Posted on 02/16/2004 1:54:53 AM PST by A Simple Soldier
Among my Christmas presents this year was a copy of Survive, a recent collection by Sports Afield magazine of helpful tips for the great outdoors, published by Willow Creek Press of Minocqua, Wisconsin.
Most of the stuff was familiar enough rub a raw potato on poison ivy, roast a wood bug before you eat it but on page 70 I was surprised by this novel approach to dealing with mountain lions: "Do not approach one, especially if it is feeding or with its young. Most will avoid confrontation, so provide an escape. Do all you can to appear larger. Raise your anus , and open your jacket if you have one on."
I can't say I did that the last time I saw a mountain lion, but maybe I had a lucky escape. And then I realized it's meant to be "raise your arms" and that the item is a cautionary tale in the pitfalls of computer "scanning" technology. One hopes the misprint doesn't lead the less seasoned weekend hiker into an awkward situation, and that any mountain lion confronted by city folks dutifully adopting the prescribed position will think, "What the hell do they mean by that?" and wander off shaking his head rather than flying into a carnivorous rage.
I thought of the mountain lion advice when I caught presidential candidate John Kerry, the Default Democrat, at one of his final campaign stops in New Hampshire. Howard Dean, the noisy Vermonter, spent last year being ever more ferociously antiwar no news was good news, Saddam's capture was just another setback, etc.
The Bushies, understandably enough, were looking forward to running against Howlin' Howard. Alas, he's now Has-been Howard, ending not with a howl but a whimper. And Kerry, the default Democrat, has taken a different tack.
The thinking seems to be that, on the war, George W. Bush is the mountain lion and the Dems need to "do all you can to appear larger." When I first encountered him on the hustings last summer, Kerry was austere and patrician and all too obviously found electioneering a distasteful chore. He mentioned his service in Vietnam a lot, but only as biography.
Now he implicitly contrasts his military record with George W. Bush's, and thereby to the war on terror. Mostly he does this through meaningless slogans. For example, everywhere he goes he intones portentously: "I know something about aircraft carriers for real."
What does this mean? Does he own one? He's certainly rich enough to afford one and, unlike the French, one that works. If I were summering in Nantucket, I'd be interested to see what he ties up at the dock in.
But, of course, it doesn't have to mean anything. It's like the other catchphrases in his stump speech: "We band of brothers," he says, indicating his fellow veterans. "We're a little older, we're a little greyer, but we still know how to fight for this country."
These lines are the equivalent of the guy in the woods raising his arms and opening his jacket: it's a way of making a dull politician with no legislative accomplishments and two decades of shifty, flip-flop weathervane votes appear larger than he is.
The Dems reckon that Bush is a single-issue candidate he's the war guy and that, if Kerry can make himself appear larger on the national-security front, Bush's single issue will cease to be an issue and the election will be fought on Democratic turf health care, education, and so forth.
SO FAR the strategy is working. Kerry won three purple hearts in Vietnam, while Bush was either in the National Guard or, according to Michael Moore, a "deserter." This charge is easily rebutted, but once you start having to explain things the other guy's won. What counts is not the fine print but the meta-narrative: Kerry was in South-East Asia, Bush was in the South-West United States. That makes Kerry seem "larger," which may be why the Bushies are waddling away from a fight on the issue.
But the idea that this puffs up Kerry to be the president's equal on the new war is a more tortuous stretch. The only relevant lesson from Vietnam is this: Then, as now, it was not possible for the enemy to achieve military victory over the US; their only hope was that America would, in effect, defeat itself. And few men can claim as large a role in the loss of national will that led to that defeat as John Kerry.
A brave man in Vietnam, he returned home to appear before Congress and not merely denounce the war but damn his "band of brothers" as a gang of rapists, torturers and murderers led by officers happy to license them to commit war crimes with impunity. He spent the Seventies playing Jane Fonda and he now wants to run as John Wayne.
Vietnam was a "war of choice." But, once you chose to go in, there was no choice but to win. America's failure of will had terrible consequences. The Seventies the Kerry decade was the only point in the Cold War in which the eventual result seemed in doubt. The communists seized real estate all over the globe, in part because they calculated that the post-Vietnam, Kerrified America would never respond.
In the final indignity of that grim decade, when the proto-Islamist regime in Teheran seized the embassy hostages, they too shrewdly understood how thoroughly Kerrified America was. It took Mrs. Thatcher's Falklands War and Reagan's liberation of Grenada to reverse the demoralization of the west that John Kerry did so much to advance.
Senator Kerry has done a good job of enlarging himself, but the reality is simple: George Bush's America has won two swift wars and overthrown two enemy regimes; John Kerry was heroic in a war that America lost and whose loss he celebrated. Since then he's been a model lack-of-conviction politician.
The question for anyone who thinks Kerry has "credibility" on national security is a simple one: who do you think Iran, North Korea, Syria, al-Qaida's Saudi paymasters and the rogue elements in Pakistan's ISI would prefer to see elected this November?
Those guys are the real dangerous beasts out there and you can bet that, unlike Democratic primary voters, they don't think John Kerry looms so large, with his endless deference to the UN and the French, and his view that the war on terror should be more a matter of "law enforcement" subpoenas, the Hague, plea bargains.
That's as profound a misunderstanding as the fellow on page 70 of my book, raising his butt to the mountain lion. And that's not a position most Americans will want to take.
The writer is senior contributing editor for Hollinger Inc.
BTW, the next big thing the Left is going to trot out will be the "quality" of Bush's service as indicated by what was written on his Officer Performance Reports.
But the contrast between Bush's war on terror and how the Left plans to handle it is already apparent.
I reckon by that point, they'll already be raised.
You sure someone didn't sneak a copy of The Advocate's special "outdoors" issue to you?
Mr. Hammer founded the Armand Hammer World College, located in Las Vegas, New Mexico -- a small town not too far from Jane Fonda's Ranch.
In the late 1980's, I recall an incident where a correspondent for US News and World Report was being held by Moscow authorities and charged with spying. When that issue was finally resolved, the correspondent was flown home on, non other than, a private plane owned by Armand Hammer.
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