No Conflicts of Interest
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
This is my
end-of-the-year reveal-all column in which I come clean about my
conflicts of interest. Trouble is, I don't have any.
All income
comes from the sales of the column, pension, Social Security and,
now that the Internal Revenue Service is forcing me to withdraw
some of the money, my rollover retirement kitty.
I am a member
of only one organization, the Sons of Confederate Veterans. I am
registered as a Democrat because I dislike the hypocrisy of the
Republicans, who talk conservative and vote liberal. Truth is, though,
I can think of only a very few Democrats I would gladly vote for.
As Huey Long once said, the Republicans skin you from the top down,
and the Democrats skin you from the bottom up.
You can describe
me as a Jeffersonian Democrat. I believe the Constitution is a contract
between the states and the federal government, not some rubbery
so-called living document. You don't amend a contract by interpretation.
That great document is written in such plain English, only an idiot
or a dishonest lawyer could misinterpret it.
Unfortunately,
in modern times, as a Yankee judge put it, the Constitution means
what the court says it means. I always include in my prayers a request
for a Congress of men and women intelligent and courageous enough
to apply the whip of impeachment to federal judges who usurp their
authority. So far, no answer has come from the direction of heaven.
I strongly suspect God thinks we should clean up the mess we created.
Like George
Washington, I believe in a noninterventionist foreign policy. We
have no legal or moral right to tell other sovereign nations how
they should conduct themselves. Contrary to the widespread delusion,
the American president is not the ruler of the world, for which,
I'm sure, the world is grateful, given the ability of the present
White House occupant.
A patriot
is a person who loves the land and the people and is loyal to the
Constitution. Patriots are not those who blindly click their heels
and salute whatever current politician temporarily occupies the
office. Such heel-clickers are generally described as having the
makings of a fascist, but a kinder description is that they are
people who have misplaced their faith.
As for the
column, I have always tried to tell the truth as best I can determine
it at the time of the writing. Sometimes I've been wrong. I don't
pretend to be omniscient. I don't mind when people disagree. Reality
will eventually settle all disputes. That's one of the advantages
of reading old books. With hindsight, you can tell who was right
and who was wrong.
My purpose
is to stimulate people to think about important issues. I fear apathy
may one day do us in. The Founding Fathers did us no favor when
they handed us the burden of self-government. It's hard work trying
to keep informed and to think clearly about public issues.
I don't carry
water for anyone not for a political party or even for conservatives.
Labels like "conservative" and "liberal" have
for all practical purposes lost their meanings, though we keep using
them for lack of a better description.
Just
remember that it's become a very approximate description. If William
Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, is a conservative,
then I'm not.
But we have
a lot to do and better things to do than quibble over labels. Our
great country is not as good as it can be. We know what the problems
are, and there are enough of them that everyone can find one to
tackle based on his or her interests and talents. May the new year
bring us all closer together.
January
1, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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