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The prolix presidential
candidates and their aids and enablers have a supply of misleading
phrases. These verbal obesities are meant to throw the American voter
off-scent. “Comprehensive immigration reform” is
one such term. It sounds innocent enough if you know only that
America’s borders are unprotected and that it’ll take an approach broad
in scope to change that. Unencrypted, however,
“comprehensive immigration reform” means granting
amnesty—also “earned legalization”—to the 20 million illegal aliens
currently in the US and further liberalizing immigration policies. On
this, the Democratic candidates and the Manchurian Candidate are agreed.
Yes, John McCain had almost managed to con talker Sean
Hannity into using his considerable clout to convince his acolytes that,
on immigration, he, McCain, is a changed man. During a friendly
interview with Mr. Hannity, McCain claimed that his earlier collusion
with Ted Kennedy over an amnesty bill had failed “because voters didn’t
trust the government to handle the security side.” McCain was not
backing down from the McCain-Kennedy-Specter
ménage à trois, but
conceding only that he had things back to front. Confusing the American
people was proving a little harder than he had expected. So first he’d
make a show of sealing the borders, and then he’d sanction the
scofflaws. Veiled vocabulary has since given way to an express
commitment to “enact comprehensive immigration reform.” The Arizonan now
routinely tethers talk about securing the borders to a need for “comprehensive
immigration reform.”
Speaking of collusion: To listen to the media (don’t), you’d think the
American people want nothing more than for their representatives to
“reach across the aisle” and “get things done.” This phrase, coupled
with “bipartisanship,” falls squarely in the tradition of political
bafflegab. Far better that the people’s representatives sleep with
prostitutes than slip between the sheets with members of the opposition.
The more they collude, the less competition in government voters end-up
with. Should Hillary be elected, how long before she “reaches across the
aisle” to give her “Republican” pals Joe (Lieberman) and John (McCain) a
surgelette in Iraq. If anything, as soon as the colluding quislings
“reach across the aisle” to “get things done,” they ought to be busted
under antitrust laws for trying to form a monopoly in government.
“The system is broken” is another term politicians and immigration
activists and lobbyists use when poised to justify their contempt
for—and refusal to abide by—existing laws. A more general
euphemism for defying the will of the
people is the phrase to “show leadership. “Not
governing by polls” is another. When Dubya promised the run of American
ports to Dubai, he was showing the kind of leadership” approved by only
17 percent of Americans. When he nominated stumblebum Harriet Miers to
the Supreme Court, “W” was, again, “not governing by the polls.”
Obama recently warned against “attempts to slice and dice this country
into red states and blue states; blue-collar and white-collar; white,
black, and brown; young, old; rich, poor.”
The appeal to togetherness is another way by which politicians paper
over differences in principles. Unity is all well and good, but the
State is not the best engineer of togetherness. In fact, most government
policies deepen divisions. Roping responsible homeowners into
subsidizing reckless borrowers; or conscripting the young into paying
for the healthcare needs of the more affluent elderly—this is a recipe
for disunity. A politician’s siren call of unity is usually a demand for
obedience.
If “unity” is Obama’s objective—the other two mercurial candidates also
say that bringing people together is their thing—why not endeavor to
treat everyone equally under the law? And in particular, why tax some
more than others? How does the “progressive tax” square with equality
under the law? People do not pay for goods and services in proportion to
their income (or else Bill Gates would be paying a million dollars for a
loaf of bread). Rather, the market treats everyone alike.
If the presidential frontrunners cared for “unity,” they’d acquaint
themselves with the teachings of the Father of the Constitution. The
first object of government, wrote James Madison in the Federalist
Papers—also the key to the Constitution—was the protection of the
“diversity in the faculties of men, from which the rights of property
originate.”
As an amulet against the lexical lies of our leaders, arm yourself with
the Constitution, and listen carefully for those pitch-perfect
platitudes.
©2008 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
May 23
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