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Phyllis Schlafly, conservatism’s “first lady,”
had this to say about presidential candidate and former Arkansas Gov.
Mike Huckabee: “He destroyed the conservative movement in Arkansas, and
left the Republican Party a shambles, yet some of the same evangelicals
who sold us on George W. Bush as a 'compassionate conservative' are now
trying to sell us on Huckabee.”
“He has
zero intellectual underpinnings in the conservative movement,” another
of Huckabee’s countless conservative detractors told the Wall Street
Journal’s John Fund. “He's hostile to free trade, hiked sales and
grocery taxes, backed sales taxes on Internet purchases, and presided
over state spending going up more than twice the inflation rate.”
“[Huckabee] was pro-life and pro-gun, but otherwise a liberal,” reveals
Betsy Hagan. The Arkansas director of the conservative Eagle Forum was a
key backer of [Huckabee’s] early runs for office, and was once ‘his No.
1 fan,’ explains Fund. Hagan now cautions that, “Just like Bill Clinton
[Huckabee] will charm you, but don't be surprised if he takes a
completely different turn in office.”
So too
has Quin Hillyer of the American Spectator been
out-and-about chatting to folks in Arkansas. A fair number of them
describe Huckabee disdainfully as “a guy with a thin skin, a nasty
vindictive streak, and a long history of imbroglios about questionable
ethics.” For instance, Huckabee used public money to fund his family’s
Falstaffian appetites, and “tried to claim as his own some $70,000 of
furniture donated to the governor's mansion.” He was also in the habit
of scolding “the media for reporting [his] transgressions rather than
demanding that the transgressors make things right.” Consequently,
Huckabee had been investigated 14 times and reprimanded five times
by the ethics commission.
Like
Michael Dukakis, Huckabee waded into the moral miasma of penal
abolition. Dukakis, the Democratic presidential nominee in 1988, fought
to secure a prison furlough for convicted murderer Willie Horton.
Horton went on to assault a Massachusetts man and rape his fiancée
during his recreational weekend off. Wayne Dumond, the recipient of
Huckabee’s helping hand, raped and murdered a Missouri woman. When asked
about his difficult-to-defend role “in
an apparently illegal and unrecorded closed-door meeting with the parole
board lobbying on behalf of a rapist,” Huckabee has offered a
thesaurus of excuses.
On
economics, Huckabee is also a habitual offender. The Club for Growth,
which is dedicated to promoting a “low-tax and limited-government
agenda,” has few good things to say about him. Apparently, there is
nothing invisible about Huckabee’s heavy regulatory hand. His consistent
contempt for the taxpayer has earned him “a lifetime grade of D from the
free-market Cato Institute.” “By the end of his ten-year tenure,” writes
the Club’s Andrew Roth, “Governor Huckabee was responsible for a 37
percent higher sales tax in Arkansas, 16 percent higher motor fuel
taxes, and 103 percent higher cigarette taxes.” State spending under
Huckabee increased a whopping 65.3 percent from 1996 to 2004, three
times the rate of inflation.”
GDP
growth declines as the government’s share of the GDP rises. Huckabee,
that economic wrecking ball, inaugurated new programs and expanded
existing ones so that “the number of state government workers rose 20
percent during his tenure, and the state's general obligation debt shot
up by almost $1 billion.”
Needless
to say, Huckabee hopped for joy when George Bush, his evil ideological
twin, passed a prescription-drug benefit that would add trillions to the
Medicare shortfall. But not even Bush stooped as low as to support
raising the minimum wage. As someone possessing “zero intellectual
underpinnings in the conservative movement,” Huckabee obliged.
Understandably, he was incapable of grasping that fixing the price of
labor above market rate or the employee's productivity increases
unemployment among the poor and the unskilled.
Huckabee’s philosophically limp conservatism led him to slip between the
sheets with the Democrats in his support for expanding the SCHIP
health-care program, and in favoring the “cap-and-trade system to limit
global-warming emissions.” The last is a scam that’ll cause massive job
and income loss.
“F” for
immigration: That’s how Roy Beck, president of “Numbers USA,” has graded
Huckabee on that front. It’s only fair to point out that by sheer fluke
Huckabee reversed his left-liberal stand on illegal immigration when he
decided to run for president.
The
CAFTA and NAFTA so-called trade agreements are not free trade, but
managed trade. This is why Rep. Ron Paul, Mr. Liberty
himself, has rejected these usurpations. The Hegelian Huckabee, however,
has sided with the statists who’d sooner subordinate America’s
sovereignty, and allow powerful, unaccountable bureaucracies to dictate
the terms of trade.
Indeed,
Ron Paul is the gold standard for personal and political principles.
“When it comes to limited government, there are few champions as
steadfast and principled as Rep. Ron Paul,” vouches the Club
for Growth. “On taxes, regulation, and political free speech his record
is outstanding.”
Who
other than Dr. Paul has “voted nine out of nine times against raising
his own pay”? Who other than Dr. Paul has
refused to partake in the obscene congressional pension scheme, a
veritable shakedown of the indentured taxpayer?
Nicknamed “Dr. No” for voting against all legislation that isn’t
expressly authorized by the Constitution, Ron Paul has never
voted for an unbalanced budget; never voted for a federal
restriction on gun ownership; never voted to increase the power
of the executive branch; and never taken a government-paid
junket.
And he
voted no to the Iraq war.
Huckabee, on the other hand, is as wasteful about lives and limbs as he
is about material assets not his own. During a recent presidential
debate, he recommended goose-stepping Americans into supporting the Iraq
war: “We can’t be divided. We have to be one nation
under God. That means if we make a mistake, we make it as a single
country: the United States of America, not the divided states of
America.” How convenient; Huckabee wishes to collectivize the
responsibility for the wrongs he went along with.
To this fascistic folderol, Dr. Paul replied:
“No, when we make a mistake, it is the obligation of the
people, through their representatives, to correct the mistake, not to
continue the mistake.”
And it
is the obligation of evangelicals to heed Mrs. Schlafly, and refrain
from “selling” Americans on another confidence trickster worthy of a
P.T. Barnum circus, not of higher office.
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
November 9
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