Naïveté, thy name is RLK. Right now, I number you (and many others here) among the RATS. Your gripes are no different.
Have a jacked up day.
I, for one, am not suicidal enough to abandon Bush come election time, for several reasons. His performance on domestic issues is a mixed bag, but the alternative would be much worse; I believe we are in the midst of a long, protracted war, and I like the kind of people he has put in charge of the war effort.(I could do without Powell and his State Dept.)
As for your reference to Keyes, he might be electable if he could keep his ego in check. His smug display of his intellectual prowess turns voters off.
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"MONTERREY, Mexico: ----- ------- yesterday said Americans are duty-bound to 'share our wealth' with poor nations and promised a 50 percent increase in foreign aid, but 'We should give more of our aid in the form of grants, rather than loans that can never be repaid,' he said. 'We should invest in better health and build on our efforts to fight AIDS, which threatens to undermine whole societies.'
"In addition to the moral, economic and strategic imperatives of increasing foreign aid, ----- ------- said, it could also help in the war against terrorism.
"'We will challenge the poverty and hopelessness and lack of education and failed governments that too often allow conditions that terrorists can seize and try to turn to their advantage.'"
Here's a small political quiz. Who is quoted above?
a) George McGovern
b) Bill Clinton
c) Al Gore
d) Al Sharpton
e) Jesse Jackson
f ) Ted Kennedy
g) George W. Bush
Hint: He's very popular here at Free Republic.
This is a common mistake. It is one being repeated by the Republican party in 2000. Republican and political amateurs tell me daily that the only important thing is to get the Clintons and Gores out of the White House. Nothing could be further from the truth and this thinking is an ultimate deathtrap. Without a highly articulate spokesman advancing a well thought out broad agenda, winning an election is an ultimate disaster during which your opposition gets a rest period while the world watches your candidate prove the criticisms the opposition made during their election campaign. You lose leverage during your own term in office because of internal organizational dissension and directionlessness. You've simultaneously undermined your ideological and political strength in future elections. Winning an election with an incompetent or compromising or compromised candidate is deferred suicide.
The worst thing that can happen is to win an election with someone who is too incompetent, or is reluctant, to confront and refute your ideological enemy. It makes a better case for the view that the enemy is so correct as to be unrefutable than the enemy could make by himself. Ideological silence or ineptitude confers an image of indominitability, immortality, invulnerability, and permission upon the opposition. The message given is that the only thing your presidential candidate can do is lamely apologize by embarrassed silence for not adopting the ideology of the political left. Your supporters are betrayed to find when they vote against the opposition they still have no voice and the opposition remains the dominant political voice.
In subsequent elections that image of indominitability and permission are used against you. The ideological weaknesses of your weak previous office-holder are declared by the radical left opposition to be the wise valid positions of your party, while deviation from weaknesses and attempts to correct them are labeled extremism. A competent new candidate in your party is nearly mortally crippled by needing to spend as much time and effort refuting or reversing the silent ineptitude and embarrassment of the previous officeholder from his own party as he does making a rational ideological case. This allows the opposition the opportunity to present your candidate as being a divergent radical within his own party for saying what the previous candidate or officeholder was too inept or disinclined to say.
Concurrently, you find your own political party has become a comfortable nesting place for an influx of weaklings and trash now promoting and attempting to extend the agreeable softness and weakness of weak predecessors.
It must be understood there absolutely is no such thing as a moderate or center position in politics where there is a radical left. Any time your candidate moves half way to accommodate or make peace with the left, the left responds by moving farther left, which then moves the middle point farther left. Consequently, in the last 40 years moderation and middle ground have been moving targets receding leftward at the speed of light as so-called moderates and peacemakers desperately and lamely pursue the endlessly moving average set and reset by ever-increasing radicalism and pathology on the left. The shift has been such that the leftist position of 40 years ago is now called right-wing extremism.
Electing peacemakers and "nice guys" in dealing with the radical left is the equivalent of quitting the antibiotic medication which is fighting an infection threatening to turn into gangrene. The infection gains strength while unopposed, and your political party or next presidential candidate faces the future having lost an arm or a leg.
This is one of the things that happened with George Bush senior. He was elected in the mistaken wish that he would have the same personal force and direction as Reagan. Instead, Bush's pleasant blandness, his timidity and/or incapacity in confronting the political left, his failure to articulate an agenda and analysis, lost the conservative momentum and brought catastrophe upon the Republican Party and the nation, culminating in the ascendancy of the Clintons. The economic condition was horrible in 1992 and strongly affected the election; but with the exception of the period just after winning the Gulf war, the Bush presidency was also directionless and without incisive forceful voice from the start because of George Bush's failure to confront the lifestyle and political left.
Like many others in the Republican party, George Bush's views of politics and the presidency were hopelessly obsolete and were based upon the long bygone days before the convoluted titanic struggle with radical socialism and rationalized borderline psychotic counterculturalism in America. Bush seemed to lack any awareness that such a struggle even existed, or of its seriousness. And probably, in his limited world, it didn't exist. This was much of Bush's failure, assuming his intent was oriented toward a free society. It is a condition seemingly shared by his son. It was also, incidentally, the failure of Bob Dole.
From Politics in America, a irrefutable explanation of how and why the barbarians took the gates and imperiled civilization.
The series is definitely worth the time it takes to read and digest it.