as the Party for War.
Of
course, the whole affair simply exposes the Republicans’ complicity
in buying votes through the defense industry. The Left is frequently
accused of buying votes from the poor through various welfare programs,
yet the Republicans are just as enthusiastic about blowing taxpayer
dollars on defense contractors and $300 toilet seats. Bush and Powell’s
even-tempered foreign policy gives them no hope for bigger and better
programs in the future.
The
pro-war Right’s hope for a new and improved Cold War is settling
in with the rank and file. For example, the John Birch Society’s
New American magazine and Newsmax.com still insist
on calling China "Red China" and never miss a chance to
cast the nation as the new Evil Empire and the great ideological
enemy of the United States. It’s all very melodramatic, although
terribly inaccurate.
Over
at the National Review Online, Jonah Goldberg is trying to re-acquaint
us with anti-Asian racist jokes. The next thing you know, he’ll
be calling for Americans of Asian decent to be forcibly moved inland
to internment camps
None
of this should be too alien to anyone who can remember the Persian
Gulf War. All of a sudden, it was perfectly acceptable to think
of Iraqis as sub-human barbarians and we were glued to our TV sets
relishing the bombardment of civilians in Baghdad. This whole attempt
to turn the American people against an entire nation is quite a
time-honored tradition. It is not unlike when, during the First
World War, dachshund dogs were renamed "liberty pups"
and stoned in the streets for their German name and origins. German-Americans
were also "encouraged" to change their names lest they
suffer the same fate as those unfortunate wiener dogs.
Is
the same kind of anti-China hysteria in store for Americans? In
a just world, we should really have a hard time coming up with a
load of bitter hatred for a Mr. Lee or a Mr. Wong who are working
in a bicycle factory in Beijing to support their families in the
countryside. Hawks are decrying the lack of political and economic
freedom that many Chinese people are now experiencing. The question
we should be asking ourselves, though, is whether we will improve
the lives of those people by crippling their economy and bombing
their homes into rubble. In other words, will we destroy China to
save it? Let’s hope not.
April
16, 2001
Ryan
McMaken lives in Denver, Colorado. He edits the Western
Mercury.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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