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For all the talk
about democracy, the will of the people got little play during the
presidential debate in South Carolina. Polls repeatedly show that 70
percent of the American people want out of Iraq. But no sooner does the
pesky popular will intrude into the debate than the top Republican
contenders begin to yammer about their obligation to demonstrate
“leadership.” “Leadership,” of course, is a euphemism for overriding the
will of the people.
Ron Paul is the exception. As Rudy Giuliani
and his posse flap like black crows over Rep. Paul, we’d do well to
remember that, unlike most of his colleagues, Paul understands that
truth is timeless, not temporary. September 11 didn’t change that
al-Qaida (the aggressors), not Iraq, needed to be punished for killing
innocent Americans. September 11 didn’t alter the wisdom of John Quincy
Adams’ counsel that America not go abroad in search of monsters to
destroy, but remain the well-wisher of the freedom and independence of
all, but the champion and vindicator only of her own.
At this juncture in American history, in the
midst of a catastrophic conflict which cannot be won, the opinions of
the daft, dirigiste
Dubya still carry the day with most of
the presidential hopefuls. Extolling “Mr. Republican” Robert Taft can
thus be dicey. Paul was mocked for “voting against authorizing President
Bush to use force in Iraq,” and asked if he was “running for the
nomination of the wrong party.” To which he responded by reminding his
colleagues of the bygone Republican tradition of non-interventionism:
Republicans were elected to end the wars in Korea and Vietnam. When
confronted with “the irrationality of Middle Eastern politics,” and the
loss of 241 Marines, Reagan extricated Americans from Lebanon.
Whereas his colleagues effected a
schizophrenic split between warfare and welfare spending—the first good;
the last bad—Paul warned against these twin perils. “Policing the world
and spending hundreds of billions of dollars on nation building,”
coupled with splurging on “an entitlement system that has accumulated
$60 trillion worth of obligations”—these are parts of the same statist
equation. Nipping and tucking at the bureaucratic behemoth is
meaningless unless we “change our philosophy about what government
should do,” Paul explained.
When asked how he could possibly consider
eliminating the Department of Homeland Security in the midst of a war,
Paul dared to suggest that the Department of Homeland Security doesn’t
do what it purports to do. Like most government endeavors. “We were
spending $40 billion on security prior to 9/11” and “had all the
information [we] needed there to deal with the threat,” but didn’t.
Recall, Condoleezza Rice insisted that intelligence received about
suicide bombers belonging to al-Qaida crashing an aircraft into U.S.
targets belonged to the realm of “analysis,” not “actionable
intelligence." Rice failed as national security adviser. The addition of
a layer of government has done nothing to remedy Rice’s inability to
perform the rudimentary tasks assigned to her.
Paul might have galvanized popular support had
he reminded the American people that the Department of Homeland Security
has been working consistently against them. This bureaucracy’s laws
mandate the tormenting of the traveling public, and ensure that airlines
are routinely sued for discrimination if they so much as attempt to
protect their charges by screening suspicious passengers. The word
“treason” comes to mind when one considers the Department’s refusal to
stop the breach of the border with Mexico. Establishment Republicans
don’t use the “treason” word nearly as often as they should to describe
the America-hating actions of their government.
Indeed, Paul might consider taking up what is
a central cause for conservatives. According to Human Events,
86 percent of its conservative readers
consider illegal immigration the most pressing issue. While his
Republican colleagues insist the American military’s obligation is to
patrol the borders of Kosovo, Korea and Kurdistan, our own borders
remain perilously porous; Americans living alongside them forsaken.
What’s more, the treacherous political class and the “parrot press” is
intent on retaining the status quo. Paul might have mobilized the masses
had he pointed that out.
Paul is after a shift in foreign policy—away
from grand, utopian schemes to compensate for deficits in democracy
around the world. He needs, however, to frame this desirable, and
desperately needed, change in direction as a circling of the wagons at
home. To wit,
the real war is on the border, not abroad.
Defending and preserving the homeland,
the conservative base believes, begins with beefing up the borders and
reforming immigration policy. This excludes the amnesty program touted
by the presidential front-runners. Paul would do well to remind
Americans that Bush’s recipe for minute-made Americans will legalize the
status of an estimated 300,000 individuals from Wahhabi-worshiping
lands, whose customs do not preclude killing their hosts.
Paul was wrong to imply, reductively, that
Islamic terrorism in general and September 11 in particular are the sole
consequences of American foreign policy. Libertarians cannot persist in
such unidirectional formulations. As I’ve said previously, our
adventurous foreign policy is a
necessary
precondition for Muslim aggression but it is
far from a sufficient
one, given that Muslims today are at
the center of practically every conflict across the world. The received
leftist wisdom that the Arabs were (and remain) hapless and helpless
victims of the West is false and patronizing. As scholars such as Efraim
and Inari Karsh have shown, “Middle Eastern history is essentially the
culmination of long-standing indigenous trends, passions, and patterns
of behavior rather than an externally imposed dictate.”
Ultimately, a
rational suspicion of power, upon which libertarians pride themselves,
must be predicated on distrusting
all
power, not only American power.
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
May 18
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