Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The [Election] Fear Factor
http://netwmd.com ^ | October 18, 2004 | Andrew L. Jaffee

Posted on 10/18/2004 8:43:41 AM PDT by forty_years

After talking with some left-wing friends this weekend, I realized now more than ever that the question of whether to vote for Bush or Kerry truly boils down to another question, “A war for our lives, or a nuisance to our lifestyle?” The later question was asked on Friday by eminent historian Victor David Hanson. He answers it with honesty and erudition, but leaves out a very important point: the fear factor.

Hanson correctly identifies Kerry et al’s penchant for wanting to solve our foreign policy disputes through diplomatic bureaucracy ad nauseum -- e.g., the United Nations. He hints at the fear factor when he recognizes guilt (“noblesse oblige”) as a motivation for the left-wing’s so-called foreign policy. But Hanson never isolates the fear factor.

The Left constantly accuses President Bush of using terrorism to scare Americans into voting Republican, but these “liberals” are merely covering up their own fears. They rant about vague conspiracy theories claiming that the Iraq war was really about “blood-for-oil,” or that John Ashcroft is using the Patriot to surreptitiously erode American personal privacy. (Isn’t it John Kerry who now is trying to scare Americans by claiming Bush will reinstate the draft?)

Blood-for-oil? The U.S. continues to lose its sons and daughters for Iraqi democracy despite that country’s lower-than-potential oil production. As James David Dickson of the The Michigan Review says,

Although Iraq’s oil reserves, which account for 11% of the world’s proven supply of oil, are considerable, Iraqi oil is replaceable. With agreements between the US and the first and fourth-largest oil producing nations, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, to increase their production of oil in Iraq’s stead, one must wonder why, if it were not for the fact that Iraq is a threat to others and a tyranny domestically, its disarmament would matter quite so much.

Furthermore, if Iraq is being taken to war for purely economic concerns, why has America failed to call for “regime change” in Venezuela, which accounts for nearly 7% of the world’s oil supply, whose strikes at state-owned oil fields have certainly contributed to rising gas prices? And instead of stationing 5000 American soldiers to protect the House of Saud, why has the United States chosen not to simply topple Saudi Arabia, the spoils of war being 256 billion barrels of oil, 22% of the world’s supply? And rather than expend such effort in assembling a “coalition of the willing” to disarm Iraq, why not simply take over the oil wells of the United Arab Emirates, a small nation whose leadership will not be missed, if replaced? One can only assume that if America were amoral enough to wage a war for oil, its leadership would at least minimize risk, and the aforementioned are surely less risky, relative to Iraq. The commonality between the aforementioned oil nations continues: none have attempted the assassination of an American president, none have signed and summarily broken armistice agreements, and none have been willing to live with crippling sanctions, preferring instead to build bombs. Iraq has done all of this, and more.

Are John Ashcroft and the Patriot Act really eroding the personal freedoms of U.S. citizens? Not if you ask Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein who said:

…she has received more than 21,000 complaints about the Patriot Act. However, those complaints either were against Patriot Act II, a bill rumored but never proposed, or against the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System, which requires people from certain countries to be photographed, fingerprinted and interviewed.

Those two items have nothing to do with the Patriot Act, she said. In addition, she said, she has never had a single abuse of the Patriot Act reported to her, even after specifically asking the American Civil Liberties Union to find some for her.

John Kerry enthusiastically supported the Patriot Act. Though he now claims he’ll do something vague like “handle it better,” this just exposes Kerry’s pattern of taking every conceivable side of every conceivable issue.

Leftists would deny it, but in their hearts of hearts they know for sure that terrorism is real and, in fact, undeniable. Look at 9/11 (3,000 murdered), the Bali bombing (202 killed), the “3/11” Madrid attacks (200 slain), and the hundreds -- perhaps thousands -- of Iraqi civilians killed by terrorist thug Abu Musab al-Zarqawi (who now has officially pledged his allegiance to al-Qaeda). Despite these hard and ugly facts, some of my left-wing friends insist that terrorism is a fantasy concocted by the evil Bush administration to… well, they can’t really explain why on first try. When I press them, they trot out the tired old socialist dogma that Republicans are only interested in making the rich richer. By distracting “us” (the people?) with terrorism, the fat-cats can conceal all their corporate corruption.

While the leftists pooh-pooh terrorism, my only conclusion is that they really are afraid -- very afraid -- of terrorism. Who isn’t afraid of terrorism? Beheadings, blowing up cafes full of teenagers, ramming airliners filled with innocents into skyscrapers filled with innocents… These are all horrible, savage, and uncivilized acts. But there is a difference between a healthy fear and a paralytic fear which prompts denial.

Both sides, Republican and Democrat, are afraid of terrorism, but the Right and probably most American centrists realize that terrorists must be confronted with an iron will. The Arab and Muslim worlds are dominated by tyrants practicing a “disagree with me and you’re dead” form of Realpolitik. The Right realizes that the terrorists respect nothing but strength.

The Left is paralyzed with fear. Since they are afraid to confront the very scary terrorists, they create conspiracy theories to deflect from the true issues of our time. Just as Neville Chamberlain thought he could appease Hitler, just as the Europeans thought they could appease Soviet evil, the Left now seeks to appease the Islamist terrorists.

Confronting and destroying the terrorist enemy means taking real actions, like President Bush’s invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. But actions are risky, especially if you are a leftist whose hope of hopes and dream of dreams is that terrorists can be reasoned with, or that if we just leave the terrorists alone, they won’t bother us anymore. John Kerry’s false logic would claim that America’s presence in Iraq is creating more terrorists. Hopes and dreams won’t defeat an enemy which trains children to believe they should blow themselves up in order to kill as many civilians as possible. The sheer brutality and evil of Islamist violence should convince all people this is an enemy worth defeating. Unfortunately, fear has overridden leftist sensibility (as if there were any remaining in the worn-out dogma).

While only hinting at the fear factor, Victor David Hanson captures the thinking of the appeasers:

The artists, musicians, and entertainers have also railed against the war. In the therapeutic mindset, the refinement and talent of a Sean Penn, Michael Moore, Al Franken, Bruce Springsteen, or John Fogerty earn respect when they weigh in on matters of state policy. But in the tragic view, they can be little more than puppets of inspiration. Their natural gifts are not necessarily enriched by real education or learning. Indeed, they are just as likely to be high-school or college dropouts and near illiterates, albeit with good memories, voices, and looks. The present antics of these influential millionaire entertainers should remind us why Plato banished them — worried that we might confuse the inspired creative frenzies of the artisans with some sort of empirical knowledge. But you can no more sing, or write, or act al Qaeda away than the equally sensitive novelists and intellectuals of the 1930s or 1940s could rehabilitate Stalin.

And then there are the new green billionaires who no longer worry about the struggle to make any more money, much less about state, federal, and payroll taxes that can eat up half of a person's income. A George Soros may have made his pile by trying to destroy the British financial system, but now he wishes to leave the world safe for currency traders to come by defeating George Bush. The up-from-the-bootstraps struggle to create the dough for the Heinz fortune is a century past and forgotten — thus the post-capitalist Teresa in her private jet and John Kerry on his $500,000 power boat can lecture us about Americans' shameless oil profligacy and George Bush's blood for oil gambit in Iraq.

Our mainstream media also cannot quite believe we are at war with evil people who wish us dead — something like the crises that have faced all civilizations at one time or another. Instead, to ponder Rathergate or the recent ABC memo advocating bias in its reporting is to fathom the arrogance of the Enlightenment, and the learned's frustration with those of us less-gifted folk who don't quite wish to follow where they lead us. Such anointed ones have taken on the burden of saving us from George Bush and his retrograde ideas. After all, who believes that anyone would really wish to reinstate a mythical caliphate, a Muslim paradise of sharia, gender apartheid, and theocracy spreading the globe through Islamic nukes and biological and chemical bombs? How one dimensional and unsophisticated.

The contradictions of the leftist mindset are indeed “one dimensional and unsophisticated,” but also very complicated. Because of what the Left perceives as a long history of wrongs perpetrated under the banner of, for example, Christianity (e.g., the Crusades), many have rejected the tenets of Judeo-Christianity in favor of belief systems like Hinduism or Native American animism. Because they feel guilty about the British Raj, Cortez, Pizarro, Columbus, and/or the American institution of slavery, they engage in pseudo-history and pseudo-anthropology. The “greens” perpetuate myths about how Native Americans were so peaceful, while ignoring the wholesale imperialism and human sacrifice practiced by the Mayas, Aztecs, Toltecs, and Incas, to name of few. Their hope of hopes leads them to believe that Islamists cannot be truly evil, because the grass is always greener outside of evil, capitalist America and/or that “brown-skinned” people are somehow not really people -- certainly better than us slavery-stained, imperialist pink-skins. The problem with all this revisionist religion is that it is not even true.

If you read the first few pages of one of Hinduism’s greatest texts, the Bhagavad-Gita, the protagonist Arjuna voices reticence about going to war. The manifestation of G#d, Krishna, chides Arjuna thusly:

Arjuna, is this hour of battle the time for scruples and fancies? Are they worthy of you, who seek enlightenment? Any brave man who merely hopes for fame or heaven would despise them.

What is this weakness? It is beneath you. Is it for nothing men call you the foe-consumer? Shake of this cowardice, Arjuna. Stand up.

And G#d forbid I bring up Carlos Castaneda, one of the so-called “fathers of the 60’s psychedelic movement,” with my lefty friends. Castaneda told us, “Fear is the first enemy,” and that there is no hope for enlightenment if that enemy is not overcome. Sadly, my leftist buddies just want to talk about the hallucinogenic drugs that Castaneda’s Native American mentor Don Juan used to help his pupil rise above hyper-rationality. They totally miss the point. Drugs are 0.01% of Don Juan’s teachings. Most of Castaneda’s 13-odd books talk about pragmatic issues like personal responsibility, self-awareness, finding “a path with heart,” and conquering fear.

There are also those Jewish and Christian liberation-theology leftists that conveniently edit the Bible’s teachings. One I know has a bumper sticker which reads, “War is never the answer.” So I quote to her Ecclesiastes 3:

There is an appointed time for everything and a time for every affair under the heavens. …

A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.

The response I get is that I should understand that the Bible was written long ago; times were different. Really? People seem to be doing a lot of things they always have done. Does “long ago” discount the wisdom of the ages? Would she argue that Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, Mao, Saddam, and Milosevic were not evils worthy of “a time of war?”

Fear truly is the first enemy. Kerry and his constituency would have us hiding under our beds from al-Qaeda, negotiating with countries like France where people are practiced at appeasing evil, and passing a “global test” before we act to protect ourselves. So much fear, so little pragmatism.

Instead of confronting its own fears, the Left has engaged in a very complicated smoke-screen of denial. Through Michael Moore, it has trotted out all sorts of lies to smear President Bush as a Hitler-like figure. Only a deep-seated terror of reality would prompt people to go to such lengths to rationalize inaction or ineffective actions like appeasing dictators. Imagine Freud’s analysis of the current left-wing. Don’t send a copy to DNC headquarters. Victor David Hanson is right-on when asking the question, “A war for our lives, or a nuisance to our lifestyle?”

What bothers me most is that most lefties know in their hearts of hearts that we are in a war for our very lives, but they allow their fear of terrorism to deny it. I can hear their words in my mind: “We’re just going to piss off the Islamists more by going into Iraq” or “We’re creating more terrorists” or “Third-world people don’t want our damn fat-ass, SUV-driving democracy.” To their credit, my local lefty friends are educated people. On the other hand, they’re stupid in the sense that fear is now their only political motivation.

It is very comfortable for most people now in the U.S.; perhaps too comfortable. The Left masks its fear by believing that terrorism is a nuisance to our lifestyle. How do we convince them otherwise; that Islamism is a threat no less dangerous than was fascism and communism? If I could only get them to listen to Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga:

We certainly have seen the results of appeasement... It's much easier to tolerate a dictator when he's dictating over somebody else's life and not your own. We have suffered through half a century because dictators were allowed to proceed unchecked in the faint hope that they would somehow see the light, or reform, or simply by indifference to those who have been affected by their actions.

http://netwmd.com/articles/article749.html


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; 3; action; afghanistan; al; american; animism; appease; appeasement; appeaser; arjuna; bhagavad; bible; bush; carlos; castaneda; chamberlain; confront; contradictions; david; democracy; dictator; dimensional; don; eastern; ecclesiastes; election; enemy; factor; fear; first; freedom; freiberga; gita; global; hanson; head; hinduism; hitler; inaction; ineffective; iraq; john; juan; kerry; krishna; latvian; left; leftist; liberal; lifestyle; mao; michael; milosevic; mindset; moore; native; negotiate; neville; november; nuisance; on; one; pol; politics; pot; president; presidential; qaeda; qaida; religion; saddam; senator; stalin; teachings; terrorism; terrorists; test; tyranny; unsophisticated; vaira; victor; vike; war; wing

1 posted on 10/18/2004 8:43:55 AM PDT by forty_years
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: forty_years
"The Right and probably most American centrists realize that terrorists must be confronted with an iron will."

Well said.

"The Right realizes that the terrorists respect nothing but strength."

Well said again.

"Just as Neville Chamberlain thought he could appease Hitler, just as the Europeans thought they could appease Soviet evil, the Left now seeks to appease the Islamist terrorists."

Exactly. And anyone with a trace of wit knows that they will be just as unsuccessful.

"The contradictions of the leftist mindset are indeed 'one dimensional and unsophisticated.'"

Very well said.

Leftists love to speak of themselves as "liberal" and to refer to themselves as "liberals". They're not. They are the opposite of liberal.

Leftists also love to think of themselves as "sophisticated". They're not. They tend to be quite unsophisticated and to have a very limited viewpoint.

2 posted on 10/18/2004 9:00:25 AM PDT by Savage Beast (9/11 was never repeated--thanks to President Bush!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: forty_years

There are two types of Presidential Candidates:

Kerry, he cannot handle the ads by the Swift Boat veterans which criticize his Vietnam war record. Kerry has been crying and whining over these ads and the movie "Stolen Honor" and can’t handle it anymore, he has even filed a complaint. What type of Commander In Chief would he make if he can’t handle the heat?

Bush, he can handle the heat from moveon.org, Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9-11 movie, war protestors, terrorists, and the world. He is a tough strong Commander In Chief and a fearless warrior who keeps on standing tall, positive, and strong. Nothing fazes President Bush.

On November 2004 I will vote for President Bush. I would like to see a real man as our President and not a rich spoiled crybaby Gigolo.

http://boortz.com/more/funny/right_stuff.html
http://boortz.com/more/funny/right_stuff_3.html
http://boortz.com/more/funny/right_stuff_5.html
http://boortz.com/more/funny/right_stuff_4.html
http://boortz.com/more/funny/right_stuff_6.html
http://boortz.com/more/funny/right_stuff_2.html


3 posted on 10/18/2004 9:01:32 AM PDT by Sadie789
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: forty_years
MN's own chicken 'lil..

"Run away"


4 posted on 10/18/2004 9:06:08 AM PDT by Xphantasos (Ceterum censeo Al-Quaedam delenda est.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: forty_years

RE: Sadly, my leftist buddies just want to talk about the hallucinogenic drugs that Castaneda’s Native American mentor Don Juan used to help his pupil rise above hyper-rationality. They totally miss the point. Drugs are 0.01% of Don Juan’s teachings. Most of Castaneda’s 13-odd books talk about pragmatic issues like personal responsibility, self-awareness, finding “a path with heart,” and conquering fear.

Indeed, long before Castaneda was allowed to use peyote or magic mushrooms, he had to undergo a series of difficult initiation steps. He essentially had to demonstrate that he was a warrior, and therefore, a complete man. It was more or less a sort of boot camp, complete with physically demanding tests and depravation of comfort. Even during later steps involving the psychodelics, he still had to perform demanding tasks, made all the more difficult by the drugs. The point of the whole exercise was intense focus, and the development of an iron will.


5 posted on 10/18/2004 9:33:18 AM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Right makes right!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson