Conspiracy
by
Charley
Reese
Conspiracy
fans can have a field day if Sen. John Kerry wins the Democratic
nomination for president, as it appears at this time he will.
Conspiracy
buffs can say that, once more, the Establishment has won. Both the
Democrat and the Republican nominees will be Establishment types
both are rich guys, both are Yale graduates, and both are
members of the secretive and elitist Skull and Bones club at Yale.
And
the outsiders (Howard Dean, John Edwards and Wesley Clark) remain
outside.
By
now, I'm used to this state of affairs and don't put a lot of stock
in any conspiracy theory. The fact is, it helps a great deal to
be a rich guy if you want to run for president. It's not because
rich guys will spend their own money, but rich guys know a lot of
other rich guys to put the arm on for contributions.
Several
serious sociological studies and books have been written about the
upper class in America. It tends to be remarkably self-contained.
For the most part, upper-class kids go to the same private prep
schools and the same universities, join the same clubs, visit the
same resorts and hang out at the same watering holes. Finally, they
mostly intermarry. Cinderella stories notwithstanding, the rich
almost always marry the rich.
As
for the Skull and Bones club, the rich are not immune from silliness.
Aside from its secrecy and apparently silly rituals, it boils down
to an elite fraternity in which the members probably pledge to help
each other for the rest of their lives.
Nothing
wrong with that. Benjamin Franklin gathered a group of young men
in Philadelphia who met regularly and among other things pledged
to always help each other succeed. Friends in high or low
places are not bad things to have.
The
thing to remember is that Kerry, despite being a rich kid, did what
he certainly didn't have to do, and that was enlist in the Navy
and go to Vietnam and fight. I can't say he fought for his country,
because the Vietnamese communists weren't threatening our country,
but he fought for the South Vietnamese in their civil war. And,
in retrospect, he regretted the war and actively campaigned to stop
it, as did many combat veterans of that war.
It
was, after all, a cruel and stupid piece of American diplomacy.
We blundered into a civil war, and the politicians never had a clear
objective. It never made sense to be fighting communism in Vietnam,
trading with it in Eastern Europe and protecting it in Cuba (as
part of the Cuban missile crisis settlement, John Kennedy agreed
to prevent any attacks on Cuba from U.S. shores). It was especially
galling that the politicians put so many restrictions on the American
military that it quickly became clear that the war couldn't be won.
We
can never win a war of attrition on the Asian mainland. People are
in surplus over there, and the powers that be will always be more
willing to expend more of their people than we are. That's why Gen.
Douglas MacArthur advised America never to get involved in a war
on the Asian mainland, advice that Harry Truman, Kennedy and Lyndon
Johnson ignored.
At
any rate, a Kerry-Bush contest will be interesting. We can all expect
a dirty campaign, but however much the Republican strategists try
to spin it, this campaign, like all campaigns against an incumbent,
will be a referendum on George Bush's administration. If people
are happy with it, he'll be re-elected; if not, whoever the Democratic
nominee is will go to the White House.
Look
what happened to Bush's father. Bill Clinton had no credentials,
no impressive résumé, yet he beat the elder Bush. Why? Because most
people weren't voting for Clinton, they were voting against Bush.
We'll see how it goes this time.
February
23, 2004
Charley
Reese has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
©
2004 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Charley
Reese Archives
|