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Politics : THE VAST RIGHT WING CONSPIRACY -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sandintoes who wrote (5559)1/21/2004 1:13:56 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 6358
 
The Safety of a Great Nation
Chuck Colson (archive)
January 21, 2004 | Print | Send
URL:http://www.townhall.com/columnists/chuckcolson/cc20040121.shtml
The president’s speech last night was inspiring for the nation, and part of it was particularly thrilling for me. The president made a strong appeal to help prisoners transition from prison back into society.

Most important, however, were the president’s words about foreign policy and the war on Iraq and terrorism. I, for one, believe the president’s policy meets the criteria of the “just war” doctrine, guidelines first laid down by St. Augustine that have informed Western thought about the use of military force for sixteen centuries. I say that not just because of the threat in Iraq, but also because of the much broader threat from Islamic fundamentalism worldwide.

The stakes in Iraq, you see, go beyond the borders of that country, beyond the Middle East . Nobody likes to say it—and the president couldn’t say it for obvious reasons—but we are in a clash of civilizations that Harvard professor Samuel Huntington predicted in his landmark book. There are not only thousands of terrorist cells spread throughout the Islamic world, but there are also groups in many Islamic countries agitating for violence and thousands being trained for terror attacks.

Terrorism experts recognize that trying to root out groups like this one by one is nearly impossible. You simply don’t know where they are, and the borders of this country are porous.

The better answer is the one the president has chosen, bringing to the Muslim world the benefits of modernity and democracy that can produce free societies and free markets. This is the only way to answer Islamic leaders who excuse their own failures by blaming the deprivation of the Islamic masses on the United States . And they will continue to foment resentment among Muslims until democratic reforms can be introduced.

That’s why Iraq is so important. Now we have a tough job to establish democratic reforms in Iraq. The country has lived under a tyrant for decades who left it chaotic. But I believe establishing a free nation will be a huge symbol of hope to the rest of the Muslim world. We have already seen signs of this in Iran and Libya. And it’s the moral thing to do. Let the critics say what they want—there is no instant solution to the clash of civilizations. It will continue until the terrorists obliterate the West, or the West loses its will—or when we can introduce democratic reforms into the Islamic world.

On the domestic front, the president announced a program for prisoner re-entry. I’m thrilled. With more than 600,000 inmates being released this year, we have got to work to make their transition successful. This proposal is part of a pattern—prison rape elimination, abolition of Sudan slavery, combating AIDS in Africa—cases where the president has shown a moral concern for the marginalized and for the hurting in society.

The president made a strong plea for the sanctity of marriage, directly confronting judicial activism—the first time I’ve heard a president do that. The people, not the courts, Mr. Bush said, ought to be making their own decisions about marriage. Make no mistake: The battle over marriage is shaping up as the Armageddon of the culture war. And the president is taking the lead, courageously saying the people will have to resort to the Constitutional process. He’s right.

This is an election year, and there will be political warfare over the president’s initiatives. That’s okay. Thank God we have the freedom to do that. But on these key issues, for Christians, the president has taken a principled and, I think, wise position. And he has my fervent prayers.



To: sandintoes who wrote (5559)1/21/2004 1:15:06 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6358
 
Bush will be effective this fall. 01/21 8:57 a.m.

“Roll Up the Map”
SOTU leaves the president's opposition demoralized.

By Michael Knox Beran

Five observations on the State of the Union Address:











1. The president has turned in many strong performances in the past; but Tuesday night's address was the first one in which he seemed actually to enjoy himself. He seemed to savor the chance to take his case before the nation. I did not get the impression, as I have during some of his past performances, that a part of him wanted to be elsewhere. In the State of the Union Address we had an intimation of how effective the president is likely to be in the fall.

2. The president's success was easily gauged: you had only to look at the faces of his demoralized opposition on the floor of the House. And I do not mean simply the histrionic head shaking of Senator Kennedy, or the shell-shocked eyes and fixed smile of Representative Pelosi as she read her rebuttal afterward, as though in a trance. The shattered look on Senator Clinton's face was in some ways more telling. It is, of course, in Mrs. Clinton's interest that the president prevail in 2004, thereby preserving unimpaired her chance to run in 2008. But no matter what a politician's interest might be, he or she can never be at ease when confronted with the mastery of a rival practitioner. Such as she

be never at heart's ease, Whiles they behold a greater than themselves.
Mrs. Clinton's face revealed the extent of her ambitious discontent.

3. As I watched the president's delivery, remarkable for its restrained strength and easy authority, I could not help but compare it to the image, still replaying itself in my mind, of Governor Dean's acknowledgement, on the previous night, of his third-place finish in Iowa, which culminated in the curiously falsetto "Yaaaarrrrr" that has been so much remarked upon. And yet until very recently the governor was considered by many people to be, by virtue of his oratorical gifts and personal magnetism, the Democratic candidate most capable of winning hearts this year. On hearing of Bonaparte's victory at Austerlitz in 1805, William Pitt the Younger pointed to the map of Europe in the cabinet and said, "Roll up the map; it will not be wanted these ten years." As I watched Tuesday night I wondered whether some of the Democrats on the floor of the House, comparing the respective performances of the governor and the president, were not quietly preparing to write off the 2004 presidential contest in the way Pitt was forced to write off Napoleonic Europe.

4. Whoever in the administration wrote the sentence in which the president — citing complaints that the United States failed to "internationalize" the Iraq war — went on to recite a Homeric catalog-of-ships listing America's allies in the conflict certainly earned his paycheck this month.

5. One gripe. The president has in recent months demonstrated a remarkable technical mastery of his office: He has learned how to use the office to surprise and startle, as well as to seize the initiative and frame the public debates to his own advantage. The visit to Baghdad on Thanksgiving Day, the proposals on space exploration and immigration, the recess appointment of Judge Pickering, all reveal an ever more adroit tactician. The State of the Union Address was a similar demonstration of how sure the president's political instincts have become. Unfortunately these instincts have led the president to settle for the mere appearance of progress in certain areas, most notably where schools and entitlements are concerned. Prescription-drug benefits are good politics; criticism of the teachers unions' monopoly of public education, apparently, is not. A lot of presidential talk in these areas; very little reform.

To be fair to the president, his political capital is not unlimited, and he has decided to devote the bulk of it to the prosecution of the war on terrorism. To his credit, he has taken enormous political risks to prosecute the war fully and effectively. But could he not devote a little more capital to, say, fixing schools — even if it means foregoing an appearance at Boston Latin School with Senator Kennedy?

My hunch is that the president means to repair the shortcomings of his first term's domestic policy during his second. But this will, I think, prove difficult. The bureaucracy is very often more intransigent in a second administration than in a first. By the dawn of a second term the civil servants have figured out the chief's operating style and have learned how to evade his directives. Many of the president's own men, moreover, will by the dawn of a second administration have been captured by the very people they were sent to tame. How quickly they all go native! It might be called State Department Syndrome, for the first symptoms of the disease very often appear at Foggy Bottom.

President Nixon understood the difficulty very well, although the way he went about addressing it was a trifle extreme. On November 8, 1972, the day after his landslide victory over George McGovern, Nixon summoned the White House staff to the Roosevelt Room at 11:00 A.M. After perfunctorily thanking them he left Bob Haldeman to demand their resignations. "Thanks, guys — and by the way, you're fired." An hour later the same ceremony was repeated with Cabinet. It was an effective if heavy-handed way of guaranteeing his continued authority.

The other difficulty in a second term lies with the president's own partisans in Congress. They know how eager a reelected president is to do the right thing, whatever the political consequences — for never again will he have to confront an electorate. The lifers on the Hill are not about to let a reelected president get away with burnishing his entry in Dictionary of American Biography at the expense of their own future livelihoods. Thus have so many grand second-term initiatives come to nothing. Perhaps President Bush (assuming he is reelected) will find a way to surmount these obstacles. But it won't be easy.

— Michael Knox Beran is the author of Jefferson's Demons: Portrait of a Restless Mind and The Last Patrician: Bobby Kennedy and the End of American Aristocracy



To: sandintoes who wrote (5559)1/21/2004 1:45:03 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6358
 
You could adopt me.