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It doesn’t take much to sunder a debate
about the Republican Party’s inconsequential core. The Rush Limbaugh-led
insurrection against John McCain gave the fleeting impression that the
movement was on the cusp of such a reckoning. No longer.
In close succession, Romney resigned, and McCain wowed the Conservative
Political Action Conference. Behind the scenes, Bill Kristol practiced
his curtain calls. Kristol is the uncrowned come-back kid—the
attractive, affable neoconservative mastermind has backed McCain’s
campaign for some time now. Philosophically, Kristol is the king of
consistency. Neoconservative all the way. Like McCain. Just as it
appeared the neocons were slowly being inched out, they’re back.
It’s proving well nigh impossible to Kill Bill.
Kristol has been doing the rounds in the media, anointing McCain as the
“leader of the conservative movement”—his words. Peggy Noonan, another
court courtesan, has been quaking and quivering about McCain on the
networks. (Will she pen an ode for McCain’s nether reaches as she did
for Bush’s in “He’s
Got Two of ‘Em”?) It all sounds terribly familiar.
I’ll grant McCain this:
His speech before the CPAC was a vast improvement on the
pathological, unremitting lies of Bush and his spokesmen. “Yes, there
were WMD in Iraq; yes, Saddam planned 9/11; yes, he shopped for yellow
cake in Niger; yes, democracy is on the march in Iraq; yes, the economy
at home is humming; yes, Iranian speedboats attacked US warships”—Bush
babble, I believe, is less a consequence of congenital stupidity than it
is of the confusion caused by incessant, habitual lying.
McCain came clean. But he chose the objects of his confession carefully,
lingering on his opposition to the small-potatoes of agricultural
subsidies, rather than on his proposal, as part of the unholy
McCain-Kennedy-Specter trinity, to legalize 20 million deadwood illegal
immigrants. “God’s children,” in his words. Be mindful that McCain is
not done with amnesty. Following the victory in South Carolina, McCain
denied, to Sean Hannity’s face, that he had been wrong in his support
for amnesty. Now he promises to “address other aspects of the problem,”
after “securing our borders first.” What does that mean? You be the
judge.
McCain spoke about beating government back, having just the other day
blessed the latest deficit spending, that obscene stimulus package.
Moreover, opposing tax cuts once over a long political career could be
put down to the ravages of age and an unsupple mind. But, by National
Review’s count, McCain voted for higher taxes 50 times, often on
the grounds that such cuts benefit those who pay the lion’s share of the
tax burden. McCain’s sense of justice matches his understanding of the
economy.
McCain’s new found fealty to the free market is suspect. Profits are the
street signs of the free market—without profits there’d be no
products. But in the course of disparaging Mitt Romney for making it
in the private sector—politics, remember, is a form of sheltered
employment—McCain badmouthed the thing that makes the free market go
around: “I didn’t manage for profit, I led for patriotism.”
So said the beneficiary of life-long sheltered employment, who couldn’t
“manage for profit” if he tried. Indeed, his CPAC mention of Edmund
Burke notwithstanding, McCain is not very bright. He finished 894th out
of 899 at the Naval Academy. He also lost five jets. IQ ace Steve Sailer
has suggested that if you’re looking for competence in the White House,
McCain may not be your man: “to lose one plane over Vietnam may be
regarded as a heroic tragedy; to lose five planes here and there looks
like carelessness.”
"Reaching across the aisle to get things done”—now that’s staple McCain
Speak; it has been throughout his campaign. It’s also a euphemism for
relinquishing principles in favor of political expediency. The political
animal known as McCain has too often moved in packs dominated by
Democrats and other left-liberals. As part of the duo McCain-Feingold,
he instated “a federal speech code, enforced with jail terms of up to
five years,” as Jonathan Rauch noted. As a member of the “Gang of
14,” and against constitutionalism, McCain and his homie, Senator
Lindsay Graham, colluded with Democrats in an attempt to sabotage Bush’s
conservative judicial nominees. Had McCain’s minders in the media dug
for dirt as diligently as they did on Ron Paul, they’d discover that he
voted for hard-core lefties Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer for
the Supreme Court. In 2004, McCain considered running on the John Kerry
ticket.
Enough said.
A man for all seasons (not), McCain has opposed exploration in the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The McCain-Lieberman bill expresses his
enthusiasm for the Malthusian environmental monomania—McCain shares the
gaseous Al Gore’s belief that there is an inherent discord between our
system of production and the environment. McCain’s contempt for
development and consumer freedom “will cost the average U.S. household
at least $600 per year by 2010, rising to at least $1,000 per year by
2020,” as well as 39,000 jobs in 2010, and at least 190,000 jobs by
2020, in the Heartland Institute’s estimation.
The McCain-Lieberman collaboration gave neocon David Brooks and crunchy
con Andrew Sullivan goose bumps. Both “fantasized” of launching a
McCain-Lieberman Party. With war and global warming on the brain, Sen.
Joe Lieberman, a neoconservative by any other name, is firmly behind
McCain’s candidacy.
From the pollution he has left along his political path McCain can run
but cannot hide. Republicans wisely rejected war in Kosovo. McCain, once
again, jettisoned party loyalty to call for bombs from above and “more
boots on the ground.” More recently, it’s been “bomb-bomb-bomb,
bomb-bomb-Iran,” and the promise of a 100 year war in Iraq, bound to
break that bank he now vows to make solvent. Under the loving gaze of
the media, McCain’s jingoism is ever evolving.
Fred Barnes, a neoconservative, has dismissed anti-McCain conservatives
as “talk-radio mafia.” Another McCainiac, Michael Medved, has framed
McCain’s apparent opposition to the “Fairness Doctrine” as a sign of his
man’s pure conservatism. A wicked, illiberal effort to control speech
and property, the “Fairness Doctrine” is a litmus test not necessarily
for a conservative, but for any decent individual, on the left or right.
Like Bill Kristol’s dad, Medved’s ideological trajectory has taken him
from the left to the neoconservative left. Unlike the clever Kristol,
Medved’s shabby argument reveals a less impressive intellectual arc.
Neocon Kristol, over on the op-ed pages of his new editorial home, the New
York Times (an appointment that speaks to how cozy the left-neocon cabal
truly is), has, excitedly, been admonishing mutinous conservatives,
while reciting gory poetry in honor of McCain. Limbaugh he has maligned
as suffering from “McCain Derangement Syndrome.” (Kristol, however,
correctly calls conservatives on their enthusiastic support for the
equally problematic candidacy of “Benito” Giuliani.)
Cut to 2000, with Kristol and Brooks making mischief together—or magic,
depending on whose side you’re on. The two collaborated on a piece, “The
Politics of Creative Destruction,” in which they argued that McCain
would revive, rather than repress, the State. I concur with Stephen
Bainbridge when he
contends that
If the Bush era has taught us nothing else, it is that we must be
skeptical of interventionist foreign policies whether grounded in the
national greatness ‘conservatism’ of a Teddy Roosevelt or the
neo-‘conservatism’ of a Bill Kristol. It produced a foreign policy
quagmire that eviscerated any opportunity to advance the conservative
agenda at home. ... Importantly when it comes to McCain, his
interventionism is fundamentally contrary to the traditions of
mainstream conservatism.
Back in 2000, McCain’s two neocon loyalists lauded him for his
unshakable belief in great government, and for resurrecting the promise
of “national-greatness conservatism.” Given the neocons’ “creative
destruction” in the interim, the two have been a little less vocal about
their aching desires. Their strategic silence makes it easier for McCain
to lay claim to the Reagan mantle. He has no business so doing. Contra
McCain, Reagan believed the state ought to get out of the way.
Indeed, most illuminating in the McCain CPAC speech was his vow to be
“an advocate for the Rights of Man everywhere in the world.” “We can
complain about various McCain positions, like McCain-Feingold,”
Bainbridge observes, “but in a sense those are tactical issues.” Agreed:
The greater philosophical significance of McCain lies in his
violence-for-values verbiage; in how he deceptively frames the
bloodletting in Iraq and elsewhere around the world as the heroic
upholding of individual rights.
Thanks to the malign McCain, it looked as though the neoconservative
whey was finally separating from the conservative curd. What was to
remain was not the best concoction, but it promised to be a far cry from
the previous accursed ideological amalgam.
I had hoped that, in the dust-up between conservatives and
neocon-dominated establishment Republicans, McCain would serve as the
curdling bacteria. I was wrong.
©2008 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
February 8
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