Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Ruining America

By Alan Caruba

George Washington warned against “factions” by which he meant political parties, but even in the earliest days of the new republic, the most natural of human inclinations was to band together with like-minded people to elect one’s preferred candidate to office.

Indeed, in the early years of the nation, elections were the occasion for candidate vilification of a sort that would appall the modern voter. All manner of calumnies and slanders were heaped upon each other by the early candidates and it was considered a perfectly natural way to campaign.

The provision of booze was considered another standard element of running for office. One could whet one’s whistle and get a bite to eat in exchange for listening to speeches and debates. Since this was what passed for entertainment in the days before mass communications, nobody thought it improper.

Eventually, it became the practice of those running for president to not even campaign in any way we’d recognize these days. Instead they stayed home and had surrogates represent them. It would have been deemed unseemly to actually want the high office. You had to be drafted by your friends and admirers.

For a long time in U.S. history, if you hadn’t been tested in battle, you might as well not even run for public office. Teddy Roosevelt so hungered for the warrior’s glory, he put together his own fighting unit, the Rough Riders, to participate in the Spanish-American War.

Today’s political battles are fought daily with endless emails and news releases, disputing every word the other side says about anything. Then the television and radio ads pile on. Major issues are reduced to “sound bites” and irrelevant charges about the smallest aspect of the candidate’s look or behavior are instantly analyzed.

In person together for a debate, Sen. Barack Obama and Sen. John McCain shook hands and exchanged an hour and a half of tedious conversation, elements of which had been carefully tested in advance. Obama did well because he is blessed with a serene demeanor that has nothing to do with his mind-boggling leftist agenda whereas McCain is a mass of twitches, blinking eyes, and inappropriate smiles. It makes one yearn for the polished affability of Ronald Reagan.

If you locked McCain in the Oval Office and sent in sandwiches, he probably would do a very competent job of running the madhouse we call America. Obama, on the other hand, in between sips of his mocha latte will bring the economy to total ruin with the help of a Congress that will more resemble the Russian Duma than anything that passes for an independent, bicameral chamber.

So now, for the remainder of the campaign, we will be assured that the “other” side will destroy the nation and, in the case of the McCain campaign, they will be right to issue such warnings. One need only listen to the ravings of Barney Frank, the lunacy of Nancy Pelosi, or rock bottom stupidity of Harry Reid, to know that.

I lived through the 1960s with the rioting in the streets, the drugged-out hippies, the terrorists like Bill Ayers, and know I do not want to live in a nation where those perpetrating hostile activities in the name of The Revolution are in charge or at least whispering in the ear of President Obama.

Things look grim. I remember the ugliness surrounding President Johnson’s escalation of the Vietnam War and the national welfare state he tried to create with his Great Society program. That, in turn, facilitated the election of Richard Nixon. In the wake of the Watergate Scandal that brought down Nixon, we ended up with Jimmy Carter, a virtual unknown with a big toothy smile who turned out to be straight out of Mad Magazine.

Just voting for “change” in bad times ought to require knowing and understanding what that change will be. So, yes, Obama’s “change” will ruin the nation by returning to all the failed programs the Democrats have foisted on us since the days of FDR.

4 comments:

  1. I agree. McCain's mannerisms did not help him in the debates. If the debates were over style, he lost.
    Unfortunately many watching seem to base their decisions based on this criteria.
    The alliance of Obama/Reid/Pelosi has the makings of a disaster that our country may not survive. Should they successfully follow their ideological wishes say goodbye to individual liberty.
    Those of us that can see through the smokescreen need to stand united to protect our way of life.
    The likely first fight against censorship must be won. Obama has made noises on regulating the internet, and imposing the Fairness Doctrine again.
    The evidence is that Obama has and will use Marxist means to affect change.
    For those clamoring for change I say look just to the south of Florida. It seems in 1959 they had a young charismatic leader promising change also. The Cubans experienced change alright.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Right you are, Alan. Today's political races, especially the important ones, are more about cult of personality and celebrity worship by American Idol voters than substance, policy, and direction. I shouldn't be, but I continue to be shocked daily, by the media's fawning worship of The One.

    What does that say about our free nation when the press is supposed to be a watch-dog entity on behalf of the populace, but cheer-leads for one candidate over the other, against what's best for the populace? Our whole system seems to be failing and a government controlled entirely by radical leftists will damage the country irreparably...not to mention the coming leftward surge of the Supreme Court. Imagine 5-6 Ginsbergs....ugh!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Visit wwww.anxietycenter.com for my commentary this week on the scary parallels between The One and another charismatic leader who came to power during bad economic times.

    ReplyDelete
  4. You have hit it, Alan: Ruining America. The dark, hidden agenda of Obama for producung 'change' is one that America can ill-afford. However, whoever reaches the White House is set to force change upon the electorate - changes they will not really know until it is too late.
    It is becoming more of a believable item, today, that the internet as we know and love it is set to be heavily regulated by 2012 as corporations are planning to introduce a pay-as-you-surf cable TV variety. This will compromise the present internet by establishing a second level system which will be super-fast leaving the old,present internet to wither and die in the slow lane, braked deliberately. No longer a viable entity. The equivalent of the destruction of the Alexanderia library or the consingning of knowledge in Northern Europe to the monestaries and would seem on the cards whoever is in power.
    The opposition Republicans offer equal pain on another scale.
    A recent campaign speech by MCCain was so loaded with AGW pseudo science it really showed his colours if he reached Office. It was so extreme it prompted an "Open letter from The Viscount Monckton of Brenchley to Senator John McCain about Climate Science and Policy". The letter is accessible on the American Thinker website and is an eye-popping response laying out the facts to every false proclamation in MCCain's speech.
    The frightening thing is that what is already in motion by the present administration will be 'business-as-usual' for any administration.
    At least you have a real and working democracy when compared to the harsh dictators and pseudo parliamentarians of the EU. However, increasingly, you seem to face a Hobson's Choice between policies furthering the discredited AGW or policies furthering the discredited AGW, and its consequences. Like Monckton, I hope MCCain reads the letter to him and fires his Green advisors who so tricked him to making such a loaded speech for non-science.
    Clive in Laoag City, RP

    ReplyDelete