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Dubya is back in the saddle of sanity
Scotland on Sunday ^ | Sun 19 May 2002 | Gerald Warner

Posted on 05/18/2002 7:06:08 PM PDT by kaylar

Dubya is back in the saddle of sanity

Gerald Warner

DUBYA is in the frame - again. After a close season of eight months following September 11 the political opponents of George W Bush have decided that it is now safe to attack the commander-in-chief, using the original casus belli as the pretext for doing so.

It turns out it was not Osama bin Laden who killed 3,000 American citizens in New York: it was Dubya, who screwed up the intelligence report warning of the September 11 massacre and threw it to his dog to catch; in fact, Dubya screwed up - full stop.

It is this legend, crafted in the finest traditions of the Protocols of Zion and the Angel of Mons, that has reactivated the DNA of the dinosaurs. Once again the roar of Dimpledchadivarius Rex is heard in the Florida swamps and the committee rooms of Washington. As Dubya himself, in typically understated style, has observed, there is "a sniff of politics in the air".

Dubya will beat this rap - no sweat. "The president of the United States can’t be expected to be an intelligence analyst and a case officer," said Senator Bob Graham, the Democrat from Florida who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee. That is code for "Jeez! I saw that report too and nixed it."

The beneficent effect of this anti-Bush slander, for the Democrats, is to allow House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt and Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle to re-enter politics, however temporarily and squalidly. Meantime, while they are talking the talk, Dubya has been walking the walk.

‘At the election in 2000 America lost a playboy and gained a foreign policy’

At the presidential election in 2000 America lost a playboy and gained a foreign policy. Now, 18 months into the new presidency, the mosaic is taking shape. Kyoto protocols? I don’t think so. ABM Treaty? Strictly for recycling in the West Wing comfort room. International Criminal Court? Take a hike. A bilateral agreement on nuclear warhead reductions to help li’l ole Vladimir Putin save his face - and his job? Yeah, okay - can’t do any harm.

The extent to which Dubya has got every tree-hugger, lentil, fiscal redistributionist, nuclear unilateralist and world-government freak writhing in despair is testimony to the soundness of his policy.

The president will not cripple American industry by banning fossil fuel emissions; but he supports reafforestation as a means of absorbing carbon dioxide and ‘emissions trading’ - the free-market road to environmental improvement - much derided by the Left (because it is free-market) but which has already abolished acid rain in the US.

The first country that rushed ostentatiously to sign the Kyoto protocols was Romania, whose volcanic clouds of pollution can still be seen from outer space as clearly as in Ceausescu’s day. Bush has imposed reductions in emissions of nitrogen oxide, sulphur dioxide and mercury, of which you can inhale a lungful in downtown Bucharest.

Earlier this month, Dubya told the International Criminal Court (ICC) that Uncle Sam would not be joining the party. Clinton had signed up to it in the same last-minute flurry of paperwork that gave pardons to Marc Rich et al. The court was established by a treaty among 66 nations negotiated in Rome in 1998 and will commence work at The Hague on July 1.

It is a travesty of justice. An unaccountable prosecutor will be elected for nine years, with absolute discretion to initiate investigations into genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and (wait for it) ‘the crime of aggression’ - ie any action taken by America and its allies. Any remote possibility of US adherence was blown away by the legal writs issued in France and elsewhere against former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.

In 1803, the decision in the case of Marbury v Madison established the supremacy of the US Supreme Court - a judicial supremacy that surely cannot be expatriated. The ICC derives from the United Nations, whose Security Council includes Red China, a régime that has 65 million murders to its credit. Will the ICC prosecute President Jiang Zemin? The clever money thinks not.

Finally came the bilateral arms agreement with Russia. It is a spring cleaning, with both sides scrapping excess nuclear ordnance. It is Putin’s reward for letting the ABM treaty go down the tubes without throwing a temper tantrum and it keeps him in countenance at home. Putin, in response, will not demur at the Baltic States joining Nato in November.

The Bush foreign policy is not isolationism: it is independent global engagement, realpolitik with a human face. That is exactly the posture we should welcome from the world’s last remaining superpower.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: gwb; icc; kyoto
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To: Miss Marple
It's good to be back! I was in Game Show Hell last week........one they watched was filmed while REAGAN was president......I swear!
41 posted on 05/18/2002 8:09:33 PM PDT by Howlin
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To: gcruse

Not likely. Tree-huggers or no, the environmentalists have their points.

42 posted on 05/18/2002 8:10:28 PM PDT by Pistias
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To: kaylar
"The only bad thing about that site is its once a week status."

I guessing that would be what they mean by Sunday...;o)
I've bookmarked it to my favorites. Nice to see a good site from the land of my ancestors.

43 posted on 05/18/2002 8:13:05 PM PDT by dixiechick2000
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To: Pistias
That's not a layer of smog. It's a cloud of Maple-tree pollen.
44 posted on 05/18/2002 8:16:43 PM PDT by Dec31,1999
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To: Howlin
LOL! I have a friend whose brother is 10 years older than she is. When they visit the brother all the brother and his wife want to watch is FISHING SHOWS!!! My friend about goes nuts!

This is like when we used to visit my in-laws, who had NO reading material in the house. Pretty slim pickings when you have to read the Missouri Cooperative Extension directions for planting root crops. Ha!

45 posted on 05/18/2002 8:17:09 PM PDT by Miss Marple
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To: dixiechick2000
I wish they'd just change it to, eg, scotlandnews.co.uk and go to daily, but no doubt they have their reasons (sigh...). This site is once a week, and the NYT's is probably a daily (I refuse to go to sites that make one sign in to access articles , so I don't know...The only time I see NYT articles is here at FR.) There is no justice.
46 posted on 05/18/2002 8:18:46 PM PDT by kaylar
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To: Miss Marple
No reading material??? At all??? last time I checked, I have 2500 books ; I'm out of shelf space as well as wall space on which to build additional cases (small house) and I've been known to buy the same book twice by accident. Can't begin to imagine a house with no reading material.
47 posted on 05/18/2002 8:21:24 PM PDT by kaylar
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To: harpo11
Absolutely delightful. Now why don't American papers get this sort of snappy witted commentary?

Why? Because our papers are all ran by and written by leftists who wish that Bush were home on the ranch so their agenda would be more assured.

48 posted on 05/18/2002 8:22:58 PM PDT by ladyinred
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To: kaylar
Loved this, refreshing change from the US Press and certain freeper threads!
49 posted on 05/18/2002 8:23:41 PM PDT by ladyinred
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To: kaylar
I used to do house calls as a design consultant for a furniture store. You would be amazed at the number of homes that have NO BOOKS! Pretty scary, as their vote counts as much as yours!

I can't live without books. I have to have something to read at all times!

50 posted on 05/18/2002 8:24:00 PM PDT by Miss Marple
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To: Miss Marple
I can't live without books. I have to have something to read at all times!

Same here. We put in built-in shelving to take up less room. No fiction though, all referance. If we can't learn something from a book, we don't read it.

51 posted on 05/18/2002 8:27:55 PM PDT by concerned about politics
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To: Miss Marple
It is to be hoped that they are faithful users of their public and semipublic libraries (college and university libraries are worth whatever card fee they charge)but I doubt it.
52 posted on 05/18/2002 8:28:50 PM PDT by kaylar
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To: kaylar; pokey78
Good find. Steyn-esque parts.
53 posted on 05/18/2002 8:29:11 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: kaylar
"There is no justice."

'Tis all too true. *sigh*

I don't go to the NYT because I don't want to give their website a "hit".
Call me ruthless...

54 posted on 05/18/2002 8:30:02 PM PDT by dixiechick2000
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To: Pokey78
The Young Ones won't be young for very long....
55 posted on 05/18/2002 8:30:36 PM PDT by shadowman99
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Comment #56 Removed by Moderator

To: tallhappy
Enough to make me want to go out and order haggis.....( well, not quite)
57 posted on 05/18/2002 8:37:30 PM PDT by ken5050
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To: Pistias
I figured as much. Thanks for the facts.
58 posted on 05/18/2002 8:55:25 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: kaylar;tallhappy
I agree - what a great article. And ... one of my countrymen! WhooHooo!
59 posted on 05/18/2002 9:28:43 PM PDT by CyberAnt
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To: kaylar
THANKS for a GREAT post! If you have a ping list for this favorite of yours ... please add me to the list.
60 posted on 05/18/2002 9:30:46 PM PDT by patricia
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