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He's a worldbeater, all right (Mark Steyn beats up on the Dems!)
Chicago Sun Times ^ | January 23, 2005 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 01/23/2005 4:35:55 AM PST by finnigan2

I picked up the Village Voice for the first time in years this week. Couldn't resist the cover story: ''The Eve Of Destruction: George W. Bush's Four-Year Plan To Wreck The World.''

Oh, dear. It's so easy to raise expectations at the beginning of a new presidential term. But at least he's got a four-year plan. Over on the Democratic bench, worldwise they don't seem to have given things much thought. The differences were especially stark in the last seven days: In the first half of the week, Senate Dems badgered the incoming secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice -- culminating in the decision of West Virginia porkmeister Robert C. Byrd to delay the incoming thereof. Don't ask me why. Byrd, the former Klu Klux Klan Kleagle, is taking a stand over states' rights, or his rights over State, or some such. Whatever the reason, the sight of an old Klansman blocking a little colored girl from Birmingham from getting into her office contributed to the general retro vibe that hangs around the Democratic Party these days. Even "Eve Of Destruction," one notes, is a 40-year-old hippie dirge.

The Democrats' big phrase is "exit strategy." Time and again, their senators demanded that Rice tell 'em what the "exit strategy" for Iraq was. The correct answer is: There isn't one, and there shouldn't be one, and it's a dumb expression. The more polite response came in the president's inaugural address: ''The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands.'' Next week's election in Iraq will go not perfectly but well enough, and in time the number of U.S. troops needed there will be reduced, and in some more time they'll be reduced more dramatically, and one day there'll be none at all, just a small diplomatic presence that functions a bit like the old British ministers did in the Gulf emirates for centuries: They know everyone and everything, and they keep the Iraqi-American relationship running smoothly enough that Baghdad doesn't start looking for other foreign patrons. In other words: no exit.

If you want an example of "exit strategy" thinking, look no further than the southern "border." A century ago, American policy in Mexico was all exit and no strategy. That week's President-for-Life gets out of hand? Go in, whack him, exit, and let the locals figure out who gets to be the new bad guy. If the new guy gets out of hand, go back, whack him and exit again. The result of that stunted policy is that three-quarters of Mexico's population is now living in California and Arizona -- and, as fine upstanding members of the Undocumented-American community, they've got no exit strategy at all.

By contrast, the British went in to India without an "exit strategy," stayed for generations and midwifed the world's most populous democracy and a key U.S. ally in the years ahead. Which looks like the smarter approach now? ''Most Indians Say 'Thumbs Up' To Second Bush Term,'' reported the Christian Science Monitor this week, "and no, that doesn't mean something rude in Indian culture.''

The problem with "exit strategy" fetishization is that these days everywhere's Mexico -- literally, in the sense that four of the 9/11 killers obtained the picture ID they used to board their flights that morning through the support network for "undocumented" workers, and only a few days ago the suspected terrorists supposedly en route to Boston were said to have entered the country via the Mexican smuggling route. But everywhere's also Mexico in the more figurative sense -- if you've got a few hundred bucks and an ATM card you can come to America and blow it up. Everyone lives next door now. Sept. 11 demonstrated that the paradox of America -- the isolationist superpower -- was no longer tenable.

That was what Bush accomplished so superbly in his speech: the idealistic position -- spreading liberty -- is now also the realist one: If you don't spread it, in the end your own liberty will be jeopardized. "It is the policy of the United States," said the president, "to seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world." By the end of his second term? Well, not necessarily. But what matters is that the president has repudiated the failed "realism" that showers billions on a friendly dictator like Egypt's Mubarak and is then surprised when one of his subjects flies a passenger jet into the World Trade Center.

You'd think the Democratic Party would welcome this: They spent the days after Sept. 11 yakking endlessly about the need to address "root causes." But, as the pitiful displays in the Senate hearing made clear, they still don't comprehend the new world -- abroad or at home. The other day David von Drehle of the Washington Post did a monster tour of what he called "The Red Sea" -- Bush country -- and went to almost painful lengths to eschew the condescension the coastal media elite usually apply to their rare anthropological ventures into the hinterland. But in the middle of his dispatch was this quote from Joyce Smith of Coalgate, Okla.: "When Kerry said he was for abortion and one-sex marriages, I just couldn't see our country being led by someone like that."

Von Drehle added: ''Later, I double-checked what Kerry had said on those subjects. During his campaign, he opposed same-sex marriage and said that abortion was a private matter.''

If the point is that Red Staters are ignorant, double- or even triple-checking John Kerry isn't the best way to demonstrate it. Insofar as I understand it, Kerry's view on abortion was that, while he passionately believes life begins at conception, he would never let his deeply held personal beliefs interfere with his legislative program. On gay marriage, likewise. That's why gay groups backed Kerry and why von Drehle's media buddies weren't running editorials warning that a Kerry presidency would end "a woman's right to choose": They understood his deeply passionately personally deep personal passionate beliefs were just an artful but meaningless formulation designed to get him through election season. Message: If Kerry's elected, abortions will continue and gay marriage will happen and he'll be cool with both. Joyce Smith understood that. Von Drehle seems vaguely resentful that she wasn't dumb enough to fall for the spin cooked up by Kerry's hairsplitters and enthusiastically promoted by his media cheerleaders.

There's a big lesson for the Democrats there that goes way beyond the merits of abortion or gay marriage. On Sept. 11, the world came unspun: There's no shame in acknowledging, as Condi Rice did last week, that previous policy -- Republican and Democrat -- toward the Middle East is wrong. But there's something silly and immature about a party that, from Kerry to Boxer to Byrd, can't get beyond spin, grandstanding and debater's points: Joyce Smith sees through it, even if David von Drehle thinks it's ingenious. If the president's speech yoked idealism and realism, that doesn't leave much for dissenting Dems except their own peculiar combination of cynicism and delusion.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bush43; marksteyn; steyn; term2
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To: federal
You can parade all the pundits and so called experts you want and it doesn't change the facts of who that person is and the actions he has taken in the past.

Our country needs more voters like you!

41 posted on 01/23/2005 6:36:52 AM PST by Tax-chick (Wielder of the Dread Words of Power, "Bless your heart, honey!")
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To: finnigan2

Thanks for posting this article.


42 posted on 01/23/2005 6:41:34 AM PST by Max Combined
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To: finnigan2

placemark


43 posted on 01/23/2005 6:45:05 AM PST by Maigrey (People on the left cannot get out of the notion that everybody revolves around them. - RushL)
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To: commonguymd
They way that Steyn puts this is brilliant. The MSM doesn't understand how so many can see through the spin and rhetoric. The MSM is losing its ability to influence and they are simply stunned.

Could it be that the internet has exposed the party of the "Artful Dodger"?

44 posted on 01/23/2005 6:54:53 AM PST by mylife (The roar of the masses could be farts)
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To: OldFriend
I had heard the senator's comments regarding exit strategy and wondered if the senator had an exit strategy for Mary Jo Kopechne.

Ouch! L0L

45 posted on 01/23/2005 6:58:39 AM PST by mylife (The roar of the masses could be farts)
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To: federal
I'm not a intellectual elite but I know when someone's past contradicts their statements about the future. You can parade all the pundits and so called experts you want and it doesn't change the facts of who that person is and the actions he has taken in the past.

I agree with you completely -- and all Kerry's political/media supporters knew exactly where he stood, too.

Joyce Smith understood that. Von Drehle seems vaguely resentful that she wasn't dumb enough to fall for the spin cooked up by Kerry's hairsplitters and enthusiastically promoted by his media cheerleaders.

It's not bad enough that he lies, but he plays such a figure of outraged innocence when he's actually called on it -- say, by the Swift Vets!

46 posted on 01/23/2005 7:08:08 AM PST by maryz
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To: RetroWarrior
And remember slick willie's exit strategy for Bosnia......they'll be home by Christmas.

He meant the following Christmas, not the Christmas ten years later.

But he's a dem so it doesn't count.

47 posted on 01/23/2005 7:11:45 AM PST by OldFriend (America's glory is not dominion, but liberty.)
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To: OldFriend

Sounds like Korea, eh? "They'll be home by Christmas!"


48 posted on 01/23/2005 7:13:42 AM PST by RetroWarrior ('I will guard my post from flank to flank and take no 'crap' from any rank')
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To: Ichneumon
All staff members must have been instructed not to hang up or be rude.

Sometimes there is stunned silence or some lame remark. But I always start the conversation letting them think I'm in agreement and then.......I let them know what I really think.

Last week when I called Byrd to let them know what I think of his blocking Dr. Rice the gal wanted me to give her my name. I gave her my name but said I would be very foolish to give my address to someone in the KKK.

49 posted on 01/23/2005 7:13:51 AM PST by OldFriend (America's glory is not dominion, but liberty.)
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To: Tax-chick

Steyn's example of Joyce Smith was brilliant.


50 posted on 01/23/2005 7:40:33 AM PST by Dog Gone
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To: finnigan2

This is one of Steyn's best!

Thanks for posting it.


51 posted on 01/23/2005 7:45:46 AM PST by Grampa Dave ( The MSM has been a weapon of mass disinformation for the Rats for at least 4 decades.)
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To: finnigan2; dead
Even "Eve Of Destruction," one notes, is a 40-year-old hippie dirge

But at least Barry McGuire, who wrote it, accepted Jesus and got his life turned around.

Any hint that anyone at the Village Voice (or in the Donk party, for that matter) has been within a parsec of a clue in the last thirty years?

Dan

52 posted on 01/23/2005 8:04:03 AM PST by BibChr ("...behold, they have rejected the word of the LORD, so what wisdom is in them?" [Jer. 8:9])
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To: finnigan2
there's something silly and immature about a party that, from Kerry to Boxer to Byrd, can't get beyond spin, grandstanding and debater's points

The Rats are maroons. They can't get past their petty partisan politics because they're socialists/communists with an agenda to take down this country.

53 posted on 01/23/2005 8:06:07 AM PST by nicmarlo
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To: finnigan2

Thanks for posting the whole essay. Not one of Steyn's best but, as always, worth a read.

Dan


54 posted on 01/23/2005 8:09:36 AM PST by BibChr ("...behold, they have rejected the word of the LORD, so what wisdom is in them?" [Jer. 8:9])
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To: Dog Gone

Yes, it was. Steyn IS brilliant ... if only he had a larger audience!


55 posted on 01/23/2005 8:09:53 AM PST by Tax-chick (Wielder of the Dread Words of Power, "Bless your heart, honey!")
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To: goldstategop
Their "reality gas tank" is no emptier than many UberKonservativs who are just as equally deluded concerning the issues of immigration in the U.S. and Islam abroad.
56 posted on 01/23/2005 8:16:19 AM PST by Cultural Jihad
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To: finnigan2
The Democrats' big phrase is "exit strategy." Time and again, their senators demanded that Rice tell 'em what the "exit strategy" for Iraq was. The correct answer is: There isn't one, and there shouldn't be one, and it's a dumb expression.

Thank you Mark Steyn. Would someone please tell the Dims this?

57 posted on 01/23/2005 8:16:30 AM PST by Rummyfan
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To: goldstategop

Yes! How come the opposition doesn't rant about the exit strategy from Japan, Germany, and the Clinton-led effort into Bosnia?


58 posted on 01/23/2005 8:18:03 AM PST by Rummyfan
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To: Dog Gone
Why do the libs have their knickers in a knot? W was simply echoing The Declaration of Independence and the Democrats Wilson and FDR.
59 posted on 01/23/2005 8:18:52 AM PST by basque (Basque by birth. American by act of God)
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I love Steyn's turning of exit strategy back on to the Dems. The shots about Mary Jo Kopechne's exit strategy are about as good a political ding as the death of innocent and unfulfilled justice can be...the Bosnia 'exit strategy' is a legitimate point of comparison to highlight their hypocrisy, but asking about the exit strategy for the millions of illegal aliens truly highlights how vacant the D party has become.


60 posted on 01/23/2005 8:20:18 AM PST by blanknoone (The two big battles left in the War on Terror are against our State dept and our media.)
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