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About
one thing Mike Huckabee is right (OK, maybe two): the presidential
hopeful told Chris Matthews that if Republicans want to win the 2008
election, they must nominate a candidate who’ll appeal to as many
independents and Democrats as possible. Dark horse Huckabee expressed
the hope that he was the man.
Wishful
thinking aside, when it comes to Iraq, Huckabee and the rest of the
Republican candidates for president, bar Ron Paul, are at odds with the
American people. According to every conceivable poll—Gallup, Rasmussen,
ABC News/Washington Post—most Americans now oppose the war in Iraq, deem
it a mistake, and “support the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq
within the next year.”
Like it
or not, these are the facts. Iraq, polls predict, will dominate the 2008
elections. Yet nine of the Republican candidates are still flogging that
fiasco with brio. On this salient issue, they’ve adopted a position in
opposition to popular wisdom; on Iraq, the Republican candidates are
mimicking a man whose approval rating is in the low 30s.
Rabbiting
on about how Iraq is part of a grander ideological war against terror
won’t wash any longer; Americans are hip to that hoax. The idea that we
can rehabilitate what we ruined in Iraq is delusional—a function of a
collective mindset that rejects reality and its lessons. We can’t fix
Iraq because of what we wrought—because of the Original Sin of invasion.
The sinner cannot turn savior.
Paul
understands this. His stance on Iraq makes him appealing to voters from
the left, the (real) right, and the center. He can thus also lower the
Republican Party’s considerable attrition rates. Like or dislike him,
Ron Paul is the only Republican presidential contender whose position on
Iraq comports with that of the American people—and hence with
electability.
This may
surprise conservatives, but bar Tom Tancredo, Paul is also the only
candidate who’ll seriously reduce undesirable immigration. Here, as on
Iraq, Americans are united. According to the Center for Immigration
Studies, “enforcement approaches with no increase in legal immigration”
were the most popular policy options among a majority of voters.
“Seventy percent of voters said they would be less likely to vote for a
candidate who wanted to double legal immigration.”
Unfortunately, the tyranny euphemized as political correctness dictates
that border security is the only angle allowed in the immigration
debate. It’s now mandatory to pair an objection to the invasion of the
American Southwest with an embrace of all forms of legal immigration.
The puppies on the Republican ticket are generally in compliance. They’ve embraced border security as their bailiwick, but not the burdens
associated with the rapid transformation of America.
Although
he has positioned himself (unwisely) as a moderate on immigration,
judging from an interview he gave VDARE.COM, Paul takes one of the
toughest positions yet—he is the only candidate who’s vowed to eliminate
all
the incentives that keep unviable immigrants coming.
Both
benefits and birthright citizenship will be abolished under a Paul
administration. Free medical care, education, welfare largesse, and the
perennial promise of amnesty—Paul will do away with these federally
mandated magnets. Immigrants who cost more than they contribute will be
unlikely to come to the US in the absence of what are substantial
taxpayer subsidies.
No
candidate has dared to talk about deportation. Paul has. “[I]f they’re
signing up for a benefit, they should be sent back home, instead of
given the benefit,” he told VDARE.COM. Nab trespassers when they come to
claim undeserved entitlements.
Huckabee,
on the other hand, has lent his ministerial blessing to the benefits
bonanza. Like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, the governor has the
dubious distinction of
deploying
the racist epithet to denounce a bill introduced in the Arkansas
legislature denying illegal aliens welfare and voting rights.
Huckabee
now natters incessantly about recruiting more chicken pluckers and fruit
pickers through guest worker programs: “We need to create a process to
allow people to come here to do the jobs… unfilled by our citizens.”
This is one libel Americans are sick of. Seventy percent of voters
nationally, says the CIS, agree that, at the right price, Americans will
do menial work. (Huckabee should take time off to watch the Discovery
Channel program “Dirty Jobs,” where I’ve yet to encounter a garbage
collector, sewer inspector, or tanner who wasn’t an Anglo- or
Afro-American.)
Huckabee,
apparently, is also unaware of the labyrinth of visa programs on the
books already. Besides (and
this applies to all the Republican hopefuls),
the
future leader of a superpower
should be
emphasizing innovation-oriented, not labor-intense, forms of production.
More
mechanization
and less
Mexicanization.
Best of
all, Paul will actually have the funds to plug the border, because,
unlike Huckabee, he refuses to remain mired in Mesopotamia. All
Republicans on the ticket, bar Paul, will be bogged down in Iraq for
years-to-come. Having squandered men, matériel, and morale there,
they’ll be less able to respond to an attack on the homeland.
The
paradox of the peace-loving Paul is this: Given his commitment to
national sovereignty—to defending
this
country, not Israel, Iraq or Afghanistan—Paul will have the will
and the wherewithal to smash any enemy entering our orbit.
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
October 12
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