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The GOP, Party of Cowards
Ever Vigilant ^ | 12/23/2003 | Lee R. Shelton IV

Posted on 01/02/2003 6:12:39 AM PST by sheltonmac

Most Americans seem to believe that Trent Lott deserved to suffer for his "insensitive" comments at Strom Thurmond's birthday celebration. Now that Lott has been forced to step down as Senate Majority Leader, neo-conservative Republicans are the ones cheering the loudest.

"We've wanted him gone for a long time," some have said. "We needed to get rid of him and move on with our agenda." The trouble is, no one in the party seems to know exactly what that agenda is.

Of course, that hasn't stopped neo-cons before. Pragmatism has always trumped principle, and as long as the polls reflect public approval for their actions, they really don't care about anything else. They must increase their majority in 2004 at any cost, and to do that they must first shake their xenophobic image.

As everyone knows, the GOP has long been branded as the party of racists. Such labels have been successfully utilized by the liberal left for years, and Republicans have tried everything to keep those labels from sticking. The end result is that in order to present the voting public with a kinder, gentler GOP, Republicans typically begin adopting Democratic positions.

It's the same three-step process every time: 1) liberals make the accusation of racism against a Republican, 2) the Republican denies the charge and 3) the Republican agrees to sign on to the liberal agenda, hoping that in doing so he might prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that he is not a racist. The entire fiasco surrounding Trent Lott is only the latest example of this kind of Republican cowardice.

Lott's comments sparked all the predictable reactions from all the usual suspects. Men like Al Sharpton and NAACP president Kweisi Mfume —both veteran champions of racial divisiveness —wasted no time in attacking the senator.

Sharpton, who had remained strangely silent in 2001 when Senate Democrat Robert Byrd let fly with his "white niggers" remark, said, "[Lott] should step aside. No one is saying that if the people of Mississippi want to elect him to the Senate that they don't have the right to do that. But to be the head of the party in the Senate, given the sensitivity of that position for the interest of the country and the party, Mr. Lott should step aside."

Mfume's response was a bit more harsh. He called Lott's little speech "hateful bigotry that has no place in the halls of the Congress," and dismissed Lott's subsequent apology as "too little, too late."

Reacting to the verbal barrage from the left, the neo-cons scattered. No one even bothered to mention the possibility that Lott was simply acknowledging the distinguished political career of his 100-year-old colleague. Nobody proposed that when the senator from Mississippi implied that we would be better off had Strom Thurmond been elected president in 1948, he was referring to some of the more noble causes Thurmond stood for, like states' rights and a less-intrusive federal government.

No, the neo-cons were so desperate to prove that they could be just as racially sensitive as their slightly more liberal counterparts that Lott's political fate had already been sealed. He was the perfect fall guy, and his sacrifice was worth it if it meant keeping the GOP in power.

Republicans, listen up. Whether you agree that Trent Lott should have resigned as Majority Leader or not, his ousting is yet another sign that you just don't get it. No matter what you say or do, you will always be viewed by the left as a bunch of bigots and racists. Bending to political peer pressure doesn't help —in fact, it makes you look weak. The sooner you learn that, the sooner we can begin repairing the damage your party has done to the conservative cause.

But it's probably too late. The mob has spoken, and Trent Lott has been forced out of his leadership role. Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah summed up what Republicans expect of Bill Frist, Lott's successor: "I think Bill has a kind of a more moderate record and a more moderate approach toward things, and I think that it's going to be very difficult to criticize him."

In other words, "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em." And that, my friends, has become the battle cry of the neo-conservatives in the GOP, Party of Cowards.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
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To: sheltonmac
By the way, if he isn't fit to be Majority Leader, what makes him fit to be in the Senate at all?

Winning the vote of the people of the State of Mississippi, for one...

161 posted on 01/02/2003 8:59:59 AM PST by dirtboy
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Frist better bring it up since President Bush said he would sign the ban on PB Abortion..........
162 posted on 01/02/2003 9:00:25 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: dirtboy; cynicom
I guess they were just mad at me for bringing a knife to a knife fight...

All personal attacks are equal. However some persoanl attacks are more equal then others.

Next time, in this thread, use the insult word, "coward". It would make cynicom feel better.

163 posted on 01/02/2003 9:01:24 AM PST by FreeReign
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To: cynicom
Personally - I think Lott should have been gone a long time ago - I was so thorougly disgusted with him when he denied the house managers the ability to put on a fair trial in Clinton's impeachment.
164 posted on 01/02/2003 9:01:38 AM PST by M. Peach
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To: TLBSHOW
Thank goodness we do question the gop as we stopped tips in its tracks!

Uh, TLBSHOW, it was a GOP representative who inserted the language into the Homeland Security Act that killed TIPS. That was more of a matter of what Ashcroft and Justice were doing, not the entire GOP.

165 posted on 01/02/2003 9:01:44 AM PST by dirtboy
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To: AnalogReigns
Thank you for putting up an intelligent overview of the Lott affair. You're absolutely correct about the view of many mainstream and paleo-conservatives: Lott wasn't worth defending. My big concern now has to do with the Bush administration's position in the University of MI case in front of the Supreme Court and getting back to the idea of a color-blind society in terms of equal treatment under the law.

I am very disturbed by Frist's 12/27 meeting with one of the most noxious black racists in the country, Al Sharpton. Why on earth would any conservative give a rip about what Al Sharpton thinks? Sharpton should be attacked for his unending stream of race-baiting, riot-inciting words and actions instead of given legitimacy. I hope I am wrong, but something smells really rotten here. If the Bush-Rove-Frist leadership panders to criminals like Sharpton, they risk losing a large portion of their conservative base.
166 posted on 01/02/2003 9:01:45 AM PST by Bogolyubski
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To: sheltonmac
I remember when KKK Byrd was senate majority leader. Not a peep from the president, or the senate, or the democrats, or from the republicans. One has to wonder what stoked these fires of righteous indignation.
167 posted on 01/02/2003 9:02:04 AM PST by cynicom
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Old Lott must have been quite a politically active 7 year old at the time Thurmond made that comment...
168 posted on 01/02/2003 9:02:13 AM PST by Axenolith
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To: TLBSHOW
..then you best label Bob Barr and many other conservatives as well in your broad stroke of the brush.......... So you are saying that Anyone that questions the gop caving in is wacky?

Bob Barr is a member of the ACLU.

169 posted on 01/02/2003 9:02:54 AM PST by FreeReign
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To: dirtboy
Tell the truth - you have a book of quotes somewhere, don't you?
170 posted on 01/02/2003 9:03:20 AM PST by M. Peach
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Sorry Luis doesn't fly. Lott was ousted for one reason only, offending those of the NAALCP and other racist organizations for making a non committal statement about a great statesmen that, as has been pointed out, could have meant many things.

Does that mean Lott should have stayed in the position before this happened? Of course not. His stance changed so often one would think he was a liberal. However to throw him to the multicultural wolves as a way to get him out of that seat was a mistake that conservatives will be paying for for years

171 posted on 01/02/2003 9:03:48 AM PST by billbears
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To: M. Peach
Tell the truth - you have a book of quotes somewhere, don't you?

I just make them up as I go along, and hope no one notices the really stupid ones...

172 posted on 01/02/2003 9:04:37 AM PST by dirtboy
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To: billbears
Sorry Luis doesn't fly. Lott was ousted for one reason only, offending those of the NAALCP and other racist organizations for making a non committal statement about a great statesmen that, as has been pointed out, could have meant many things.

Lott was ousted after he began sucking-up to the NAALCP.

173 posted on 01/02/2003 9:06:00 AM PST by FreeReign
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To: dirtboy
a conservative member of the GOP....
not a coward one.....


Before Dick Armey, a vigilant Republican House leader, stopped — for now — Operation TIPS, New York Daily News columnist Zev Chafets warned us, in his July 17 column, what the return of "Big Brother"

could mean as our Constitution was being amended without consultation by Congress and without the vote of the citizenry.

http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20020729-91234329.htm

174 posted on 01/02/2003 9:06:07 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: sheltonmac
Reacting to the verbal barrage from the left, the neo-cons scattered. No one even bothered to mention the possibility that Lott was simply acknowledging the distinguished political career of his 100-year-old colleague. Nobody proposed that when the senator from Mississippi implied that we would be better off had Strom Thurmond been elected president in 1948, he was referring to some of the more noble causes Thurmond stood for, like states' rights and a less-intrusive federal government.

Another flippin' idiot who doesn't get it.

For everyone who agrees with this imbecile, read this carefully: IF LOTT WAS SIMPLY "ACKNOWLEDGING THE DISTINGUISHED POLITICAL CAREER OF HIS 100-YEAR-OLD COLLEAGUE, HE SHOULD HAVE SAID SOMETHING TO THAT EFFECT. IF LOTT WAS REFERRING TO STATES' RIGHTS AND A LESS INTRUSIVE GOVERNMENT, HE SHOULD HAVE SAID THAT.

WHAT HE SAID WAS THAT IF THURMOND WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT "WE WOULDN'T HAVE ALL THE PROBLEMS WE DO TODAY." NOW, GENIUS, WHAT "PROBLEM" IS THURMOND MOST FAMOUS FOR TRYING TO PREVENT? THAT'S RIGHT, BRAINIAC: THE "PROBLEM" OF INTEGRATION!

LOTT DIDN'T HAVE A SATISFACTORY ANSWER FOR WHAT THE "PROBLEMS" WERE, AND EVEN IF HE DID, HE WOULD HAVE STILL HAD TO ADDRESS THE FACT THAT HE SAID HIS STATE WAS PROUD TO HAVE VOTED FOR A PRE-CIVIL RIGHTS ACT SEGREGATIONIST!

No, the neo-cons were so desperate to prove that they could be just as racially sensitive as their slightly more liberal counterparts that Lott's political fate had already been sealed. He was the perfect fall guy, and his sacrifice was worth it if it meant keeping the GOP in power.

Oh, shut your stuff up! If Lott had remained Majority Leader, he would have been the equivalent of a firing range target for the left for the two years he's still got left -- which, if you haven't forgotten, is a Presidential election year!

You idiots who are in the business of ragging on "neo-cons" for being realistic and pragmatic don't seem to realize that the left is relying on gaffes like Lott's to EXPAND THEIR BASE -- something that is already forecast to happen just by means of illegal immigration and the percentage increase in non-whites. Even if you think that the future lies in rallying more white voters to the GOP by being intentionally provocative on racial issues, THAT will be a additional war cry for the Democrats! And on top of that, if your approach is taken, and the Dems accuse the GOP of shutting out minorities, THEY'LL BE RIGHT THIS TIME!

175 posted on 01/02/2003 9:06:53 AM PST by L.N. Smithee
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To: FreeReign
so, last I saw him he was on the front page of FR too!
176 posted on 01/02/2003 9:07:40 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: sheltonmac
Lott lived by the 3-step dance, so it's appropriate that his leadership died by the 3-step dance. I must agree with the author, however, that the entire process was cowardly. Fortunately, the electorate has a very short memory. Mine, however, is longer. I'm all for seeing any senator who aided and abetted Bill Clinton remaining in office go down the road. Bye, bye, Trent.
177 posted on 01/02/2003 9:07:51 AM PST by PeoplesRepublicOfWashington
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To: TLBSHOW
a conservative member of the GOP.... not a coward one.....

TLBSHOW nails the triple Lutz as he effortlessly spins his way to his new position. Even the French judge is impressed...

178 posted on 01/02/2003 9:07:53 AM PST by dirtboy
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Thanks for the reminder. It astounds me there are people still defending Lott, and who are still sore about his replacement. It HAD to be done.
179 posted on 01/02/2003 9:08:15 AM PST by L.N. Smithee
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To: sheltonmac
If incompetency was the real issue here, Lott would have been gone long ago. By the way, if he isn't fit to be Majority Leader, what makes him fit to be in the Senate at all?


Maybe, maybe not as to being gone a long time ago. Unless you are perfect, sometimes it takes numerous mess ups till finally people get a gut full and you are put out.

Apparently the electors in Mississippi feel he is qualified to be their Senator and have so spoken. They didn't elect him majority leader.
180 posted on 01/02/2003 9:09:27 AM PST by deport
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