Posted on 10/30/2004 7:12:29 AM PDT by Tunehead54
By DAVID BROOKS
Published: October 30, 2004
Columnist Page: David Brooks
Forum: Discuss This Column
E-mail: dabrooks@nytimes.com The nuisance is back!
Remember when John Kerry told Matt Bai of The Times Magazine that he wanted to reduce the terrorists to a nuisance? Kerry vowed to mitigate the problem of terrorism until it became another regrettable and tolerable fact of life, like gambling, organized crime and prostitution.
That was the interview in which he said Sept. 11 "didn't change me much at all." He said it confirmed in him a sense of urgency, "of doing the things we thought we needed to be doing."
Well, the Osama bin Laden we saw last night was not a problem that needs to be mitigated. He was not the leader of a movement that can be reduced to a nuisance.
What we saw last night was revolting. I suspect that more than anything else, he reminded everyone of the moral indignation we all felt on and after Sept. 11.
Here was this monster who killed 3,000 of our fellows showing up on our TV screens, trying to insert himself into our election, trying to lecture us on who is lying and who is telling the truth. Here was this villain traipsing through his own propaganda spiel with copycat Michael Moore rhetoric about George Bush in the schoolroom, and Jeb Bush and the 2000 Florida election.
Here was this deranged killer spreading absurd theories about the American monarchy and threatening to murder more of us unless we do what he says.
One felt all the old emotions. Who does he think he is, and who does he think we are?
One of the crucial issues of this election is, Which candidate fundamentally gets the evil represented by this man? Which of these two guys understands it deep in his gut - not just in his brain or in his policy statements, but who feels it so deep in his soul that it consumes him?
It's quite clear from the polls that most Americans fundamentally think Bush does get this. Last March, Americans preferred Bush over Kerry in fighting terrorism by 60 percent to 33 percent, according to the Gallup Poll. Now, after a furious campaign and months of criticism, that number is unchanged. Bush is untouched on this issue.
Bush's response yesterday to the video was exactly right. He said we would not be intimidated. He tried to take the video out of the realm of crass politics by mentioning Kerry by name and assuring the country that he was sure Kerry agreed with him.
Kerry did say that we are all united in the fight against bin Laden, but he just couldn't help himself. His first instinct was to get political.
On Milwaukee television, he used the video as an occasion to attack the president: "He didn't choose to use American forces to hunt down Osama bin Laden. He outsourced the job." Kerry continued with a little riff from his stump speech, "I am absolutely confident I have the ability to make America safer."
Even in this shocking moment, this echo of Sept. 11, Kerry saw his political opportunities and he took 'em. There's such a thing as being so nakedly ambitious that you offend the people you hope to impress.
But politics has shaped Kerry's approach to this whole issue. Back in December 2001, when bin Laden was apparently hiding in Tora Bora, Kerry supported the strategy of using Afghans to hunt him down. He told Larry King that our strategy "is having its impact, and it is the best way to protect our troops and sort of minimalize the proximity, if you will. I think we have been doing this pretty effectively, and we should continue to do it that way."
But then the political wind shifted, and Kerry recalculated. Now Kerry calls the strategy he supported "outsourcing." When we rely on allies everywhere else around the world, that's multilateral cooperation, but when Bush does it in Afghanistan, it's "outsourcing." In Iraq, Kerry supports using local troops to chase insurgents, but in Afghanistan he is in post hoc opposition.
This is why Kerry is not cleaning Bush's clock in this election. Many people are not sure that he gets the fundamental moral confrontation. Many people are not sure he feels it, or feels anything. Since he joined the Senate, what cause has he taken a political risk for? Has he devoted himself selflessly and passionately to any movement larger than himself?
We are revealed by what we hate. When it comes to Osama bin Laden, Kerry hasn't revealed whatever it is that lies inside.
E-mail: dabrooks@nytimes.com
It's NOT the Slimes..it's David Brooks..the lone conservative voice on the paper...Safire isn't a conservative. I didn't like Brooks when he first started, but he's really found his voice the last few months..
Bump! ;-)
Someone(s): please collect the polling data as of yesterday -- whatever polling was done prior to the announcement of the Bin Ladin tape. It will demonstrate Bush ahead in the polls at that time and either gaining the undecideds and switches, or splitting them.
Off topic, but interesting tidbit..just saw that on MTP for tomorrow...Guiliani is on for Bush, and Bob Kerrey is on for the Dems..that's the BEST the Dems could do, the Sunday before the election, on what is the most important Sunday talk show?
Kerry is Osama's man, Bush is mine.
You have got to be kidding. 3k+ deaths within our own borders "a royal PITA?" Where are you from, France?
Bump.
Just remember:
9/11 WAS NEVER REPEATED--THANKS TO PRESIDENT BUSH!This is one thing that Kerry and his henchpersons in the "Mainstream Newsmedia" can not refute--no matter how much propaganda they sprew forth.
Let's not jump to conclusions. I remember fallout shelters too. The fact that one enemy is more powerful and deadly doesn't make the other enemy a mere "nuisance."
It's long forgotten that cynics on the Democratic Party side had concocted a cover story in case President Bush had gotten Bin Laden before the election. They'd have said it was his October Surprise and that our army or our CIA/FBI had had him all along. Theyve said President Bush had him stashed away for a campaign stunt. Now that Bin Laden is back the Democrat cynics want to have it both ways. Now, they want to say Bush has failed to catch him, and the president didnt even have him stashed away to use as a campaign stunt. Bin Laden showed up spouting Michael Moore's rhetoric adding his endorsement of him for the Oscars, (Michael Moore the honored guest at the Democratic National Convention, is another example of how serious the Democrats are) and the Democrats would have us believe they're not frivolous on the matter of capturing Bin Laden and the War on Terror in general. Theyre not playing politics with the war on terror. Before we got Saddam, Democrats taunted the president with Wheres Saddam? You havent gotten him yet? Then when we got Saddam, they changed the taunt to You havent gotten Bin Laden. You let him flee from Tora Bora. Can anyone imagine the Republican opposition in WW II taunting Roosevelt with Wheres Tojo? You havent gotten Tojo yet. Or how about the rant of Wheres Hitler? You havent gotten Hitler yet. And who today in his right mind listening to Senator Kerrys contradictory and constantly changing remarks on the war on terror and the war in Iraq can believe he has got the gravitas to be president? We cannot lose this election to silly Democrats without rewarding them for being silly and in effect encourage our enemies.
This President has assembled the finest war cabinet probably in the history of our nation PRIOR to the most difficult war we will ever fight. The military operations in Afghanistan with the negotiations prior with Pakistan and Iraq are historic. The President never politicized or used this war in any self serving way.
John Kerry and his liberals cannot fight this war. Their take on the tape:
Michael Savage 10/29: Michael Moore should be arrested for sedition.
Earlier Post - same article - I swear I searched on the exact title! Arrrgh!
Please lock mine out - thanks! :-)
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