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"PHOBE" FIBBERS

 
   Liberals have so much fun labeling conservatives and calling them names. With
controversies swirling around the issues of illegal immigration, gay marriage and
the "middle-finger" mosque, the words "Islamaphobe," "homophobe" and "xenophobe"
have been rolling off forked liberal tongues like grease going through a goose (an apt
parallel because they have a similar odor).
   The power of words -- any words -- is the response they evoke. The term "racist,"
for example, used to draw a powerful emotional response of anger or denial due
to the political and moral incorrectness of being one. The term has recently lost a
good deal of its clout because both neutrals and those who are targeted by it have
caught on to the fact that it really only means the user, almost always a liberal, hates
and disagrees with the target which, for the most part, has nothing to do with race.
   "Fascist" was another such word, conjuring up images of brown-shirted thugs
with swastikas on their armbands goose-stepping toward one crime against the
human race or another. The same thing happened to it. It was so overused that
most people came to see that so labeling someone had no connection in reality to
historical examples of such behavior.
   So the problem for liberals, who inevitably resort to namecalling extremes when
they are losing arguments on fact and logic (which is most of the time), is that
they are running out of effectively heinous label words. Not to worry, however,
for they have discovered the "phobias."
   All the "phobia" words are based on the Greek noun phobos which, literally
translated, means fear. Coupled with another noun, it describes fear of something
specific. Agoraphobia, for example, combines the Greek word agora, meaning
marketplace, with phobos to mean, in English, fear of crowds. Hydrophobia is
fear of water, claustrophobia fear of closed in places, and so forth and so on. These
are, of course, psychological terms describing undue or unwarranted, even psychotic
aversions to things considered by others to be harmless. This makes them fiendishly
useful for the left who, by coupling them with identity politics, can allege at one and
the same time that conservatives unduly fear whole classes of people thereby showing
their intolerance and mental imbalance. Yum!
   This explains the fact that the MSM, Democrats and other liberals can hardly frame
a sentence these days without using the word xenophobe (undue fear of foreigners),
Islamophobe (undue fear of Islam) or homophobe (undue fear of homosexuals). They
are the more delighted because they can sound educated and erudite while doing it.
   But like most liberal tacticss, this shabby one breaks down upon close examination,
and increasingly falls on deaf ears because it begs two questions, namely whether
the sentiment being challenged is genuinely fear, and whether it is indeed undue or
based on real threat. To wit, no one really fears homosexuals or gay marriage. One
may disagree with them on moral or sexual preference grounds, but the notion of
mobs of conservatives fleeing in terror before stampeding faggots is ludicrous on its
face. Renowned German philosopher Immanuel Kant famously said, "Always so act
that the maxim of your action could be wished universal." What he meant was that
one should act in such a way that if everyone else in the world acted that way, then
everything would be great. What would happen if everyone in the world opted for
the homosexual lifestyle? Well, we could close all our schools, because there wouldn't
be any children. There would be no more clothes to buy, no junior soccer teams to
coach, no grandchildren to dote on. Would everything be just fine? Would that be
a situation we would choose? You decide. Are so called "homophobes" really afraid?
Should they be?
   What about Islamophobes? Do you really think New Yorkers are Islamophobes?
They were attacked and slaughtered on 9/11 by Islamic extremists, nearly blown
up by the Times Square bomber, a Muslim, and had the World Trade Center bombed
from below by Muslims even before the air attack. At least three sharia mosques in
upstate New York have produced a total of five different terror plots over the last
three years, and STILL, even though many New Yorkers hate to see the mosque built
near grond zero, few would deny Muslims the right to build it at all. Would New
Yorkers be justly dscribed as unduly afraid? Would there be any grounds whatever
to justify their fears if they were? Does Islam produce a lot of terrorists? Hmmm.
   Then there's the dreaded xenophobe, the person who opposes illegal immigration
because he/she is allegedly unduly afraid of foreigners. Let's see, now, how much
are these unlawful aliens costing the states in which they unlawfully reside? And
how many did Immigration Control arrest just yesterday because they were serial
criminals? The number was 370. And is there no connection between those unlawfully
sneaking across the border, human trafficking, gun running and drug smuggling? Is
any of that cause for legitimate concern, or, if you're Rob Krentz, mortal fear? Don't
worry, be happy say the liberals.
   But fear not, if liberals can take fancy words, ascribe whatever meaning they wish
to them and then hurl them in bitter invective at conservatives, two can play the game.
You don't have to take it! Next time you're in an argument with a liberal and he/she
loses it and starts the namecalling, refer to them as an alethiaphobe (one who has an
undue fear of truth), or a patriophobe (one with an undue fear of those who love and
are devoted to their country). They, of course, won't have the first clue what those
words mean, which will cause them to become even more irrational. A friend of mine
told me about the time when he was in middle school and he and his friends used to
tease the elementary kids on their way home from school by running up to them and
saying, "You've got GARMENTS." Not knowing that "garments" referred only to
their clothes, the littler ones would angrily deny that they had any, thereby making
the whole thing the more hilarious. The same tactic works with liberals.
   Verbal bullying can be a hurtful thing, even when the target of such knows the bully
words to be false. The only way liberals learn is when they feel the sting at the business
end. Note how they froth and deny when called Marxists. But in their homophobic,
xenophobic, Islamaphobic tirades they mistake disdain for a culpable few for prejudice
against all, and strong resolve and resistance for irrational fear. Don't let the "phobe fibbers"
get  you down. It's their mistake, their baggage, so don't let them impose it on you. My dad
always used to say that it sometimes takes a good bloody nose to unmake a bully.
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A TALE OF TWO STRATEGIES

 
   With just 79 days left until the midterms, strategies have been plotted and the
combatants have marched off to political war. This time, Democratic and GOP
strategies agree on one truism: this election is all about connections.
   Polls regarding Barack Obama and his agenda clearly reveal a powerful ground-
swell of voter rejection and anger. Included under that umbrella are the hated
healthcare reform, proposed climate change legislation, union power grabs, amnesty
for illegal aliens and the two underlings who carried Obama's water, House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leadr Harry Reid. This makes Republican
strategy both clear and simple. If they can successfully tie their opponents to any
or all of the things Americans have rejected, they will defeat their Democratic
opponent in November.
   The connection, of course, is how that opponent voted or commented on these
matters, and how far they toed Pelosi's and Reid's line. Democrats are trying
desperately to distance themselves from Obama, Pelosi and Reid, with some
shying away from campaign appearances with the president and others taking out
ads slamming Pelosi's agenda. The Republican antidote for such denial is a
straighforward question. But how did you vote?
   Democrats, on the other hand, are pursuing a strategy of disconnection. Talking
points issued by Democratic leaders caution candidates against running on the
healthcare legislation, the stimulus bill or the "economic recovery" which isn't.
Instead, they are to say to voters, "But this election isn't really about Barack
Obama. It's about YOU. And I am here for YOU." This, of course, is a prime
form of verbal flatulence, for it is the voters who are being negatively affected
by unemployment, rising taxes, expensive healthcare, the specter of higher
gas prices and utility bills and no hope in sight. In other words, they perceive
themselves, in large numbers, to have been injured by Obama's policies, and
Dems' votes to support those policies are matters of public record. It's a very
tough sell, but it's their only hope.
   All of this points to one conclusion. This election is, like most first-term
midterms, a direct referendum on the president and his policies. If people vote
the way they're telling pollsters they feel about Obama and his agenda, the
Democrats are in deep, deep trouble, and stand to take a historic November
whipping.
   But it will all be determined by whether Democrats are able to use familiarity,
name recognition, money, union support and machine politics to weaken or
break the connecting link between themselves and the state thinngs are in, or
whether Republicans can hold their feet to the fire of fact and keep the connection
strong.
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WILL OBAMA RUN IN 2012?

 
   An odd question to ask 18 months into a first term. Yet it is already being asked
by quiet voices on both the right and the left. What could make a man walk away
from the presidency of the United States of America absent impending impeachment?
Perhaps several things.
   If Obama chooses to run again, it will not be in any sense a repeat of the 2008
campaign. Now he has a record to run on, and given his poll numbers it is clear that
his record and his policies are stern liabilities. In 2008, his campaign was able to
control the media, keeping Obama on his script and denying reporters the chance to
question him. His then Director of Communications, Anita Dunn, even bragged about
how they were able to manipulate the press. That boast, the failure of promised
transparency and the controversial nature of his actual agenda will keep that from
happening again, although the slobbering sycophants at MSNBC will still get "chills
up their legs" and throw him softballs. And he will no longer be able to rely on the
now disgraced ACORN to register the dead as voters.
   Campaign finance has also changed. When the Supreme Court handed down the
ruling that unions and corporations could not be barred from spending their money
to influence political campaigns, Democrats went hysterical. Subsequently they
proposed and tried to pass legislation to circumvent the court, which Republicans
blocked because while it limited corporations, it did not limit unions. In that, at
least, Republicans were as smart as Democrats were transparent. Unions always
support Democrats, pouring hundreds of millions into Dem coffers. Corporations,
on the other hand, are apolitical. They tend to back winners, and not just
candidates who can win but those who can muster controlling blocks in congress.
The CEOs and Directors of corporations can read polls too. And if polls suggest
Republicans may win, as they do today, many large corporate contributions will
go to Republicans, thus cancelling out the lopsided Democratic fundraising
advantage afforded by the unions. No wonder Obama takes a shot at either the
Supremes or the GOP in every speech he makes these days for raining on his
parade. Also, the Federal Election Commission will soon be launching a far-
ranging investigation into Obama's fundraising tactics, particularly those having
to do with ACORN in the '08 election. Whether wrongdoing is cited or not, the
level of scrutiny will be heightened, thus dampening opportunities for illicit gifts.
   When the 2011 congress convenes, it will certainly feature either a greatly
diluted Democratic majority or the Republicans in control of one or both houses.
This means Obama priorities like climate change legislation and union card check
are DOA. It also means his spending wings will be clipped, and a number of his
priorities will flatly not be funded. It will be difficult, after two more years, to
show any significant accomplishments unless Obama completely changes directions.
   Can he learn from Bill Clinton and "pivot" away from the extreme left and back
toward the middle? While anything is possible, this is doubtful. Clinton decided that
he would rather remain president than be right according to the orthodoxy of his
party. So he started meeting the GOP in the middle on issue after issue, and he got
re-elected. But Obama is far more an ideologue than Clinton ever was. Plunging
ever leftward, he has flown in the face of public preference on issue after issue in
the delusional assumption that they would eventually "catch up" and understand
that he was right all along. That's not happening. His poll numbers are so far
underwater that if the election were held now he would lose to a generic (unnamed)
Republican. More than half of Americans want his signature healthcare bill, the
brightest jewel in his crown, repealed. Given his ego, the biggest in recent presidential
history, it is highly dubious that he would be willing to eat the crow of compromise
with those so diametrically opposed to his views. If he does that, he likely loses
everything he has won, and the left along with it. My bet? The man won't budge.
He would rather be right (in his own eyes) than president.
   Don't undersell his ego. Obama is most of all about Obama. To be trounced by
a Republican after just one term in office would be humiliating. Unless he can
turn things around in two years that is exactly what he's looking at. His own people
have conceded that the effects of the recession, including high unemployment and
reduced national productivity are likely to last another four years. Since the
economy is the bellwether issue, it seems doubtful that a turnaround of the magnitude
he needs is in the cards. And if the GOP takes over, as some believe they will, they
will get a lion's share of the credit for any improvement. His presidency will languish,
especially if he refuses to work with them. He will quit rather than take an assured
whipping.
   And he, just like every other president, must take into consideration the future and
well-being of his party. By stepping down, he could wipe the slate at least semi-clean
and make way for a different face, perhaps Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, to run
a more competitive race. The question is, if things do not drastically improve for
Obama, is he willing to take the whole Democratic ship down with him? Only time
will tell. But there are certainly enough plausible reasons for him to make the one-
and-out-call on his own, before Americans make it for him. Stay tuned.
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THE UNWASTED CRISES

 
   A statement attributed to White House Chief of Staff but quite probably pre-
dating him is, "never let a crisis go to waste." The theory is that when cisis arises
and foks are casting about for solutions, sometimes you can ram through things
you've always wanted to do but never could. And that's even if there's no proven
connection between the crisis and your hobby horse.
   Three such crises beset the world today, and into the fray with questionably
relevant solutions, three prominent Americans have jumped feet first. Crisis one
is the horrendous flooding in Pakistan which has already claimed thousands of
lives and threatens to enmesh that nation in further pestilence and heartache.
But fear not! Hillary Clinton has stepped forward to explain the deluge. Why,
it's man-made climate change, of course. Never mind that gigantic floods have
plagued man since at least the days of Noah and his renowned ark. But I'm
sure that one must have been caused by the carbon footprint from excessive
camel flatulence. Methinks her tactic is transparent. If you want to harp on
the global warming issue to prod congress into cap-and-tax energy legislation,
why not ride a favorite hobby horse during the crisis? Weather experts smirked
on at least two major networks in distancing themselves from Clinton's theory.
But I don't know why. It's only half as preposterous as the Iranian cleric's
hypothesis that earthquakes are the result of revealing female clothing.
   Then there's the eternal infernal debate over the groud zero mosque. After
Obama, Harry Reid and Howard Dean finished offering their opinions, which
were either irrelevant or conflicted, none other than House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
has weighed in with a great idea. Let's have an investigation into who is funding the
people who object to the mosque being built. What a stroke of genius. Let's
not waste congressional time doing mundane things like making and passing a
budget. Let's pry into the bank accounts of the 9/11 victims' surviving family
members. And while we're at it, lets check to be sure their right to speak, as well
as those of other Americans who agree with them really ARE covered by the
First Amendment free speech guarantee. Maybe it would be good for the wicked
witch from California to read the SCOTUS decision in Quinn vs. the United States
in which Earl Warren wrote for the majority that the investigative powers of
congress "shall not be used unrelated to valid legislative priorities," and that such
"must be subject to the specific individual guarantees in the bill of rights." Nice
try, Nance. We all know you've just been itching to investigate those danged right-
wingers. But this one might even get a laugh out of Elena Kagan.
   Crisis number three is really a Trojan horse, in that it's not just about what it
seems to be about. It has finally dawned on a panicky president and his equally
panicky party that elections are just a couple of months off and the entire economy
is in the toilet with one hand raised going down for the third time. So after a brief
lull, we're now hearing the name of George W. Bush dredged up yet again, so that
Democrats and Obama can try to hang the flailing thing around his neck. Never
mind that they've had legislative control for years, including a super majority for
the last 18 months, or that Obama has had a year-and-a-half in the White House.
Never mind that he has outspent Bush, driven the deficit to an all-time high and
has nearly nothing to show for his pork laden stimulus monstrosity. It must be
Bush's fault, it just has to be. A weary and cynical public, however, isn't buying
it, according to the polls. They're starting to blame Obama and the Democrats.
How long will the Bush-bashing continue? For a hundred years, if it works. But
all indicators are that it's going over with voters like a moldy taco shell. It's not
really about Bush, or even about the economy, regarding which the spendthrift
Democrats don't give a rat's behind. It's about them holding onto power in the
November elections. It's them cynically trying to get even more mileage out of
a heart-wrenching national crisis.
   But Rahm must be chuckling as he sits, feet propped up on his desk in his
plush White House office. He's not on food stamps, marching in protest or reaching
for a life jacket. But he must be enjoying it as his disciples ply "the doctrine."
 
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OBAMA'S "MUSLIM PROBLEM"

 
   Shocking new polls reveal that 1 in 5 Americans believe President Barack Obama
to be a Muslim. The mainstream media responded unanimously by mocking their
stupidity, and the White House, which claims not to read polls (ha, ha) almost
immediately issued a disclaimer stating that Obama is a committed Christian, prays
daily, and giving the sources from which he receives his daily devotional reading.
   So what gives? Now there are certainly a lot of crackpots out there who will
believe any gossip and spread any rumor. But 1 in 5 boggles the mind. One can
follow the mainstream media herd in pronouncing 20% of the population deranged.
But that's almost as big a reach as calling Obama a Muslim. Maybe it's a bit more
complex than that.
   Considering that in the eyes of the rumor mongers Lincoln was a Catholic (untrue),
and FDR was  Jew (also untrue), perhaps it should not come as such a great shock
that some believe Obama is a Muslim. It would come as a shock, however, to a
majority in the Islamic countries who profess great disappointment in him. A Muslim
prays five times daily, facing Mecca, gives alms to the poor and attends mosque
regularly. Obama does none of those things. So, if he is a Muslim, he is a very poor
one. Why, then, the big number of the deluded?
   Obama is perceived to be a Muslim sympathizer. His speeches in Cairo and Turkey
in which he uttered in nearly unaccented Arabic the opening line of a famous Islamic
prayer, his statement that Islam's sunset call to prayer is "the prettiest sound in the
world," his embracing of his Muslim heritage and disavowal of America as a Christian
nation, his bow toward Saudi royalty and his ambivalence toward the building of a
mosque at ground zero in New York, accompanied by a passage in his book that
boasts "I will stand with Muslims," all contribute to an impression. That impression
is further enhanced by the furor over NASA's mission being changed, by direct
instruction of the president, to one of outreach to Muslims, and Obama's own
frequent praise of Islamic culture. The American public is, if nothing else, very
impressionable, and the 24/7 news cycle and media bombardment only amplifies
the tendency.
   A great many Americans now believe Obama to be an inveterate prevaricator.
His statements about the healthcare reform bill alone that (a) healthcare costs
would decline (b) the bill would not add to the deficit, (c) Medicare recipients
would not lose benefits and (d) no one would have to change their coverage or
physician have now been proven inarguably false. Thus, his affirmations that
he is in fact a Christian or, conversely, that he is not a Muslim, have less force
because a large portion of America no longer trusts him to speak the truth. Beyond
that, most believe he willfully employs deception to advance his political agenda.
   Add to all that his attempts to close Guantanamo Bay, where Muslim killers
are being detained, his attempts to politicize and bring into civilian court the trial
of 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed and his attempts to hamstring
American intelligence capacities and what many Americans see is a man who
is soft on national security, lax in his treatment of jihadists and one whose bent
is to pander to a hostile Muslim world. Is all of this enough to convince 1 in 5?
Apparently so.
   America, on the whole, does not understand Islam. To them, the mosque
worshippers and those who scream allah akbar (god is great) just before blowing
themselves up along with anyone else who happens to be around, or opening
fire on a roomful of innocent people (Ft. Hood) are not all that different one from
another. Islam is not simply a religion. It is a socio-cultural movement that
unabashedly aspires to a worldwide caliphate (world domination) under shariah law,
and often counsels and employs violence toward infidels (non-Muslims). Western
Muslims who seek to co-exist peacefully are the liberalized ones whose lifestyle
meets with near universal disapproval in Muslim countries such as Saudi and
Indonesia. If even Muslims are unable to separate the "religion" from the socio-
poitical agenda, how can it come as a suprise that many Americans can't either?
   We cannot always control what others believe about us, even when we know
what that perception is and are pained by it. Most of us, however, understand
that we do bear some responsibility for keeping our words and actions consistent,
and making reasonable attempts to explain choices we make that could be
open to misinterpretation. In private life, many of us do not care what people we
don't know personally think about us. Unfortunately, those who present themselves
for elected office do not enjoy such a luxury. All Americans, including presidents,
should be free to practice the religion of their choice in reasonable privacy. But
when we speak out about it selectively, and often ambiguously, we must share the
consequences of misunderstanding. That is a hard lesson which this president, who
is almost certainly not a Muslim, seems to be learning late in life.
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OBAMA'S WORST FEAR

 
   Barack Obama can presumably read the polls, and their trend is unanimous and
unequivocal. Democrats are headed for a November whipping, perhaps even one
of historic proportions. His own poll numbers in freefall, his agenda at an impasse,
his party bogged down in ethics scandals and his opponents rife with fresh, sharp-
tongued faces, he has to be reading the handwriting on the wall. The congress he
must work with beginning in 2011 will be far less malleable and sympathietic, and
perhaps downright hostile.
   When one's dreams enter a death spiral, the things they shout on the way down
usually betray what they fear at the bottom. The repeated piqued cry of Obama in
recent speeches is an anguished plea not to "go back." He usually uses the name
of George W. Bush to demonize what "back" is, but he's not fooling anyone, as
is often true of the truly desperate.
   Obama has ruthlessly prosecuted a progressive agenda to "fundmentally transform"
America from a constitutional republic with limited government to a eurosocialist
model wherein government controls, if not owns outright, every facet of economic
and personal life. To make that happen he has broken every tax promise he made
in order to fuel a bloated government bureaucracy where workers earn sometimes
half again the wages and benefits of their peers in the private sector. He has, for
all practical purposes, nationalized automakers, insurance companies, healthcare
banking and the student loan industry, and torn down every vestige of restraint
that could thwart an unparalleled labor union power grab. Those are the things
he fears the new congress might strip away. And they can.
   Had any of them demonstrably reduced unemployment, eased restraints on
business, produced economic prosperity and a steadily growing GDP, or invested
taxpayer funds cautiously and wisely, Obama might find himself in a very different
place, and on the cusp of the godhood he so clearly covets. But his reality is much
darker. Ad campaigns touting his hated healthcare takeover and trying to persuade
Americans that his $862B stimulus actually worked have fallen flat. Most Americans
believe that the economy is bad and getting worse, and they further believe Obama
has had enough time to make some real difference, if he was ever going to do so.
The long discredited Keynesian economic theory so dear to Obama's heart has
been tagged again for the load of horse hockey it is. See, even Americans, whom
Obama apparently thinks are stupid, know it's a dry hole to take taxpayer money
to hire men to dig holes while hiring others to fill them up.
   No, Americans are now demonstrating majority solidarity in the opinion that the
country is going nowhere good under Obama and the Democrats, and they are
poised to express that conviction at the polls. The reason Obama fears a hostile
takeover of congress, where he has heretofore benefited from a supermajority,
is that he knows (a) the items high on his priority list like cap-and-trade energy
legislation and forced unionism through card check are wallowing in their
dinosaur-like death throes, and (b) once undone, it will be difficult if not impossible
ever again to lead Americans by the nose down the dead end of socialism. It
will also make his re-election tenuous, if not downright doubtful. He has reason
to fear.
   As he looks into the dark night of his soul during the din of partisan conflict
leading up to the mid-term elections ahead, what will Barack Obama see staring
back at him? It will likely be the face of the little boy who tried to pull too many
cookies out of the jar at once, and got caught with his hand still stuck inside. He,
more than any other individual, will be to blame for his party's demise. Many of
them already openly regard him as a campaign liability.
   This is the sad end of a man's career who seeks public office to rule over Americans.
We don't do that here anymore. And we have a way of bidding a none-too-fond
farewell to those who try. If Obama's mother could whisper in her flailing son's ear,
surely she would say, "Barack, you should have listened. They tried to tell you."
   
 
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THE THREE MOSQUE-A-TEERS

 
   While the controversy about whether to build a mosque two blocks from ground
zero swirls on, three brazen "cavaliers" have stepped into the breach, swords drawn
for combat. Taking to the microphone, they have boldly sought to resolve the weighty
matter by the sheer might of their words. Methinks Cardinal Richelieu would be
shuddering in his cloak.
   First among the mighty word warriors was ebullient New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg, who did not preside over the 9/ll calamity and has showed his complete
disconnect with its victims by championing the building of the controversial mosque
against all critics. Apparently wishing to demonstrate that his city is the Mecca of
political correctness and religious tolerance, he got out front in favor of the project
and bullied the City Planning Commission not to declare the site a historical marker,
thus clearing the way for the Cordoba Project. It is doubtful whether Bloomberg
knew or even cared that Cordoba, Spain, was home to a large Catholic catherdral
that was razed by invading Moors so they could build a "victory mosque" on top
of its ruins. If that does not inform the significance of this travesty, how else can
the "Cordoba" imagery be explained? A man of Bloomberg's wealth probably
doesn't care who he alienates. He just wants to make sure it isn't the Muslims,
because they don't play nice with their enemies.
   Next on the stage was babbling Barack Obama, the amateurish U.S. president
whose mishmash of incoherent statements about the mosque are reminiscent of
former presidential pretender John Kerry who "voted for it before I voted against it."
At a lavish dinner for Muslim leaders that he hosted at the White House, Obama
sounded what bonehead Bloomberg referred to as a "clarion call" to religious freedom.
In retrospect, it seems that he was one of a very few who thought so. Obama argued
that this is America people are free to build and worship where they will, including the
Cordoba Project muslims. This ignores the MANY religious groups who have
been denied building permits on specific sites in MANY cities, counties and states in this
country on the basis of city codes and usage appropriateness. It is also an attack on a
straw man, since no one serious is arguing the plan is illegal.
   Drawing immediate fire for his insensitivity by New Yorkers who suffered loss
from the 9/11 attacks, the families of victims and all of his political opponents,
musketeer Obama seemed to waiver. He "clarified" his statement to suggest that he
was commenting only on the constitutional legality of building the mosque at ground
zero, not the wisdom of it. He then hastened to add that he had not and would not
comment on the wisdom, or lack thereof, thereby creating a complete cop out. So does
he think it's wise, thus spitting on the majority of Amerca opinion -- yet agan? Or does
he think it's unwise, but is afraid to say so because he wishes to pander to muslims -- yet
again? We'll apparently never know, which begs the question. If one has nothing new to add
to the discussion, and wishes to avoiod clarity, then why speak up at all? Why make a public statement on a controversial topic in the middle of a tight election and then simply clam up?
It's not only amateurish, it's boorish!
   The third caped crusader is none other than the dashing Majority Leader of the Senate,
Harry Reid. Reid, being a quintessential clever politician, simply could not pass up the
opportunity for a free shot. He publicly broke with Obama and Bloomberg and said that the mosque should be built "somewhere else." Do you think, Harry? Reid is embroiled in the
electoral fight of his political life in Nevada, where his personal popularity has dipped lower
than a snake's belly. His opponent, Sharron Angle, immediately threw down the gauntlet demanding that he either support or repudiate Obama's position. It was a no-brainer. After ramming through the Senate bill after bill against the wishes of America, he finally got the
chance to be the good guy, and it cost him absolutely nothing. It helped him appear caring,
savvy, sensitive, and gave him a bit of distance from Obama who hangs like and 800 pound albatross around the neck of every Democrat seeking re-election. It was a freebie and he
went for it. Did he mean it? Let's give the man the benefit of the doubt and say yes. Was he
right? Absolutely, and someone in this bumptious threesome needed to be.
   The fight over the ground zero mosque rages on, the end as yet unknown. But be badgered neither by emotionalism nor by self-serving political rhetoric. This issue is not about legality or constitutionality. It is about the memories of fallen victims, the sentivities of Americans in
America's foremost city, the political and cultural messages being sent and what ought to be.
It's one case where no court can render justice. America has to work it out. That's why the significance of the Cordoba image must be considered, the source of the mosque's funding
known and the true motives and ideas of its leaders clarified. Otherwise the doubts have it.
If there's nothing to hide, then why hide it?
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WHEN THE ISSUE ISN'T

 
   Unable to honestly confront critics of their damaging policies, Obama and Democrats
have turned increasingly to the tactic of misdirection through the creation of armies of
straw men whom they can handily dispatch and then claim false victory. It's so obvious
that a 6th grader could see through it, and it is making few believers and even fewer
friends among likely voters.
   During discussion about changing the 14th amendment to the Constitution, one
interpretation of which grants birthright citizenship to the children of aliens, Dems
have repeatedly harped on the argument that aliens come here for work, not to
have babies, and that there are no pregnant women swimming the Rio Grande to
be sure their children are U.S. citizens. That argument is fundamentally true, though
many, including this writer know of exceptions that disprove it as a rule. But, on
the other hand, intelligent advocates of taking another look at the 14th amendment
don't envision women in labor climbing the wall. What they do see is a troubling
rise in births to illegals in the U.S. What difference does it make, how, when or
why they came? And who cares? Few want to repeal the amendment. Some want
a review of the single judicial footnote that interprets it to grant citizenship to everyone
born here. By painting the whole group with the brush of believing pregnant women
are invading while in labor, Obama and the Dems create a straw man -- an idea no
one is championing -- and dismiss it by ridicule. Meanwhile, they are no closer to
producing a viable idea to solve the problem.
   Then there's Obama's series of gaffes about the so-called Ground Zero Mosque, a
cultural and worship center for Muslims in the shadow of where the Twin Towers,
destroyed by Islamic extremists in the name of Allah, once stood. While hosting (mind
you) a group of disinguished Muslims at a White House dinner, Obama seized upon
the occasion to declare that because in America we have freedom of religion, there
was no reason not to build the mosque at ground zero. That was a true argument.
It also completely missed the point. No one in his right mind is saying it's illegal or
unconstitutional for the mosque to be built. But a majority of Americans see it as
spiteful, insensitive and insulting to the memories of the 3,000 who died there.
Faced with the elephant in the room (the question of whether building the mosque
is right), Obama chose to talk, instead, about the weather (whether it is legal). His
was a useless statement contributing nothing but more controversy to an already
inflamed debate. Another straw man vanquished. So what?
   What the comment earned Obama was a firestorm of criticism from the 9/11
victims, politicians from both sides of the aisle and a plurality of the American
public. Faced with his term-long pandering to Muslims who clearly wish America
ill and would establish Shariah law inmthe Constitution's stead, people said enough
is enough is enough. Then came the backtracking, the pie-eyed, stupid-grinned
semi-retraction that was inevitable. In an off-the-cuff comment Obama told reporters
he was commenting only on the legality of building the mosque (which needed no
comment), and not the wisdom of it. He further said he would make no comment on
the latter. Then, astoundingly, White House spokesmen asserted that Obama's was
in no way a "political comment." What an amateurish and transparent attempt at
misdirection. In an election year virtually everything a president says is "political."
In this case it was also inflammatory and showed Obama to be neither sensitive to
nor in touch with the electorate he is supposed to serve.
   But the straw men are increasingly afire, and Obama has given the Republicans
prime leverage to use with every Democratic candidate for office, forcing them to
publicly declare whether they stand with the public demand for what's right to
prevail, or with Obama's sniveling issue avoidance, denials and backtracking. Ouch!
What an incredibly amateurish mistake!
   If one looks at how it came about, it is easy to see what happened. During his
campaign, Obama habitually pandered to whatever constitutency he was addressing,
speaking about small-town Pennsylvanians as "bitter, clinging to their guns and their
religion" while addressing liberals in California, but singing a different song when he
went back east. At the infamous Muslim dinner, Obama clearly pandered to his Muslim
audience. Hopelessly confusing what is right with what is legal, Obama continues to make
irresponsible statements which are either beside the point or flatly untrue. It gets even
worse when he's deprived of his teleprompter. Now the lies are coming home to roost.
Perhaps Obama is leading his party in a new and wonderful experiment on trickle
down implosion. One can only hope.
 
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SPILLED MILK: THE QUEST FOR A LOST ECONOMY

 
   According to the polls, 55% of Americans think the word "socialist" fits Barack
Obama very well. That being the case, the outrage over 10% unemployment,
record numbers on food stamps, massive and continuing mortgage foreclosures,
government takeovers of automakers, financial institutions, student loans and
healthcare, strangling regulation of virtually every type of business and the threat
of some new and burdensome tax on an almost daily basis seems amusing. What
has America hot under the collar is, after all, what they signed up for when they
voted Obama and his Democrat cronies virtually unlimited legislative and executive
power.
   Despite manifold historical examples, people still don't seem to get it that this is
precisely what socialism does to a country. Now, I grant you that Obama cloaked
his socialism in charm, wit and an inspiring message of hope and change. And I
further grant that he did so in front of a war-weary, Bush-hating electorate that
wanted to believe any change was for the good. But now, 18 months after Obama's
grand inauguration, 62% say the country is headed in the wrong direction and 50%
disapprove of Obama's performance, with 54% saying that Democratic ideas
are too liberal. Duh! Somebody really smart once said, "Be careful what you wish
for."
   What's really interesting is that the Democrats don't understand why their grand
plan is failing either. They do know, because they're working so hard to persuade
us that it isn't. When something succeeds, you don't have to prove it.
   In a recent public moment of partisan pique and personal frustration Obama claimed
that, "Republicans don't have one single new idea to move the country forward"
from the mess it's in. That statement alone shows how much the Democrats really
don't get what they've done. Let's unpack it for a moment.
   First, it seeks to justify obvious Democratic failures by suggesting that Republicans
have no alternatives. We see that argument played out in senile liberal Princeton
economist Paul Krugman's recent New York Times article seeking to discredit Paul
Ryan's (R-WI) "Roadmap for America's Future" (a prime example of a "Republican
idea"). Krugman dismisses Ryan's arguments as "old" and "tired" and then whines
that Ryan's revised taxation plan (flat or fair tax) couldn't possibly provide the revenue
needed by the government to operate. What he isn't honest enough to add, is that
it isn't sufficient for the bulging, bloated bureaucracy created by Barack Obama
to operate, a point Ryan would, no doubt,concede. The errors in Krugman's
(and Obama's) position are (a) that the country needs to continue barging forward
like a drunken bull in a fine china shop, and (b) "new" ideas are needed to fuel
that progress.
   When one is approaching an obvious dead end, the last thing he needs to do is
step on the accelerator. And if America is correct that the country is moving in
the wrong direction, then going farther down that road is the last thing we should
be doing. What don't we understand about the "progressive" agenda that is
driving the Democrats? Their notion seems to be that we need to put the pedal to
the metal and drive away from consitutional government, free enterprise and personal
prosperity as fast as possible. What many of the thoughful dissenters are urging is
putting the wagon in reverse, undoing some of the damage, scaling down government,
putting business back in private hands, cutting business owners some slack and allowing
people to make their own medical decisions in conference with the doctors they trust.
When you believe you're headed the wrong way, the last people you want to listen to
are those screaming at you to step on the gas. That's the message Obama and the Dems
don't get, because they don't want to.
   The United States Constitution is pretty old, and it's just chock full of old ideas,
But maybe before turning it into  Obama's "living document" that we can twist
according to our whim, we'd better take stock of what strict adherence to and
patriotic defense of it have done for this nation. And then, perhaps we should
compare that with what Obama has done in 18 months, and what the cratering,
debt-riddled eurosocialists have done. Having made such a comparison, then
perhaps we should give serious thought to which state of affairs we find more
attractive. By comparison with Obama's neo-socialism, the old ideas look pretty
darned good, Maybe the way out of this mess is not more innovation in govern-
ment, but a government more intent on implementing the tried and true formula
that made America great. Democrats with power are as dangerous as children
with a new chemistry set, and they're bound to blow something up. This time, it's
the economy. What's next?
   Perhaps the voters deserve some slack. Obama's schtick sounded so good, all
hopey and changey. And Bush, who forgot he was supposed to be a Republican,
was so bad in th eyes of so many. And who wasn't drawn to the notion of electing
America's first black president. But most never understood how far Obama was
prepared to go in confiscating wealth from some and redistributing it to others.
No one guessed that this first "post-racial" president would lead the nation into
deeper racial divisions than ever. No one envisioned him as the de facto CEO of
banks and automakers, the regulator of executive salaries or one who would
decide, independently of congress, how much electricity we could use, where
our health insurance would come from, what our doctors could and couldn't
do to treat us, what products we had to buy or where and when we could drill
for oil. We were gullible, perhaps even stupid.
   But now the economy lies in ruins, unemployment remains high, the "recovery,"
such as it was, has stalled, our president is involved in lawsuits against half the
states of the union, illegals are still streaming across our southern border. The
milk has been spilled, and we, the voters, have to try and find a way to put it back
in the bottle before it all spoils. We can cry over it, or we can take the bull by the
horns and solve our problem. We know who is causing the problem, where they
are, and what they'll be calling themselves on the November ballot. So, will it be
full speed ahead to hell? Or is it time for thoughtful leaders who will slow down,
think, and return us to the prosperity and pride we remember? It's really up to
us, isn't it? But this time, we can't be blinded by political correctness, or plead
that we've been fooled. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me!
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THE REID CALCULUS: UNDERESTIMATIING LATINO INTELLIGENCE

 
   While some have expressed surprise at Harry Reid's amazement that anyone of
Hispanic heritage could possibly be a Republican, they shouldn't be. Reid is a
desperate man driven to desperate measures to stay in office. And he is exercising
a carefully thought out Democratic calculus that if they can maintain 80% of the
black vote, capture two-thirds of the Hispanic vote and hold onto just 36% of the
white vote they can win the elections and stay in power.
   Although the calculus is flawed, Reid's main problem may be that in "profiling"
Latinos, he has greatly misunderstood their long-term motives and aspirations, and
seriously underestimated their intelligence. While it might lock in a few votes for
him and his Democratic cronies in the short-term, which is likely as far as Reid
can see, it is a formula for long-term disillusionment and defection.
   While living in Houston, Texas, I worked side-by-side with many Latinos, both
men and women. Our particular mission was to help high-need families with young
children, and given Houston demographics, most of them were Latino, as well. Some
were undocumented, some here legally. Over a 15 year period I learned some major
differences between Latinos and other indigent populations. Harry Reid should be
so lucky.
   First, I found out that Latinos are smart -- not so much in terms of I.Q., but in
terms of life lessons, the ability to absorb and replicate and the wisdom to apply new
skills and ideas to life situations. This characteristic makes them highly adaptable to
new and changing conditions, and unafraid to confront new challenges from which
many of the poor normally retreat. It results in a quiet confidence that issues in their
being able to do something unassisted once they have learned how to do it.
   Then I discovered that Latinos will run, not walk through open doors of opportunity.
Most of them are far less interested in a handout than they are in the chance to succeed.
One fellow I met was an auto mechanic who was here legally, although his wife was
undocumented. He worked at a shop where he was being exploited and grossly under-
paid. He, his wife and four children lived in a tiny, rat-infested, two-bedroom apart-
ment. We helped him get an SBA loan so he could open his own shop, and his wife
to get into an amnesty-to-citizenship program. Someone brought an older model
Mercedes in for repair and never returned to claim it. Under a mechanics lien, he
seized the vehicle and soon his wife was driving a Mercedes. Business boomed, and
he was able to save a downpayment with which he purchased a repossessed home
with four bedrooms and a pool. Later, he was able to buy a used Mercedes of his own.
I could cite many, many, many instances of similar Latino success that came about not
because they were given handouts, but because they were given a chance. Industry and
a work ethic are the rule, rather than the exception.
   Latinos have a very strong commitment to family values, and those who have made
their way upward stand more than ready to mentor others, whether family, friends or
complete strangers in how to succeed in America. Today, I count some of the Latinos
with whom I worked among my best and most trusted friends. They will be the first
to say that Harry Reid has it all wrong.
   What they came here for was a chance they did not have in Central America, Cuba
and Mexico. They did not have the chance because of incredible poverty and unemploy-
ment, government control of business and corruption in high places. They understand
that an anti-business government imposing high taxes and Draconian controls is not in
their interests if they want to become successful, affluent and even have their own shop.
The Democratic promises of handouts, mostly empty, may buy a few short-term votes
from the poor, the unenlightened and the desperate. But thinking Latinos will ultimately
reject Democratic socialism because it runs contrary to their economic interests. One
recent poll showed just 12% of Latinos favoring Republicans and 42% favoring
Democrats. But if you parsed the participants to exclude illegals and the very poor
living on the government dole, you would get a radically different picture. The more
Latinos succeed and the more they understand Democratic socialism, the more open
they are to Republican alternatives. It's the process of growing up.
   Reid and the Democrats are banking on the fact that Latinos won't grow up soon.
Their calculus is legalize (through amnesty), unionize and monopolize (vote as your
union bosses tell you). This treats a whole class of people like pawns to be manipulated
instead of like valuable human beings. My bet is that Latinos will prove increasingly
too smart, too ambitious and too independent to fall for it. When they do, a whole
new political class will be born, one capable of forging its own destiny without either
Democrats or Republicans. When that happens, politicians who try to profile them, as
Reid is doing in Nevada, will be shown the door. Hasta la vista, baby! 
 
 
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THE MORNING OF NOVEMBER 3

 
   Some have said that the coming election is significant because it will be a referendum
on Barack Obama's creeping eurosocialist "fundamental transformation" of America. If
that is true, and if the polling data holds up, then November 3, 2010, may well go down
as one of the most significant dates in American history.
   If the pollsters are correct, and when they are so united in their renderings they seldom
miss the mark by much, Republicans, infused with Tea Party enthusiasm and a mission
for fiscal conservatism will make enormous gains toward restoring legislative balance to
the nation. Some say they will even capture a majority of seats in the House. But so what?
How will (or may) we poor schmucks who voted be better off on November 3 than we
are right now?
   It all depends. There are cynics who see the Republicans as only a slightly more
conservative version of Democrats, and Tea Partiers as overly enthused cheerleaders who
don't really understand the Washington grist mill, let alone have the know-how to change
it. So, in their view, we won't be much better off at all. Just same old, same old, with a
bunch of new, jaundiced faces. That is one possible scenario, but probably an unlikely
one because those who survive the rigors of this campaign season will almost surely
come away from the experience with a vivid sense of the profound national discontent
over the current direction of things. They will quite likely understand that they have a
very limited space in time to bring about a radical reversal of course, lest they, too, go
the way of the incumbents they have ousted.
   So, how might things look on November 3? If conservatives make deep inroads into
the liberal majority, but seize control of neither house, it will mark a new phase in the
all-out war for American hearts and minds. Desperation will drive Democrats to try
driving through pieces of the radical Obama agenda like cap-and-trade and union card
check in lame duck sessions before incoming conservatives can be sworn and seated.
Whether they succeed or not, such action will fuel such a national backlash as to
concede the moral high ground to their opponents, who will use it against them from
that time forward. Once seated, the new conservative cadre will frustrate every liberal
Obama initiative, forcing concession and compromise on every hand. It may result in
more gridlock, and that may be better than the current out-of-control slide toward
fiscal oblivion. But it is the least desirable of the possible scenarios.
   Should conservatives capture the House, but not the Senate, they can force even
more compromises, and perhaps even begin to reverse some of the entitlement and
national security damage that Obama and his majority have wrought. It is true that
such will be hard without Senate cooperation, but remember that the Senate needs
House cooperation too, just to keep government going, and so will have to make
some concessions, however bitter. As the court battle heats up and it becomes clear
that the individual mandate of the healthcare reform bill is a constitutional overreach,
they may even have to concede to repeal and re-start. (Without the individual
mandate, the insurance exchanges and high-risk pools will collapse, nullifying all
the supposed benefits of the reform). Majorities do make a difference.
   In their efforts to stay in power and turn back the tsunami of public disapproval,
Democrats are making a series of strategic and tactical miscalculations that are
likely to backfire on election day. They cannot run on their record, for it is their
record that has met with the public's disdain. Nor can they run on the popularity
of their president of whose performance a solid majority of Americans now
disapprove. So they have chosen among the unenviable lot of remaining options,
and they have chosen badly. They are viciously attacking Republicans and the
Te aParty, hurling accusations of racism, fascism and extremism. Historically, the
negative campaigning has persuaded many, but this time it's not going to work. In
this case the devil voters know (the Democrats) is perceived as infinitely worse
than those they aren't sure are even devils. The old politics-as-usual game has
grown tired, and is unlikely to preserve Democrats power this time. They have
raised the grim spectre of George W. Bush, whose very name stirs ill feelings in
many, supposing that if they can tar current Republicans with the Bush image,
they will win by default. The problem is that the current crop of fresh Republican
faces had nothing to do with George W. Bush, and has no stake in defending his
policies. It is therefore a stretch to drag in Bush, especially in an environment
where most believe that in nearly two years of Obama's presidency things have
gotten worse, not better.
   Obama argues that Republicans don't have a single, solitary new idea to advance
the nation past the recession. In addition to being demonstrably false, it misses the
point that it is not just Republican ideas the electorate is seeking, but a reversal of
Obama's ideas. Finally, Democrats argue that Republicans and Tea Partiers have
ideas that are too extreme. So "no ideas" or ideas that are "too extreme?" Which is
it? The fact is that conservatives have no ideas that will advance the liberal agenda,
and most Americans are smart enough to see through the Obama-Democrat
subterfuge and get that. Democrats can't run on the positives of what they have
produced while in unprecedented power, so all they can do is raise alarm about
what George W. Bush did and what current Republicans might do. It may persuade
a few dimwits, but it won't win in November.
   But there is a fire burning in America today which may, in the end, burn down
the ivory towers of both Democrats and Republicans. Increasingly, the old Democrat
versus Republican narrative is becoming irrelevant. What matters most to the voters
of today is responsibility versus irresponsibility. What matters is the perceived
encroachment of government upon private business and individual lives. What matters
is the ascendancy of the "political class" that pays no heed to what voters want, or
what they think, but takes its direction from liberal academia, or special interests like
the labor unions. It's post-political because it has infected not only the Tea Party, but
also Republicans, Independents who have no prior political allegiance and even some
commonsense Democrats. The days of career politicians and national transformation
by executive order are numbered. It all begins, for better or for worse, when the
votes of November 2 have been counted. Wouldn't it be nice, on the morning of the 3rd,
to wake up and feel that your vote had made a real difference?
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THE DEVOLUTION OF WAR - PART IV

 
   So what should the United States of America have learned from its sundry wars,
what is the prognosis of the current conflict in Afghanistan, and what principles
should guide us in deciding whether and how to fight in the future? That's a longer
discussion than this post will allow, but here are some shorthand observations.
   1. We have to get better at calculating what wars will cost and how they will be
paid for. While the nation teeters on the brink of the deficit abyss, we have poured
trillions into the wars in the Middle East, for a modest return. Before going "all in"
to defeat an enemy, America must calculate realistically the costs of doing so, and
argue openly for the shared national sacrifice necessary to win.
   2. We have to get better at defining what constitutes "winning" in any conflict in
which we choose to engage. Is it vanquishing a dictator or depriving a dangerous
enemy of armaments that can threaten our homeland, or is it a limited mission to
protect a population until danger abates, or to drive out an unwelcome invader?
Unless we can better define winning, there is no way of knowing when we're done,
and that's what frustrates and demoralizes the citizens whose morale and goodwill
are necessary to military success and unneccessarily costs American lives.
   3. We must admit when we have miscalculated or made an error in judgment. Had
we withdrawn from Iraq the moment we learned there were no weapons of mass
destruction, an all-out civil war would have resulted. Because  we stayed, the limited
civil war there claimed most of the American lives lost in the entire misadventure.
If we cannot clearly define winning in Afghanistan and commit the resources to do it,
then we should cut our losses and get out now.
   4. We have to get far more realistic about what is possible. The notion that a western
style democracy can flourish in Iraq or Afghanistan is historical and cultural wishful
thinking of the most naive kind. Even now, the Iraqis cannot seem to form a consensus
government, nor will the historically and culturally tribal Afghans be able to do it. In a
part of the world where human life remains cheap and corruption is the rule rather than
the exception, America continues to insist on playing baseball by cricket rules. It is
madness!
   5. If we continue to decimate enemies and then assume financial responsibility
for rebuilding their damaged infrastructure, our wars will bankrupt us even faster
than Obama and his Democratic congress (which is saying a lot). If we insist on
bombing enemies back to the stone age, then we must accept the painful chore
of watching them rebuild from that point, on their own. The argument that if we
don't help them they will hate us, or that our enemies will move into the vacuum
to establish a new foothold simply no longer washes, because they seem do that
anyway. It makes absolutely no sense to borrow money from the Chinese to help
the Iraqis, who are sitting on trillions in oil, rebuild their country. If that flies in he
face of conventional diplomatic and political wisdom, it is because that so-called 
"wisdom"  is a stinking pile of irrational garbage and it's time to admit it.
   6. It is necessary to re-think the "axis of evil." With respect, George W. Bush,
while right in concept, was wrong in identifying the points of the axis. North Korea,
Iraq and Iran are and were "small potatoes." The real players are Radical Islam,
Russia and China. In spite of the presidential lockjaw about the Islamists, they remain
the foremost short-term threat to American national security. It is a fatal error to
understand jihad as either the benign struggle described by presidential security
advisor Brennan or as a short-term phenomenon limited to al Qaeda alone. Islam's
principal jihad is to impose sharia law and establish a worldwide caliphate by peace-
ful means if possible, but through violence if not. That won't go away if we capture
or kill bin Laden and Alzawahiri, and the persistent attempt to confront it will main-
tain a constant state of tension, sometimes breaking out into open war, between the
west and the Islamic nations of the Middle and Far East. While the Russians and
Chinese play at "nice" in the context of the United Nations or in White House "burger
summits," they continue to spy on us, undermine our attempts to corral rogue nations
of whom they remain principal patrons and supply those nations with both armaments
and economic assistance designed to break sanctions and cause heavy U.S. investment
in countermeasures. American leaders need to go back to the grammar school of
enemy identification, and then start shooting straight with the American people.
   7. Finally, America needs to "man up" on national security. Between the no-profiling
whiners, the open borders freaks and the political apology tours, two deadly trends are
developing apace. We are being infiltrated and overrun by illegal immigrants who
include among their number both terrorists and spies, on the one hand, and our slide
toward disarmament and determination to deal, through, diplomacy, with those who
will not honestly engage, is leaving us more vulnerable by the day. The START
treaty constitutes further nuclear disarmament, with woefully inadequate verification
measures to assure that the Russians are doing the same. Our nuclear arsenal and
delivery systems have not been upgraded in years. Are we even certain that they
still work? Recently China announced final development of a surface-to-surface
missile that can sink a nuclear aircraft carrier at a distance of 900 miles with a
single blast. Where's ours? Obama's fantasyland economics has led us to the brink
of national bakruptcy. It would be a real bummer to have to learn to speak Chinese
to boot. It's time to get serious about national defense.
   Wars fail when they are fought by political whimsy. Instead of firing MacArthur,
Truman should have taken the leash off. If he had, we wouldn't be treating the
Cinese with kid gloves now. Instead of declaring the North Vietnamese industrial
and harbor complex off-limits for U.S. bombers, and declaring the Yalu River an
absolute "no-go" for pursuing fighter pilots, thereby guaranteeing a loss, LBJ should
have confronted the Russians and the Chinese. How many times must it be proven
that appeasement is a losing strategy? Limited wars are very,very dangerous, and
when America will not fight to win, andclearly define what that means, she should
not fight at all.
   So what is "winning" in Afghanistan? If it is eradicating the Taliban, then that is
impossible. So long as they have sanctuary in Pakistan, money from opium and
an endless supply of fighters and suicide bombers from Muslim families who are
too poor and afraid to do anything else, it will be like fighting plaque in one's mouth.
You can move it around, but you never get rid of it. If it is propping up a corrupt
"democratic" government in a society with a historically tribal mindset, then the
outcome will be even worse than the one in Iraq. If it is simply demonstrating
American resolve in retribution for 9/11, then we have to be honest about that and
put a cap on its price tag. The smart thing to do is (a) degrade the Taliban as far as
possible, (b) withdraw, and (c) maintain a satellite and intelligence presence so that
we can bomb out of existience any future terror training camp before it is completed.
It's time to be honest. What's the end game? And how many lives and dollars is that
worth?
   War is a hard university with a high tuition and no certainty of graduation. Only
the wise and wary should apply.
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THE DEVOLUTION OF WAR - PART III

 
   If history should never be ignored in the calculus of war, neither should culture.
For example, given the  ongoing strife, animosity and violence between the Shia and
Sunnis, and the historic dominance by the minority Sunnis over the majority Shia
in Iraq, civil war, in the vacuum created by Saddam's overthrow, was axiomatic.
The U.S. should have seen it coming many miles away, and crafted a strategy to
extract our troops before they became targets in a crossfire that claimed the
majority of American lives in that country. We should be carefully looking at the
cultural factors at play in any country we seek to invade, and calculate in advance
the likely aftermath of our success or failure. This calculus should then drive our
strategy, tactics and extraction plan.
   Alliances are a huge factor in both success and failure in war. In Viet Nam, the
North's close alliances with Russia and China doomed the American effort from
the beginning. In Korea, Harry Truman's reluctance to fully engage a stubborn
Chinese enemy caused him to reign in Douglas MacArthur's strategy to win the
war, and caused America to settle for a hard-won, bittersweet draw. Today, the
Taliban alliance with powerful elements in neighboring Pakistan threaten American
success in Afghanistan. None of these alliances were great surprises, and should
have been factored into the war objectives in each of these cases and, perhaps,
even the decision regarding whether to fight at all.
   Timing is also a major factor. Should we have attacked Hitler before he conquered
most of Europe, confronted the Japanese Navy before Pearl Harbor or restrained
Mexico before the Alamo? In hindsight, probably so. But "pre-emptive war" is a
slippery slope, and launching an attack absent irrefutable evidence of capacity and
intent on the part of our enemy can lead to embarrassing debacles such as Iraq. The
trick is to fight when success can most likely be achieved, and before irreparable 
damage is done. Military analyses show that the U.S. could likely have beaten Iraq
anywhere, at any time and on any field. So why not wait until the WMD evidence
was conclusive?
   The undeniably changing nature of war is a growing factor in evaluating which
wars to fight and under what circumstances. King George's redcoats, using standard
European military doctrine in which lines of marksmen stood opposite one another
in an open field and blasted away to see which could do the most damage, was
summarily routed by American militiamen utilizing ambush tactics learned from the
American Indians and utlizing natural cover and concealment. The Iraqi's, using
Russian military doctrine reliant on long-range heavy artillery and massed armor
were shocked and overwhelmed by the advanced American military tactic known
as the "vertical envelopment," in which large contingents of skilled commandos
parachuted behind their lines, surrounded them and cut their communications. In
Viet Nam, the Cong proved to be better jungle fighters than the Americans. It
stands to reason, because it was their jungle. Military strategies can no longer be
static, and must be tailored to factor in a great many different contingencies. The
toughest admission is the most obvious: that most wars today will ultimately devolve
into guerilla conflicts.
   A major factor in American conflicts has been lack of a clear and achieveable
objective,  or a major change of objective that is not successfully communicated,
sold, and re-calibrated into strategy and tactics. Most Americans were on board
with attacking Iraq when they believed Iraq had nuclear and biological weapons
that might threaten the U.S. homeland. But had someone told them there were no
weapons of mass destruction and asked permission to sacrifice over 5,000 U.S.
lives to overthrow Saddam, the proposition would have been universally scorned.
George Bush was loth to admit the catastrophic failure of intelligence, and his
attempt to justify the invasion after the fact by the beat down of Saddam and the
presence of al Qaeda was simply too weak to bear scrutiny. And given that shift
in rationale and objective, the U.S. was far too slow in converting its strategy to
pure counterinsurgency. The lag undoubtedly killed American soldiers.
   So what, then, are the criteria Americans should use in deciding whether, where,
when and how to fight? And what is the likely future of the mission in Afghanistan?
Tomorrow's final post in his series will make concrete suggestions.
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THE DEVOLUTION OF WAR - PART II

 
   Ethicists have, for ages, debated the matter of what constitutes a "just war." This
was necessary, you see, because men and nations have chosen to do battle over
land, commodities, political differences and even a woman, Helen of Troy. Their
best consensus seems to be that the protection of national sovereignty, wars of
self defense are "just," as are wars seeking to ameliorate the intolerable conditions
of enslaved peoples. Other conflicts are less clear cut, and require case-by-case
parsing.
   The problem with such philosophical analyses in the modern world is that there
are so many definitions of what constitutes justice, self-defense and slavery. Once
Hussein was gone, for example, Iraqi insurgents argued that they were simply
defending their homeland against an occupying power, the USA. Many Americans
see Venezuela's Hugo Chavez as a socialist dictator, but Hollywood's Sean Penn
disagrees and cheekily says that journalists so depicting him should be thrown in
jail. One man's hero is another man's despot, one man's terrorist another's "freedom
fighter." The American left sees the confiscatory redistribution of wealth as justice,
while those on the right see it as Draconian oppression. It seems that what is just
("right") is in the eye of the beholder.
   Adolf Hitler, Jozef Stalin and Benito Mussolini claimed that their mass murders
and invasion of other lands were justified because they were in the national interest.
Great Britan, France, Belgium, Norway, Poland, et al, would say that those actions
were decisively against their interests. So national interest alone cannot justify wars
of offense, though it is the sine qua non of protecting national sovereignty.
   And most modern wars are marked by internal dissenters who object to going to
war given the government's rationale and justification, or sometimes even in any case.
If America had taken a national poll in advance of any given war in which it has
fought, a portion, sometimes a large portion of its citizenry would have objected.
   In the end, only the objectives and results of armed conflict will bear history's
verdict, vindication or condemnation. So will the ways in which such conflicts are
fought, and the enduring post-surrender aftermath. The Revolution was justified by
liberation of the colonies from unjust oppression and the founding of the American
nation. The Civil War was justified by the preservation of the union and freeing of
the slaves. The two great world wars were justified by the removal of unspeakable
tyrants and the defeat of murderous regimes. The Korean conflict resulted in
preserving a free South Korea. Desert Storm and, arguably, Desert Shield were
justified by the protection of Kuwait and Iraq's other, weaker neighbors. In each
of those wars, the objectives were clear and unwavering. The Mexican-American
War was one of protecting the territory of Texas, and was provoked by Mexico's
attacks, including the slaughter at the Alamo.
   But the rationale for America's other wars has been less clear. Critics say that
Iraqi Freedom was never about WMDs, but about oil. At the time, many thought
the Spanish American War was about annexation of the Philippines. Since we beat
the Spanish and the Iraqis, yet never annexed the Philippines or got any oil, it
would seem that whether those critics were right or wrong America failed in its
primary mission.
   The U.S. has made three great martial miscalculations, leading to one draw, one
loss and the Afghan war currently raging and of uncertain prognosis. If we were
to clearly understand and admit those miscalculations, the enlightenment might
guide the nation safely through the uncharted waters of future wars.
   One such lesson is never to ignore history. In Viet Nam, for example, powerful
European armies had sought hegemony, only to perish in a swamp of treachery,
betrayal and humiliation. This was a repeated historical pattern, and it was
both arrogant and foolhardy for America to believe so deeply in its own
exceptionalism to assume that where others had failed miserably, we would
succeed. The chemistry, the terrain, the political climate and the history made such
an expectation unrealistic. It is true enough that had we not gotten involved, the South
would have succumbed to the communist threat. But that happened anyway in the
end, and cost the lives of thousands of American fighting men and women.
   In tomorrow's segment, we look at other such factors that can help us to
choose and fight our wars wisely and successfully in the future.
 
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THE DEVOLUTION OF WAR - PART I

 
   Americans have fought a number of wars, beginning with the 18th century War for
Independence and extending through the current conflict in Afghanistan. The popular
assumption is that America always wins its wars, but a closer examination of history
makes such a judgment questionable and hinges upon one's definition of "wins."
   To be sure, America has won some wars outright. The Revolution against great
Britain is an example. The clear objectives of that war were to throw off the yoke
of British tyranny and establish a free and sovereign nation. Mission accomplished.
The War of 1812 was something of a reprise of the Revolution, albeit with a slightly
different configuration of powers. It ended in a stalemate, but America still won
because it had rebuffed an attempt by the British to reassert dominance.
   The Spanish-American War started over Spanish intervention in Cuba and the
Philippines (imperialism), and after the U.S.S. Maine was sunk in the Havana harbor
congress declared a war in which the U.S. trounced Spain. However, the ending was
bittersweet, because after evicting the Spaniards from the Philippines America wanted
to annex the islands, causing yet another conflict with the Filipinos whom America
had armed and trained. The Filipinos defended their land and achieved independence,
and America turned an overwhelming win into an embarassing non-win.
   Mexico and America fought a war over the independence of Texas, and Mexico
got its backside kicked across the Rio Grande and all the way to Mexico City. Not
only did Texas win independence and the right to become a state, but California and
part of what is now Arizona were conquered and annexed as well. That's right,
illegal alien indigenous rights boosters. Losing has consequences, and Mexico was
the big loser in that war.
   Americans fought each other (north vs. south) in a bloody civil war that claimed
a huge toll in lives and national ill-will, some of which persists to this day. The south
wanted its independence (to secede from the union) and the north wanted to liberate
the slaves and preserve the constitutional republic. On all counts, the north won.
   World War I was fought to keep Germany from dominating all of Europe, and was
a clear win for the U.S. and its allies. World War II was a struggle against the maniacal
regime of Adolf Hitler in the Atlantic theatre and Tojo's Japanese hordes in the Pacific.
Germany was beaten the old-fashioned way, and the Japanese surrendered after U.S.
President Harry S. Truman ordered atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Italy's Benito Mussolini stupidly cast his lot with Hitler, thereby guaranteeing Italy a
spot on the loser list. The clear objective on both fronts was to defeat imperialist
armies with designs on controlling large populations other than their own.
   In Korea, the U.S. fought a bitter two-year war against the North Koreans and the
Communist Chinese, the purpose being to defend the freedom and independence of
South Korea. The war ended up a bloody draw, with an armistice protesting the
boundary of South Korea, but leaving in place a bloodthirsty militaristic regime which
ultimately camed to be ruled by Kim Jong Il.
   In Viet Nam, the U.S. plunged into a combat zone where European armies had
floundered, perished and ultimately withdrawn. The hope was to keep South Viet
Nam free and independent. But communist sympathizers in the south (the Viet Cong)
and Chinese protectors from the north joined forces with communist dictator Ho Chi
Minh to drive the U.S. army out, inflict huge numbers of casualties and overwhelm the
weak and corrupt government in the south. This was a U.S. loss.
   When Iraq sought to invade Kuwait, seeking to assert an ancient and bogus claim
to the oil rich land there, they found a U.S. force waiting and ready. Operation Desert
Shield, quickly followed by Desert Storm resulted in the humiliating defeat of the
vaunted Iraqi army, a shock to the Russian generals who had trained them and provided
their strategy. When President George W. Bush believed intelligence that dictator
Saddam Hussein was seeking weapons of mass destruction, Operation Iraqi Freedom
commenced wherein Hussein was overthrown and ultimately hanged by his own people
for crimes against humanity. The good news was that Hussein was gone. The bad was
that no weapons of mass destruction were ever found, although some evidence of the
Iraqis' interest in them was. The succeeding Iraqi civil war left American combat troops
trapped in the middle, and the mounting loss of life coupled with the absence of WMDs
led to eneormous presidential unpopularity for Bush and loss of support for the war
at home.
   After Islamic extremist terrorists, mostly born in Saudi Arabia, hijacked four airliners,
crashing two into the World Trade Center and one into the Pentagon, Bush declared
war on the Afghanistani Taliban who provided shelter, aid and comfort to al Qaeda
mastermind Usama bin Laden. That war continues to rage, with the outcome uncertain.
   There are good wars and bad ones, and reasons for success and failure that go well
beyond numbers of soldiers, quality of weaponry and strategic brilliance. War as a genre
has evolved technologically, but devolved politically, strategically and tactically. The final
segment of this post will establish and analyze that devolution, as well as providing a
calculus for determining which wars are profitable and which are not.
 
 
 
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