Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
« October 2009 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Decline of the West
Freedom's Guardian
Liberal Fascism
Military History
Must Read
Politics & Elections
Scratchpad
The Box Office
The Media
Verse
Virtual Reality
My Web Presence
War Flags (Website)
Culture & the Arts
The New Criterion
Twenty-Six Letters
Wednesday, 14 October 2009
The Road to (Health Care) Serfdom
Topic: Liberal Fascism

BaucusCare just made it out of committee, which has some (not all)progressives cheering. It's another small step, you see, along the road to socialized medicine.

But if you examine the details of the bill, it looks more like a stumble than a step. BaucusCare would spend close to $1 trillion over a period of ten years or so—yet we're told that it won't increase the deficit. So where's the money to come from? You and me.

Barack Obama promised that he would never, ever raise taxes on the middle class. The Baucus bill does just that. Democrats have long treated Medicare as a sacred cow, immune from even the smallest spending cut. The Baucus bill would slash Medicare spending by $500 billion. And with all this, the Baucus bill includes provisions for government rationing of health care—another supposed no-no, according to President Obama.

Maybe the Baucus bill will never make it through the long, arduous process of congressional approval, especially with the 2010 elections looming. On the other hand, maybe Democrats are so desperate to pass something on health care that they'll cut their own throats by enacting this atrocious legislation.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:44 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Two States to Watch
Topic: Decline of the West

New Jersey and Virginia will be electing governors next month, and both races bear close watching.

In Virginia, the Republican candidate holds a comfortable, perhaps commanding, lead over his Democratic opponent. A GOP win in the Old Dominion, which has been shifting from red to purple in recent years, would certainly be a blow to the Democrats and a bad sign for Barack Obama. But New Jersey is really the one to watch.

In the Garden State, the GOP challenger, Chris Christie, is clinging to a narrow lead over the unpopular incumbent, Democrat Jon Corzine. But New Jersey is the most azure of Democratic Party strongholds, with powerful unions and a big Democrat advantage in voter registration. Nor has Christie proved to be the most adroit of candidates.Still, he has several things going for him, not least among them New Jersey's parlous economic condition, sky-high taxes and culture of corruption. So he has a real shot at unseating Corzine—and it that happens, expect to to see signs of panic among congressional Democrats as they prepare to face the voters in 2010.


Posted by tmg110 at 7:42 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Hit It Again, Hillary
Topic: Decline of the West

One of the more enjoyable aspects (from the cosmic justice standpoint) of the Obama Administration has been the humiliation of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Remember the Russian Relations Reset Button? Well, Hillary hit it in the hope of bringing Russia on board the Iran Sanctions Express.

In hopes of garnering Russian support for action against Iran's nuclear ambitions, the Obama Administration betrayed two US allies, Poland and the Czech Republic. These nations had agreed to host US anti-ballistic missile (ABM) sites on their territory. Russia didn't like that, so Obama canceled the deployment.

Now comes the payoff: Russia Not Budging on Iran Sanctions. Having obtained, at no cost to itself, a major concession from the US, Russia simply pocketed it—and, in passing, stuck a finger in Clinton's eye. Couldn't have happened to a nicer girl.


Posted by tmg110 at 7:27 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
The Hate Goes On
Topic: Decline of the West

 

World leaders—including, sadly, the President of the United States—are competing energetically for the Suck Up to a Genocidal Maniac Award. And Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad must be laughing himself silly. The crazier he gets, the more desperately the “world community” scrambles to appease him and the regime he represents. The latest offender is the widely admired President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil. He will be hosting Ahmadinejad next month, when the latter pays an official state visit to Brazil. And David Harris of the American Jewish Committee just can’t figure it out.

 

Let me suggest one possibility. The Holocaust, which consumed the lives and bodies of some 6 million Jews, finally terminated anti-Semitism’s status as an overt, mainstream prejudice. With exception of fringe kooks such as Holocaust deniers, the West abandoned overt Jew hatred.

 

But anti-Semitism, perhaps the world’s oldest form of racial prejudice, proved too hardy a perennial to be uprooted by even the Holocaust. The desire to hate the Jews remained, and the establishment of the State of Israel eventually provided it with a respectable outlet. Now it’s possible for anti-Semites such as Pat Buchanan to bash the Jews to their hearts’ content. They’ve got nothing against Jews, you see, it’s just those wicked Israelis they can’t stand.

 

When progressives whine about the “neocons” and Israel’s supposed lock on US foreign policy, they’re simply recycling old conspiracy theories in an updated form. The Jews, it seems, are still plotting to take over the world, and their evil influence circles the globe. Now wonder that the ousted president of tiny Honduras (holed up in the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa, come to think of it)  has claimed that “Israeli mercenaries” are shooting death rays into his head.

 

That the establishment of Israel has given anti-Semitism a new lease on life is a sad historical irony. I suspect, however, that if Israel did not exist, something else would have come along to reanimate this ancient prejudice. We’d do well to remember that hate can be as vital as love.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:07 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Further Thoughts on the Messiah's Nobel
Topic: Liberal Fascism

It’s true that in the past, the Nobel Peace Prize has been given to some pretty dubious characters. But even with that caveat, this year’s award to Barack Obama seems bizarre.

Let me stipulate at this point that I’m not criticizing the President for winning the prize. As far as we know, he was as surprised as anyone by last week’s announcement. It may even have embarrassed him. For surely Obama realizes that the Nobel came to him not for anything he’s done but rather for what he is: America’s first post-patriotic president.

Consciously or not, Obama has communicated the impression that he sees nothing special about America. To him it’s simply one country among many—larger, richer and more powerful than most, to be sure, but American exceptionalism? Please! Small wonder that Europe’s postmodern elites—to whom anti-Americanism comes as naturally as breathing—love this guy. He also shares their hostility toward Israel, albeit in a less virulent form. From the European point of view, therefore, no American could be more worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize.

But it seems to me that there was also an element of condescension in Obama’s selection— condescension toward both the man and the country he leads. Perhaps that explains why the Nobel Peace Prize, supposedly such a high honor, has left him looking slightly diminished. Since when has an American president required the encouragement of a committee of jaundiced Norwegian leftists? For that was the motive behind their selection of Obama: to encourage him in his post-patriotic course. An approving pat on the head at this juncture might prevent backsliding later.

I’d like to believe that the President is too smart to fall for such a transparent ploy. But everybody likes flattery, after all, and when it comes to a man as vain as Barack Obama, laying it on with a snow shovel generally does the trick.


Posted by tmg110 at 7:26 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Friday, 9 October 2009
Being There
Topic: Liberal Fascism

OK, I've managed to stop laughing long enough to post the news: Barack Obama has won the Nobel Peace Prize. Since nominations for the award closed on February 1, this means that he is being recognized for the achievements of his first ten days in office.

No, seriously, I get it—I really do. President Obama is being honored not for anything he did, but for what he is, or rather isn't. He's not that oafish yet sinister, quasi-fascist neocon cowboy, George W. Bush, and that's enough, it seems, for the Norwegian Nobel Committee. Just by showing up on January 20, Obama clinched the award.

Indeed, in a subtle way, the Committee's decision is an insult to America. For quite clearly, Obama's Nobel Peace Prize honors all that America is not: left-leaning, post-patriotic, postmodern. What Europeans really like about the guy is precisely what is causing his domestic poll numbers to fall.

Besides being ridiculous, the award seems ill-timed. It comes at a moment when Obama is wrestling with the decision that may decide the fate of his presidency: What to do about Afghanistan? If he decides to accede to General Stanley McChrystal's request and send 40,000 more troops to the Afghanistan, how might that play in Oslo?

I suspect that even the Obama claque will be clearing its throat and shuffling its feet over this silly business.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:16 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
The Pain in Spain
Topic: Liberal Fascism

 

The Spanish prime minister is coming to Washington, DC, which makes this a good time to have a look at one case of “real, existing socialism.” (Michael Moore, pay attention!)

 

Reelected just 18 months ago on a left-wing platform that would gladden the heart of the most worshipful Obama hymn-singer, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero is not a happy camper nowadays. For despite the wonderfulness of his Euro-progressivism, Spain’s unemployment rate stands at 18%—and no, that is not a typo. When the books are closed on 2009, economists expect to record that the country’s GDP will be found to have contracted by 4%. But there’s one statistic that’s arrowing up: thanks to the Zapatero government’s profligate spending, Spain’s budget deficit is expected to reach 10% of GDP this year.

 

Zapatero has blamed Spain’s economic woes on “neocons” and “radical liberalism.” In sharp contrast to these sinister reactionaries, he has proposed an innovative response to the economic crisis: higher taxes. Good idea in the middle of a deep recession.

 

Incidentally, Zapatero is also a leading Greenshirt. The green energy initiative that he cobbled together has been cited by President Obama as a model for the United States. Yet somehow, green jobs have failed to arrest Spain’s precipitous economic decline, while the country remains Europe’s leading greenhouse gas emitter.

 

On the foreign policy front, Zapatero showed himself to be a good little soldier of progressivism by withdrawing Spanish troops from Iraq with days of his 2004 election. He followed up with a steady stream of anti-American rhetoric. All this earned him the lasting enmity of the Bush Administration, which spent the subsequent four years more or less ignoring Zapatero’s existence.

 

So needless to say, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero can expect a cordial welcome at the White House. In so many ways, he’s Barack Obama’s kind of guy.

 

(A tip of the hat to Soeren Kern, whose article in the Weekly Standard alerted me to Zapatero’s impending visit, and reviews his sorry record.)


Posted by tmg110 at 7:37 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Thursday, 8 October 2009
There's a Market for Dumb Documentaries
Topic: The Box Office

 

No, I’m not going to see Michael Moore’s new movie, Capitalism: A Love Story. Life is too short. Let him preach that socialism is the best thing that ever happened to humanity; he has that right. I was about to observe that Moore isn’t fooling anyone, but that really isn’t true. He’s fooling himself, surely. Unlike some of his critics, I doubt that Moore is simply a con artist. No, he believes what he’s saying—in this case, that “capitalism” is a great evil. But his idea of what constitutes capitalism is crude to the point of caricature. To Moore, it’s all fat cats and greedy bankers and crooked politicians. Wall Street’s recent collapse has made him mad as hell, and he wants our money back.

 

But money is, of course, capitalism’s sine qua non. Without it, a modern market economy could not exist. Socialism, which looks to the destruction of capitalism, implies the demise of the market economy, private property—and money. To be sure, in the late, unlamented Soviet Union, pieces of paper called money existed. But the Soviet ruble’s face value bore no relation to its actual purchasing power. It never served as a store of value or medium of exchange on the capitalist model. Indeed, for the whole of the Soviet period, the ruble was not convertible to other currencies. Nobody had any idea what, if anything, those fancy pieces of paper bearing Lenin’s portrait were really worth.

 

So when, as apparently he does in his movie, Moore goes around badgering “capitalists” and demanding the people’s money back, he falsifies his entire argument. And I don’t think he’s being dishonest. He simply doesn’t know what he talking about. His documentary on capitalism mostly documents his own dim-bulb inability to grasp simple economic concepts.


Posted by tmg110 at 8:15 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
Wednesday, 7 October 2009
He Won't Say the "V" Word
Topic: Decline of the West

Speaking of the middle of the road, that appears to be the Obama Administration's preferred route where Afghanistan is concerned. On the one hand, he won't just pull out, but on the other hand he won't give the commanding general the resources necessary to win.

Now it's certainly true, as Clausewitz observed, that war at its highest point of view is politics—but I doubt that he meant the craven, poll-driven politics that dominates the Obama Administration's thinking. The President is quite evidently afraid (a) to appear weak by abandoning Afghanistan and (b) to alienate his progressive base. So he's not trying to win, but he doesn't want to lose. I think I know how that's going to turn out.

Clausewitz notes that war is characterized by a principle of polarity: what's good for one side is necessarily bad for the other side. If the Taliban is winning in Afghanistan, the US and its allies are losing. That's the fundamental nature of war, and there's no way around it. Unfortunately, we now have a commander-in-chief who can't bring himself to utter the word "victory"—and if he can't even say it, he'll never achieve it. So for what, precisely, are the troops risking their lives? A healthier presidential approval rating?


Posted by tmg110 at 8:01 AM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:47 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
The Center Cannot Hold
Topic: Decline of the West

Writing in the online edition of the Jerusalem Post, David Harris of the American Jewish Committee puts the best possible spin on a somewhat disquieting poll. That poll, conducted by the AJC itself, found that contrary to the claims of Left and Right, the views of American Jews are straight down the middle. "They yearn for peace in the Middle East and support some territorial concessions in its pursuit," Mr. Harris notes, "but, at the same time, they have serious doubts about Arab intentions towards Israel."

This is why what you generally find in the middle of the road is unappetizing road kill. American Jews appear to recognize the grim realities of the Middle East, but they cannot bring themselves to connect the dots. For if, as they suspect, Arab intentions toward Israel are in fact malign, then territorial concessions would be utterly futile. American Jews seem unwilling to draw this obvious conclusion. For the same reason, probably, they support the Obama administration's handling of US-Israeli relations by a 54-32% margin. In its desire to appease the Arabs, the Obama Administration has caused a crisis in US-Israeli relations, but American Jews don't want to see this.

It's the liberalism of American Jews drives these contradictory results. Jews in this country have always leaned left, and they supported Obama in 2008 by a wide margin. If today, they seem unwilling to recognize that he sold them a bill of goods on Israel and the Middle East, well, their reaction as reported in the AJC poll is natural enough. Breaking up is hard to do.


Posted by tmg110 at 7:32 AM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 7 October 2009 7:53 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink

Newer | Latest | Older