Posted on 10/19/2004 11:28:38 PM PDT by goldstategop
Farah and buchanan both in one...yawn...day.
Farah sounds like a fiscal conservative like me who really dislikes large government. I am in the same mindset as Farah. Bush may not always get it right, but at least he knows how to define evil, and has the will fight it.
How many times has America flinched? Iran under Carter. Pulling US troops out of Lebanon. I mean we haven't flinched near as many times as the Europeans, but we have flinched enough that the enemy is still more than willing to test our resolve.
The last strict constitutionalist President was George Washington !
Washington probably wouldn't make Farah happy.
"Joseph Farah Swallows Pride And Urges Vote For President Bush Nov. 2."
It's about time. I stopped reading WorldNetDaily, when Farah turned it into a Bush bashing site.
Smart decision on Farah's part--after Bush is re-elected, we'll still have a constitution--and our heads will still be attached, too.
Kerry is so dirty with mullah money and love of the anti-US, anti-Israel UN--
--not to mention Kerry's affirmation of al Sadr as "a legitimate voice"--
Farah's more of a libertarian - he dislikes government, period. That's why he hates the conservative label on the grounds conservatives are "conserving" everything that needs to be swept away if we are to get back to the kind of country the Founders bequeathed to us. As he said, he thinks President Bush hasn't gone in the direction we need to go. But he reluctlantly has come to endorse Bush since despite everything many small government folks detest about Bush, the truth is if this country is destroyed by its enemies, what we want won't matter. Right now, the first and foremost duty of the President is safeguarding America from its enemies. President Bush gets it and Senator Kerry doesn't. Its that simple.
So do most of us but Farah is way out there sometimes.
You say it's up to us? Well I think Bush has followed the law and took the right measures to protect the United States. I support President Bush all the way for another 4 years. I will not sell out our security and interests to the United Nations or subject our military to the World court. There, 3rd world countries that hate America and American values would seek revenge on our military.
"I stopped reading WorldNetDaily, when Farah turned it into a Bush bashing site."
I did the same.
About time! Glad to see he realized we are fighting for survival.
I stand corrected.
I should have said I stopped reading Joseph Farah on WND not that I stopped reading WND.
I kind of liked Harding and Coolidge, myself, but then, they were dead before I was born.
In 1929,after the crash, the first reaction of the government was that, since there had been too much speculative cash in the system, creating a bubble, the right thing to do was to tighten government spending and lending. By the time they loosened the reins of fiscal and monetary policy it was TOO LATE.
There is a time and place for fiscal conservatism. But 2001-2002 was NOT IT. The wild party of the dot-com bubble (aided and abetted by Clinton's gang at treasury, who had a deliberate policy of jacking up the US dollar to suck money into the US stock and bond bubble) was the BIGGEST financial bubble in history! The bursting of that bubble, compounded by 911, created a serious danger of a deflationary collapse. That was no time for fiscal or monetary conservatism. It was time to SPEND and LEND.
The "downside" of Bush's economic policies was a decline in the US dollar. But this has only amounted to reversing the untoward gains of the Clinton years, brought on by his massive tax increases. Tax increases, everywhere in the world and every time, lead to a rise in currency value. A rising currency is great for wall street, but very bad for US farming, mining, and manufacturing. Farmers in particular have favored a lower value for the dollar since the beginning of time :).
It is interesting that the 1920's were similar to the 1990's in that stock markets boomed (along with a rising US dollar) while farmers suffered. Bush's policies offered some quick and much needed relief to all US commodity producers. Bush's policies were not fiscally conservative, but they were right for the time.
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