THE FOUNDATION
''Firearms are second only to the Constitution in importance; they are the people's liberty's teeth.'' --George Washington
______--------********O********--------______ ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO PUNT
In the BIG news this week, NATO officials are actively planning for ground warfare in Yugoslavia, though insistent that the air war will succeed. As The Federalist argued in March, the only bomb that will change Milosevic's mind is the one that lands on his head. Thursday, while saying Milosevic is personally not a target, NATO forces sent three laser-guided bombs through the sewer vent on the roof of his villa in the exclusive Dedinje district of Belgrade. Unfortunately, Slobo was asleep in a nearby bunker.
Meanwhile, if you are planning a visit to ''the shining city on a hill'' this weekend, cancel. Washington is enshrouded in security to protect the leaders of 40 countries arriving to celebrate NATO's 50th anniversary. Their host, Bill Clinton, had anticipated looking like a world class leader and humanitarian hero on the heels of what was prognosticated to be a ''quick and clean'' antiseptic air war to contain a third-rate dictator. So much for legacies.
Boris Yeltsin says his seat at this weekend's festivities will be vacant. Russia's lower house of parliament has passed a non- binding resolution to allow Yugoslavia into the Russia-Belarus union. (Yugoslavia's parliament voted to join the union last week.)
Russia's role in the Balkans is summed up accurately in a few notable excerpts from Thomas Sowell's 1995 book, ''An Insult To Our Intelligence.'' Mr. Sowell says, ''...There are far more belligerent Russian politicians waiting in the wings, eager to restore Russia's power and its historic role as a force backing the Serbs in the Balkans.''
Regarding other resolutions, despite the circumstances of Mr. Clinton's current foreign policy benightedness, a bipartisan coalition of senators introduced a resolution giving Mr. Clinton the authority to use ''all force necessary'' to achieve our yet-to- be-determined mission objectives in Yugoslavia, and House Republicans will open debate on a formal declaration of war by April 30.
''It's apparent that the objectives are much greater than the resources devoted to them,'' said one Senate resolution sponsor, Richard G. Lugar. Another sponsor, Sen. John McCain, said, ''Congress, no less than the administration, must show the resolve and confidence of a superpower whose cause is just and imperative,'' though he added, ''It would be nice if the president would say to the American people that things are not going according to plan.'' Rather understated for Mr. McCain....
More to the point, Linda Bowles notes, ''If our goal was to alleviate human suffering in Kosovo, we have failed. If our goal was to stabilize the Balkans, we have failed. If our goal was to provide a framework for enduring peace in that area of the world, we have failed.''
The Senate sponsors are rightly concerned that if we do not follow through with our campaign against Milosevic, however ill- conceived, every despot in the world would have carte blanche to rise up and test our will (as if they don't already). But sending American troops into a ''face-saving'' war against one of Europe's toughest fighting forces -- the result of Mr. Clinton's bungled photo-op -- is rather bitter medicine.
Mona Charen asks the question all America should continue to ask: ''So why are we now embarking upon a military adventure that has not been thought through, has no clear goals and has precipitated some of the civilian suffering it was designed to prevent -- all in a region where no American interests are at stake?''
Continuing from Mr. Sowell's book, on the issue of ''American interests'' he says, ''What would we do then, with 20,000 young American soldiers as sitting ducks in Russia's backyard? We have a huge national interest in avoiding any such situation. We have no other national interest in that part of the world. Not one American's safety will be endangered if we stay out. Not one American's livelihood will be jeopardized....'' Anyone for a game of roulette?
Last month, The Federalist also asked, ''Who will pay to reconstruct all the civilian targets we are now obliterating?'' The answer: Mr. Clinton asked Congress for an initial token of $6 billion for the Kosovo campaign -- and said he plans for U.S. taxpayers to shoulder 25% of the cost of ''reconstruction.'' But the cost of this open-ended mission could be staggering.
Fresh from the front, Sen. Fred Thompson says, ''I came away with a notion that this is going to last much longer than most people are thinking right now. ... I hope I'm wrong, but I don't think that I am.'' Retired Lt. Gen. Tom Kelly also concludes, ''Nobody ever surrendered to an airplane. I think we are at the front end of a long time here.''
And, a final note to Mr. Clinton and all those ''just war'' rationalizers: While we are on the subject of saving Muslims from ''ethnic cleansing'' in Kosovo, turn your attention for a moment to a cleansing operation in the south of Sudan, where the Sudanese government, one of the world's three fundamentalist Muslim theocracies, has presided over the wholesale murder of almost 1.9 million Christians. Of course, like the million some-odd Rwandans killed on the Clinton watch, the Sudanese dead are ''just'' black men, women and children....
In other news...
There was yet another murder rampage at one of America's government schools, this time in Littleton, Colorado. The Sociocrats have been quick to capitalize on the tragedy, blaming it on guns, and calling for more gun control. (See today's Second Opinion feature, The ''Gun Problem''). But some liberals are able to distinguish between gun problems and cultural problems.
Flamboyant attorney Gerry Spence bushwhacked a panel of Larry King's gun-control advocates the night of the Littleton murder spree with this retort: ''Larry, we hear people amazed and astounded at what happened, but maybe we ought not to be amazed and astounded. I mean...aren't these the seeds of the violence that we plant in this country?''
Referring to the cultural influence of television, Spence continued: ''I think we have to realize that we're looking at the seeds of what we planted ourselves and to blame guns or to blame pipe bombs or to blame kids -- we better put the blame where it belongs and that's on us.'' Congratulations, Mr. Spence.
Quote of the week...
''The Parties to this Treaty ... are resolved to unite their efforts for collective defense and for the preservation of peace and security.'' --Preamble to the North Atlantic Treaty, as adopted April 4, 1949
Question of the week:
Anybody notice any similarities between Ireland and Yugoslavia? How about Kosovo and Northern Ireland? How about the Kosovar Liberation Army v. the Serbs, and the Ulster Defense Association v. the IRA? Of course, there are a few differences. The IRA has gotten most of its financing and arms from Catholics in the U.S. -- and Bill Clinton has not bombed Dublin or London. --The Editor
The big lie...
Trying to sell the air war in Yugoslavia to the annual meeting of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, Mr. Clinton was asked -- much to his chagrin -- how he would explain his ''moral authority'' to U.S. pilots he is sending into a war. ''Well, I don't have to address it to Air Force pilots,'' said Clinton. ''I am his commander-in-chief, and they swore an oath to the Constitution....'' Conclude what you may....
Bore2000...
The Left-Reverend of Eco-Theology, Al GloBullGore, can add another award to his aspiring presidential credentials. He was honored with the National Anxiety Center's ''Chicken Little Award'' for those ''who have scared the daylights out of millions of Americans.'' The center's founder, Alan Cabua, said in making the award, ''Hardly a week went by when he was not running amok with bogus tales of global warming.''
On the political front...
Y2Kandidate, V.P. ''Chicken Little,'' raised $8.9 million in the first quarter of 1999, after relentless cross-country campaign junkets on Air Force II. Potential candidate, Gov. George Bush, collected $7.6 million in donations -- without holding a single fund-raising event.
Regarding your IRS overpayment...
April 22, 1999 marks the 29th anniversary of Earth Day. It is estimated that the economic cost of environmental and risk regulations to get ''Earth in the Balance'' will top $260 billion this year. To celebrate, Al Gore proposed new regulations, ostensibly to improve the air quality in -- and around -- national parks.
In the halls of injustice on the left...
This month's ''Legal Lotto'' Award goes to all those municipalities who are filing suit against gun manufacturers for crimes committed by those who are illegally using a product that is for the legal use of law-abiding citizens. ''If we're going to hold gun makers responsible for violence perpetrated with what is, in essence, a hunk of metal, should we also blame hit-and-run accidents on GM, Ford and Daimler-Chrysler?'' asks Ed Feulner of Heritage Foundation.
On the culture war front...
McDonald's added ''sexual orientation'' to its corporate nondiscrimination and anti-sexual harassment policies. Burger King and Wendy's have yet to make that distinction in their policy manuals.
>From the frontiers of science ''oops'' files...
In New York, a white woman and a black woman went to the same clinic for in vitro fertilization. The black woman didn't get pregnant. The white woman, however, gave birth to two children, one white and one black. The black couple sued the clinic after determining the white woman's black child's parentage. The white woman has relinquished the three-month-old black child to the black couple. Somebody get on the horn to Geraldo Springer!
And last, refugees fleeing Kosovo are barely getting enough food, water, clothes, shelter and basic medical attention to survive -- while dodging bullets. But first things first. It's the United Nations Population Fund (UNFP) to the rescue. ''UNFP recognized that all refugees and persons in emergency situations have the same vital human rights, including the right to reproductive health, as people in any community,'' declared UNFP executive director Nafis Sadik. Thus the UNFP is providing refugees with ''vacuum extraction equipment,'' ''complications from abortion kits,'' ''intrauterine devices (IUDs),'' ''sexually transmitted disease kits,'' and, of course, condoms by the case.
______--------********O********--------______ INSIGHT
''A riot is a spontaneous outburst. A war is subject to advance planning.'' --Richard Nixon {} "Treason doth never prosper, what's the reason? For if it prosper, none dare call it Treason." --Sir John Harrington {} "Diplomats are only useful in fair weather. As soon as it rains, they drown in every drop." -- Charles DeGaulle {} "I got very well acquainted with Joe Stalin, and I like old Joe! He is a decent fellow." --President Harry S. Truman {} "Not one cent should be raised unless it is in accord with the law." --Napoleon {} "When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite." --Winston Churchill {} ''The wise learn many things from their enemies.'' --Aristophanes, Birds [414 B.C.]
______--------********O********--------______ THE TEXT
Righteousness exalteth a nation. --Proverbs 14:34
______--------********O********--------______ UPRIGHT
''The watching world will learn a new lesson, which is that the iron fist of the United States doesn't pack much punch. Homicidal gangsters have hamstrung the most powerful military force in human history. This is Clinton's national security legacy. This is his bridge to the 21st century. This is the cost of feckless leadership.'' --John Ellis {} ''The problem is that for far too long members of Congress have endorsed the unconstitutional principle of complete presidential prerogative in military affairs. It is Congress, not the President, which is empowered to declare war. For years, though, Congress has allowed presidents - - Republican and Democrat -- to recklessly scatter our troops around the world to play the ill-conceived role of international policemen.'' --Congressman Ron Paul {} ''President Clinton...never speaks on this [Kosovo] without subtracting from clarity....'' --George Will {} ''Bill Clinton has spent his life hiding behind someone, usually a woman. This time, it's the flag (and the men and women he has sent off to war). ...Playing soldier is fun, as every little boy knows. But anyone but Bill Clinton would understand that grown-ups playing soldier, using the lives of others as mere pawns and diversions, is squalid business.'' --Wesley Pruden {} ''I don't think ever has our nation had such a bunch of fools running our national security as we do now.'' --Colonel David Hackworth (US Army-Ret.)
______--------********O********--------______ SECOND OPINION
THE ''GUN PROBLEM''
Last week, The Federalist reported a noteworthy development: ''The families of three teenagers murdered in a Paducah, Kentucky school shooting are suing the entertainment industry for $100 million in damages, claiming the violence the industry produces influenced the young man who murdered their children.''
This week, there was yet another government school bloodbath perpetrated by ''Clinton Culture Kids.'' Why ''Clinton,'' you ask? All of the recent school murder sprees -- Paducah, Kentucky; Edinboro, Pennsylvania; Pearl, Mississippi; Jonesboro, Arkansas; Springfield, Oregon; and now, Littleton, Colorado, have been committed by kids who ''came of age'' on Bill Clinton's watch. That is certainly not to say Mr. Clinton is personally responsible for these atrocities, but it is to say that the liberal government and social policies he advocates contribute to such ''behavior.''
In Littleton, the violence reached a new threshold as two teenagers killed 13 other teenagers, booby-trapped the building with 30 explosive devices, and then killed themselves. Criminologist Bill Resiman says, ''...every time, [the violence] has escalated, the kids have learned from the previous one.''
The television media have only the inclination to spin these tragedies into microanalysis sound-bites, the most popular being, ''It's a gun problem.'' But the question, ''What has given rise to this horrendous genre of antisocial behavior?'' can only be answered through macroanalysis, as the causal origins span two generations.
Contemporary liberal politicians are masters of sound-bites as well. They also blame inanimate objects (guns) for the cultural ills created by 30 years of misguided government policies and court decisions -- from Johnson's ''Great Society'' to Clinton's ''New Covenant.'' Godless, fatherless sociopaths are the disenfranchised effluents of such policies and decisions.
For two generations, modern liberals have endeavored to re-frame the notion of human equality in the transience of man's relativist laws and institutions. They discarded our Founder's original framing of human equality in the timeless ''laws of nature and of nature's God'' as referenced in the Declaration of Independence. In other words, enduring truths have been supplanted with contemporary relativism, thus turning the natural order of man on end.
''Relativism'' as a new foundation for culture, has adulterated, as Claremont's Larry Arnn says, our ''recognition that human beings have a common nature, that they are able to understand that nature by use of their reason, and that they are able to deduce from it common rules of morality.'' The net result is the dawning of social chaos -- and its tragic symptoms like Littleton. That is to say, this is an emerging cultural phenomenon that is destined to become much worse unless we start aggressive reforms to restore enduring truths.
Kevin Ryan, director of Boston's Center for the Advancement of Ethics and Character, says of liberal relativism, ''There was a time when a school was a place where...society's values [guided policy]. We've tried to make our schools all things to all people, and we've let kids create the culture and the moral system of the school. And now we're just reaping what we've sown.''
This brings us back to Bill Clinton.... Arguably, he is as much a reflection of contemporary culture as it is of him. And what does he reflect? His election was funded, and transition team directed, by Hollywood elites (the same folks spewing the gratuitous violence that indoctrinates sociopathic teens who kill their classmates). He is the most vociferous opponent of the sanctity of human life in U.S. history, and demonstrates no virtues of honesty and personal responsibility. He is the ultimate relativist, a president perfectly matched to build a bridge to the demise of the great experiment.
And for the sound-bite artists who want to dodge the tough cultural questions generated by horrendous examples of social entropy and individual sociopathy by using the bodies of slain children as a political stage to lament the ''gun problem,'' we offer the following retort. Obviously the phenomenon of sociopaths who kill kids with bullets is no more a ''gun problem'' than those who kill kids with pipe bombs is a ''plumbing problem.'' This phenomenon is a cultural problem, the result of 30 years of ''Socialism Lite.'' The reason liberals don't want to blame culture is that most of the culture to blame is of their own making.
To counter the ''gun problem'' smokes screen, provide the partisans of such nonsense with a few facts. In South Africa, which in recent years had the highest per-capita murder rate in the world, the weapon of choice is the machete. Does South Africa have a ''machete problem''? On the other hand, the society with the highest accessibility to assault weapons, Switzerland (with its armed public militias), has one of the lowest murder rates in the world.
It's not a ''gun problem.''
It's the culture, stupid!
______--------********O********--------______ PRINT PERSPECTIVE
''We see a danger that publicity surrounding such attacks could be contributing to the phenomenon.'' --Editor's note in the Chicago Sun-Times regarding their decision to keep the Littleton, Colorado school shooting, as they have with all previous school shootings, off their front page.
______--------********O********--------______ DEZINFORMATSIA
''If we got the guns out of schools and out of the hands of younger Americans, say nothing of their parents and older Americans...then perhaps this wouldn't be as pervasive a problem.'' -- MSNBC anchor Brian Williams on ''the gun problem.'' {} So, which is it.....? ''[Milosevic] is slowly losing his war against NATO....'' --CBS's David Martin ++ ''There's no sign tonight that Milosevic himself is about to crack. The latest U.S. intelligence says that Milosevic and his regime, despite NATO bombing, remain firmly in power.'' --NBC's Jim Miklaszewski {} ''I don't think we're going to be very eager to help the KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army). They have a checkered past, but so many of us do.'' --Geraldo, with some brilliant NBC reporting on ''checkered pasts.'' {} After 18 years, it's ''goodbye Peter''! ''We are grateful for Peter's [Arnett's] contributions to CNN and we wish him the very best in the future.'' --CNN's Tom Johnson. Translation: Finally we can dump this pariah after he exposed our anti-military bias in his special report, ''Operation Tailwind.'' ++ ''I've had a long and wonderful relationship with CNN and have been proud to be part of this great news organization.'' --Peter Arnett. Translation: May the fleas of a thousand camels infest Tom Johnson's panties. {} From the ''Department of Corrections''... ''A brief article on Monday about a Connecticut legislator who revealed that he is gay misidentified the legislator. He is Representative Patrick J. Flaherty, a Democrat who represents Coventry, not Representative Brian G. Flaherty, a Republican who represents Watertown.'' --New York Times
______--------********O********--------______ SOCIOCRATS
''Polls at this time in a campaign are a lot like sand castles. They're nice to look at, but they don't mean much.'' -- Al Gore, when asked about polls indicating his presidential aspirations are ''feeling the pain'' of Mr. Clinton's ethical problems. {} ''We've got to make sure they have the counseling, the support to help them come to grips with the anger of their life when it occurs.'' --Janet Reno, in the wake of the Littleton school murders, on treating the symptoms of a society undermined by years of liberal social policy. ++ ''It's going to require all of us to renew our efforts ... to reweave the fabric of community around children and give them the guidance to live constructive lives.'' --Janet Reno on treating the real problem. {} ''Castro made me promise I would get Ben & Jerry's ice cream to him.'' -- Demo-gogue, Sen. Patrick Leahy, on the outcome of negotiations with Cuba's dictator.
______--------********O********--------______ VILLAGE IDIOTS
The Village Matriarch, Ms. Rodham-Clinton, on solving teen pregnancy: ''My own theory is don't [have sex] till you're 21, and then don't tell me about it.'' {} ''She's focused, she's smart, and her vision of policy is a clear, perfectly legitimate one.'' - - ABC's Ted Koppel on Ms. Rodham-Clinton's Senate prospects. {} ''Justice Blackmun saved more women's lives than any other person in history.'' --Gloria Steinem eulogizing Justice Harry Blackmun for his Roe vs. Wade decision. **That is, of course, unless you include the lives of unborn women. {} Forget school vouchers.... A prominent New York rabbi, Hertz Frankel, pleaded guilty to charges that he conspired with a public school board to place 80 Hasidic women in no-show jobs on the district payroll and thus was able to siphon off more than $6 million in taxpayer funds for his private Jewish school.
______--------********O********--------______ SHORT CUTS
''If You Liked Vietnam, You'll Love Yugoslavia'' --Protest sign outside one of Mr. Clinton's fund raisers. {} ''Friends of Bill are fond of describing presidential critics as 'haters.' Does this mean that speaking ill of Bill might in time become a federal crime?'' --Tony Snow on Mr. Clinton's so-called ''hate- crimes'' legislation. {} ''Sun Plays Key Role in Global Warming.'' --Headline of a news release from the National Center for Public Policy Research {} ''Having Bill Clinton in charge of the Kosovo operation is like having [Don] Corleone running a mob war in New York.'' --Vermont GOP Chairman Pat Graham {} ''My president fooled around with your honor student.'' --Bumper humor in the nation's capitol. >From the ''Double Entendre'' department... ''The Federalist stated, 'Mr. Clinton, cunning linguist that he is, has yet to define our mission and objectives in Yugoslavia.' Let us also remember that he is likely a master debater!'' --Member Comments {} And one last question: Does ''war'' mean no more spare parts for one of the finest automobiles ever produced by a Communist government -- the Yugo? --The Editor
-- PUBLIUS --
To TELL-A-FRIEND about The Federalist, link to: federalist.com If you don't have Web access, forward a friend this edition and tell them to request their subscription from: Subscriptions@Federalist.com |