Saturday, November 28, 2015

The Democrats' Death Wish: The Disappearing Destiny of the Donkey Party - Breitbart

The Democrats' Death Wish: The Disappearing Destiny of the Donkey Party - Breitbart

The Democrats’ Death Wish: The Disappearing Destiny of the Donkey Party

Drought Hit Kenya Heading For Humanitarian Crisis




 by Virgil27 Nov 2015

I. The Democrats’ “Euro Envy”

Let’s state our thesis up front: The Democrats are in so
much trouble on the immigration/border security/counter-terrorism issue
that only a truly bone-headed move by the Republicans could save the
Democrats from electoral debacle in 2016 and beyond.  Which, of course,
is always possible, even if, thankfully, it is increasingly unlikely.   



Perhaps the biggest problem that the Democrats have is Euro Envy
That is, leftist Americans are deeply influenced by the leftist
politics of Europe and therefore determined to emulate all its
features—whether ordinary Americans like them or not.


Yes, European social democracy, if not communism, has long been the
lodestar of American liberalism.  For more than a century, American
“progressives” have admired the European welfare state in its plenitude:
high taxes, national health insurance, and big foreign aid budgets—and,
more recently, libs have revered it all the more for its devotion to
combating “climate change.”


But leftists don’t just want progressive policies; they want progressive institutions
to permanentize those policies.  Hence the building up, and lauding up,
of the European Union (EU).  The EU is a multinational, multicultural
edifice that represents the fond dream of globalists on the left—and, in
a curious bit of congruence, the fond dream of corporatists on the
right as well.  The EU today is a kind of regional United Nations,
seeking to subordinate the “evils” of nationalism and sovereignty under
the heel of a new transnational bureaucracy.


So perhaps the greatest mission for the EU—and a cause that
unites progressives on both sides of the Atlantic—is open borders. Yes,
the crown jewel of the EU is the Schengen Agreement,
which established the principle that an EU resident could go anywhere
in the EU without so much as stopping at a border gate or checkpoint. 
And to the delight of empire-building EU-ers, the Schengen Area has grown huge—although many now say that it’s too big to police and protect.


We might recall that when Schengen was first agreed to, back in 1985,
the EU—then called, much more modestly, the European Economic
Community—consisted of just ten member states.  And we might also
recall, in those Cold War days, that the Schengen countries were
insulated, if that’s the right word, by the Soviet Union’s Iron
Curtain.  That is, if no East German could travel to West Germany
without risking a bullet in the back, then nobody from the Middle East
was going to get through to any Western nation, either.  And of course,
back then, Middle Eastern countries such as Iraq were stable, if nothing
else, under the iron fist of Saddam Hussein and other highly effective
dictators.


But as we have seen, the Schengen Area has gone gargantuan; it
sprawls all the way from Portugal to Finland to Greece.  And fatefully,
Greece shares a long land- and sea-frontier with Muslim Turkey and,
beyond it, the entire Muslim Ummah.  All 1.5 billion of them.


So while nationalists and other real-world types could see, in this
geographic engorgement, the beginning of a problem for Schengen, the
globalists could not.  Their vision of a borderless world—that being the title of a lyrical libertarian book from the naive nineties, namely, Ken Ohmae’s The Borderless World—has
taken on its own momentum.  Onward, said the progressives, to a
post-nationalist, politically correct, green-certified “United States of
Europe.”  You know, as in the John Lennon song, Imagine“Imagine there’s no countries.”


Yet that giddy open-borders momentum has collided with the grim need
for homeland security in the age of the Kalashnikov and the suicide
belt.  We might recall that the first big move that France’s leader,
Françoise Hollande, made after the November 13 terrorist attacks in
Paris was to close the French border—a bit of “retro” nationalism that
seemed necessary at the time, even to a Eurocratic socialist such as
Hollande.


But before we go further, we might ask: What’s the ultimate source of this open-borders hurly-burly?  Where is it coming from?


II. The German Question

By all accounts, the driving force in Europe’s open-borders quest—a
more specific and more focused crusade than just gloppy Lennon-ism—is
Germany.


The Germans, we might note, are not only determined, with Teutonic
relentlessness, to abolish national frontiers in Europe, but they also
want to welcome “migrants” with near-unlimited welfare benefits.


A look back at German history tells us that the Germans weren’t
always so friendly.  And in fact, the undeniable barbarity of that
German history helps explain why, today, the Germans are bending over
backward to be kindly.


Yes, the Germans, so resolute in their desire not to repeat the
mistakes of the past, have, in fact, over-corrected.  They should have
listened to the wisdom of the pundit George F. Will, who once said, “The
four most important words in the English language are, ‘Up to a
point.’” Evidently, no one ever translated that into German.


But this we can say: In the last century, the Germans developed a
uniquely diseased and malignant form of nationalism.  So yes, the
Germans must be watched.  However, just because they got carried away,
that doesn’t mean that the basic ideas of nationalism—defined as the
instinctive impulse toward hearth and home, toward kith and kin, turned
into a functioning political system—are in any way bad.  And if the
Germans can’t see the difference between our kind of nationalism, which has nurtured and protected, and their kind of nationalism, which has mass-murdered—well, that’s just a reminder that the Germans still have a lot to learn.


So sure, it’s a cliche that the Germans are still working through
their guilt-feelings over World War Two.  And without a doubt, the
Germans have plenty of guilt from that war to work through.  Still, it’s
worth pointing that German Chancellor Angela Merkel was born in 1954, a
full nine years after the death of Hitler.  So while of course it’s
right and fitting that the the Germans should compensate handsomely the
victims of the Holocaust—and Lidice, and Oradour-sur-Glane,
and countless other atrocities—it’s also incumbent on Berlin to act
rationally, in our own time, to protect its own national security and
identity.


This need for practical prudence today is especially important in the
realm of immigration, because, as we have learned, there’s a “spillover
factor.”  That is, an immigrant living in Germany is within striking
distance of every other country in the West.  We might recall, for
example, that the ringleader of the 9-11 attackers, the Egyptian-born Mohamed Atta, made Hamburg, Germany, his base of operations.


But alas, even after 9-11, even after Paris, the Germans still think they must open their border and open their wallets—most recently, to a million or more Syrians
And how many more?  Five million?  Ten million?  But so what, the
Germans might say; even if they’re not all Syrians, but rather just
Muslims and others from around the world who see a path to a soft life
on welfare?  Well, here’s the Deutscher answer: That’s a small price to pay so that we Germans can once again feel virtuous.


Thus the Germans, in their renunciation of all the time-tested
lessons of sovereignty and survival, are putting the rest of Europe at
risk.  And so we come to a painful irony: Once again, knee-jerking
German dogmatism—now weirdly inverted into a kind of passive-aggressive
leftism—is endangering the rest of Europe.


So Americans, then, might ask: Why is the U.S. imitating Germany?
 Why do American leftists, sitting atop the commanding heights of the
Obama administration, take their cues from Berlin?  After all, we were
the good guys in World War Two; the Germans have nothing to teach us about national behavior.


III.  Germany’s Best Pupil, Barack Obama

No doubt President Obama, fan of European social democracy that he
is, wishes that he could take in more than 10,000 Syrians.  And he no
doubt has guilt of his own: Let’s recall he received the Nobel Peace
Prize in 2009 without having done anything to earn it.  So now, with the
Syrians, here’s a chance for him to pay back the Norwegians and the
international peace movement.  So yeah, why not go all out on Syrian
intake?  After all, there’s no risk to him personally: None of the
Syrians will be moving into the White House.


Of course, there is a hangup: The American people oppose the Syrian
influx by margins of 2:1 or more. Yet as with so many issues these days,
we can observe a sharp polarization on the Syrian issue—and that means
there’s a strong, or at least loud, constituency on the other side.


Republicans are overwhelmingly hostile to the Syrian influx, and, crucially, independents feel the same way.  But Democrats are just as monolithic in their support of Obama’s position.


In other words, we can be sure that inside the Obama White House,
there’s unanimity that The Chief is on the side of the angels.  Indeed,
in its invincible self-righteousness, the Obama administration threatens legal action against states that don’t knuckle under to his Syrian Surge.


Moreover, Obama himself has chosen to double down rhetorically; on Thanksgiving, he compared the Syrians to the Pilgrims who came over on the Mayflower.  And it’s more than possible that Obama, who once told The New York Times that the Muslim call to prayer was “one of the prettiest sounds on Earth,” might really believe that the Syrians are like the Pilgrims—only better.


Of course, the rest of us, uninterested in expanding the influence of
Islamic culture into the U.S., are left to stew over the appropriate
response.


So we might start by asking our 44th President: “On the morning of November 13, just hours before the Paris attacks, you assured the American people that ISIS had been ‘contained.’  So our question, Mr. President, is: Why should we believe a single thing you say about homeland security or counter-terrorism?” And as a follow-up to whatever he replies, we might then ask, “Sir, do you really think we’re that stupid?”


Of course, he does—either that, or he just doesn’t care what we think.


And thus the great paradox of the Obama presidency:  A man who came
into office with a message of, “You can trust me, and trust the
government, to do the right thing,” has, in fact, presided over the collapse of public faith in government
And that mistrust of the state will likely get worse: Who doubts, for
instance—even if both houses of Congress vote to forbid the entry of
Syrians, and even if they manage to override a presidential veto—that we
will still wind up with thousands of new Syrians in our country?  Yes,
between sheer incompetence and shuddering malevolence, the feds will
have us cornered.


IV. The Democrats, Then and Now 

However, unless Obama finds a way to change the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution, his reign of error is coming to an end soon.


Indeed, the American people have put together, in their minds, an extensive bill of particulars against Obama: The latest CBS News survey
found that 66 percent of Americans said the president has no clear road
map for combating ISIS, and just 36 percent approved of his overall
handling of terrorism, an historic low.


And while the re-elected Obama is safe from the voters’ wrath, other
Democrats are not.  Yes, the 2016 hopefuls Hillary Clinton,

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
16%
,
and Martin O’Malley are cheerfully dancing, now, to the Obama tune, but
they will find out, soon enough, that the bell tolls for them.
But first, a digression on the Democratic tradition.


Once upon a time, Democrats were mostly hawkish on immigration, for a
good and simple reason—it was bad for the incomes of their working
constituents.  In the days before E-Z welfare obviated the need to get a
job, new arrivals were hungrier for work; they would work cheaper, they
would be scabs in strikes, and so on.  So no wonder Democratic pols, on
behalf of their loyal voters, didn’t want them.


We might note that this hostility to immigration was felt especially intensely among “people of color,” including their leaders.


For example, Cesar Chavez, founder of the United Farm Workers in
1962, was a staunch opponent of immigration, which he knew would
overwhelm his fledgling union.  He is reported to have once said, “If my
own mother were coming across the border to break a strike, I’d arrest
her.”


More than once, Breitbart News has quoted the Hispanic journalist Ruben Navarrette, Jr.,
who reports, “The historical record shows that Chavez was a fierce
opponent of illegal immigration.” Navarette adds, “It’s unlikely that
he’d have looked favorably on a plan to legalize millions of illegal
immigrants.”  Continuing his assessment of the labor legend who died in
1993, Navarette concluded, “Were he alive today, it’s a safe bet that
Chavez would be an opponent of any legislation that gave illegal
immigrants even a chance at legal status.”


And among African-Americans, we must reckon with Barbara Jordan, who
represented Houston in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1973 to
1979.  Just as as Chavez could see trouble for Hispanics, Jordan could
see that the wage-incomes of American blacks would be diminished by an
endless inundation from other countries—no matter what their race or
color.


Indeed, Jordan’s voice on this matter was so strong that she was
named to lead a federal task force, soon known as the Jordan
Commission.  In 1997, the commission issued a report calling for
multiple immigration reforms, including limits on newcomers, as well as a
fool-proof national ID card to prevent employment fraud. But alas, by
then, Jordan’s own voice had fallen silent; she died in 1996.  And so
the recommendations went nowhere.


Yet since the passing of Chavez and Jordan in the ’90s, the Democrats
have changed their views dramatically.  The old idea of limiting
immigration as a way of propping up job-incomes yielded to a newer idea:
Un-limiting immigration as a way of beefing up the voter-rolls.


The hinge was 1995. In that year, President Bill Clinton, eyeing his
re-election campaign in 1996, saw a chance to improve his chances; the
answer, Clintonites concluded, was more new voters from abroad.  And so,
as part of its “reinventing government” initiative, the Clinton
administration accelerated the naturalization of more than a million new
citizens.  They called it “Citizenship USA,” and they didn’t care in the least if Republicans cried Foul!  Indeed, during the ’96 campaign, Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole accused the Clinton administration of registering an additional 1.1 million Democrats;
as the Dole campaign noted in a radio spot, “Aliens with criminal
records–rapists, murderers, armed felons–have been granted U.S.
citizenship so they can vote.”


But of course, in those days—before Fox News really got going, before
the rise of alternative Internet-based media—Dole’s was a lonely voice
crying in the hostile MSM wilderness.


Interestingly, the following year, Bill Clinton glibly signed the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996; today, it’s impossible  to imagine a Democrat signing a piece of legislation with such a politically incorrect name.


Indeed, we might note that less than two decades later, Hillary Clinton finds that she must apologize for even uttering the phrase “illegal immigrant.
A few hours after her “gaffe,” she wrote on Facebook, “That was a poor
choice of words,” adding that the, uh, undocumented “have names, and
hopes and dreams that deserve to be respected.”  Not a promising augury,
we might say, for intense immigration-law enforcement in a Clinton 45
administration.


Yes, everything is different, now, for elite Democrats.


As we have seen, they are inspired by the EU.  And as we have also
seen, they no longer worry about worker’s wages—and that only makes
sense, because the two big magnetic poles of the new Democratic
coalition, Al Sharpton and George Soros, are both oblivious to wages.
 Why?  Because Sharpton’s core constituents aren’t in the workforce;
they make their living through welfare, not work.  And as for Soros and
his fellow billionaires, they couldn’t be bothered to think about
anything as microscopic as a mere wage.  Meanwhile, Democratic politicos
believe that if they just get the immigrant ranks big enough, they can
get the Democratic vote big enough.


In addition, top Democrats are constantly being egged on in their liberalism by the trendoids of the MSM.  NBC’s Seth Meyers, for example, laughed in Sarah Palin’s face when she expressed concerns about Syrian refugees.  And that mocking moment led to a media cascade of condescension and ridicule: Yahoo News headlined, “Seth Meyers explains Syrian refugee vetting process to Sarah Palin,”  and Salon chortled, “Wow, Seth Meyers just stripped down Donald Trump’s lies and Islamophobia so clearly even your racist uncle will get it now.”


Meanwhile, New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait, not be outdone, referred to Donald Trump’s anti-immigration supporters as “knuckle-draggers,” adding that Trump himself was the natural leader of “lizard-brain America.”  Got that?  That’s you Chait is talking about.


In this sort of supercharged media environment, it’s easy to see how
Democratic pols, who might normally be more careful, have lost their
heads.  Instead of showing the usual mumble-mouthed caution, top Dems
are joining in the bashing of Middle America—aka, the very swing voters
they will need if they are to win the White House and Congress next
year.


Let’s start with Hillary Clinton, who, long ago, at the low ebb of
the Clinton presidency, in 1994, encouraged her husband to bring in Dick
Morris, the ultimate amoral political mercenary.  Yet whereas once she
was pragmatically flexible, today she is doctrinally rigid.  She now
says  she wholeheartedly agrees with Obama on letting in more
Syrians—the polls be damned.


Yet Hillary is, of course, forever wily.  So she is attempting to
make her pro-Syrian stance into a profile in courage.  And yet in the
midst of her pandering to the MSM and others on the trendy left, she
seems to have lost her logical train of thought.  Under the headline, “Clinton denounces ‘inflammatory talk’ about Syrian refugees,” The Washington Examiner quoted
her telling an audience in Colorado, “I think it’s worth remembering
that the hijackers who struck the World Trade Center came here
legally.”  We might observe that perhaps that’s not the strongest
argument for new kinds of legal immigration!


So yes, it’s a new Hillary.  The “triangulating” Hillary of yore has
had to yield to an updated version, the passionate progressive.  And why
is that?  The answer, of course, is that she is “Feeling the Bern.” 
That is, the pressure from the hard-left insurgency of Sen. Bernie
Sanders, who would love to ambush her from the left, as Obama did eight
years ago.


And without a doubt, Sanders is a hard leftist.  One easy clue to his
true self is the misdirection practiced on his behalf by his
sympathizers at The New York Times; a recent headlined assured us that Sanders’ true trait is “pragmatism.”  Got that, comrade?


But a look at Sanders’ new immigration plan, released less than two
weeks after the Paris attacks, tells us he is everything a Euro-style
open borders-type multiculturalist could want.  Let’s start with The Washington Post headline on November 25: “Sanders promises broader protections against deportation for undocumented immigrants.”  In it, Sanders outlined a plan for the immediate amnesty of nine million (at least) illegals.


Needless to say, a look at the details of the Sanders Plan reveals nothing meaningful on border security, such as a fence or a barrier, except for a snide jab at “boondoggle walls.”


Then Team Sanders pats itself on the back for providing for
“expedited citizenship” and “federal financial aid.”  Indeed, Sanders
wants illegal immigrants to get subsidies to join the Obamacare health
exchanges.  And oh yes, they would also get full access to U.S. courts,
which means, in practice, that they would get taxpayer-subsidized Legal
Aid as they sued local, state, and federal governments for more
benefits.  Yes, in a Sanders Administration, the peoples of the world
will get to ask  American judges for a bigger piece of the economic pie,
relief from the strictures of law enforcement, and any other goody a
Naderite litigator might think of.  Surely Sanders thinks it would be racist to have it any other way!


Needless to say, the opinionists at The New York Times love it: “Bernie Sanders Gets Immigration Policy Right”—that’s the headline of its November 26 editorial.  Sanders “turns away from…insanity,” the Times
piece assures its readers, leading America “well beyond the usual
nativist bigotry.”  (Once again, as with “lizard-brain America,” we
might pause over the invective that the MSM routinely hurls in our
direction.)


Continuing, the Times trills this ode to systemic
law-breaking: “Mr. Sanders rightly defends ‘sanctuary city’ policies
that protect public safety by building trust between immigrant
communities and local law enforcement.”


Okay, that’s the Times, enjoying its lefty reverie.  But meanwhile, we, the “lizard-brained,” might wish to protest that the whole idea of a “sanctuary city” is to supersede federal law.  Indeed, in sanctuary cities, we see the complete negation of any national law.


For good measure, in a separate document, the Sanders campaign attacked the third Democrat in the presidential race, Martin O’Malley.  Sanders, you see, is eager to position himself to the left of the left-wing O’Malley; quoth the Sandersites:


Unlike the O’Malley platform, the Sanders platform speaks
to providing deferred action to undocumented immigrants engaged in
labor disputes, eliminating the “significant misdemeanor” bar in
enforcement, and providing discretion for immigrants with
non-immigration convictions, such as identity theft, driving without a
license felonies, and survival crimes.
In other words, translating the legalese, the Sanders forces caught
O’Malley leaving in a few residual penalties for illegal immigrants’
criminal behavior—beyond, of course, coming here illegally—and so now
they are pouncing on the “right wing” Marylander.


No doubt, the underdog O’Malley campaign will soon enough be
scrambling to catch up—to get to the left, somehow, of both Sanders and
Hillary.


V. The Submerging Democratic Majority

So yes, the Democrats are having their fun.  But as Peter Falk, playing Lt. Columbo on the old TV series would say, “There’s just one more thing.


And what would that one thing be?  Only this: Open-borders-ism is toxic politics with the electorate as a wholeAs in, support for open borders is a political death warrant. 


Once again, the early indicators are coming from Europe, where the open-borders experiment has had such a thorough testing.


Of course, to the incumbent class of Eurocrats, nothing much has
changed, even after the Paris attacks and the Syrian throng.  Swaddled
in security, drenched in ideology, succored in self-rectitude, the
Brussels crowd feels free to continue expounding its globaloney.


But ordinary Europeans—that is, the folks who could
lose their jobs, their incomes, or even their lives—are starting to
rebel; even the MSM has had to take grudging notice.  This headline
slipped into
The New York Times: “Regulating Flow of Refugees Gains Urgency in Greece and Rest of Europe.”  And this headline, too, made it into The Washington Post: “Europe plans to speed up deportation of tens of thousands of Pakistanis.”


And in Europe itself, the issue is put even more starkly, viz. this headline in the Daily Mail (UK): “EU must stem migrant flow or risk the same fate as Roman Empire, warns Dutch PM.”


Breitbart readers are, of course, familiar with the leading European
nationalist parties, UKIP of the UK and the National Front of France. 
At the rate that European politics are changing, it’s a certainty that
one or both parties will take power—unless one or more of the major
parties pre-empt their anti-open-borders message.  And as a further sign
of the changing times, we can note that in England, a former
Conservative Member of Parliament, now a professor at Winchester
University, has established a Centre for English Identity and Politics.  (Parenthetically, various U.S. campuses have established White Student Unions.)  Thus we see: politics, as a subset of human nature, is its own kind of Newtonian physics—for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.


Yet even as Europe turns, here in America, an ocean away, the left
remains free to get leftier.  As we have seen, in the
bureaucratic-academic hothouse, there’s not a more pungently seductive
orchid than the one beckoning ideologues to a come-one-come-all
globalism.  And so if following that exotic scent means cutting oneself
off from thinking about the larger world, so be it: As Politico reported recently, the 2016 Democrats don’t really want to talk about foreign policy anymore, because to do so would mean grappling with tough-minded matters of national security and national survival.


And so The New York Times, shorn of practical or
logical arguments for its pro-open-borders position, is reduced to
attempted tearjerking, to wit, this recent headline: “‘I’m Frightened’: After Attacks in Paris, New York Muslims Cope With a Backlash.”  In other words, in the Times
view, only a hard-hearted wretch could oppose the coming of more meek
Muslims.  To which we might add only this: Of the 320 or so million
Americans, some 319 million do not read the Times.


Still, we can observe the same
don’t-confuse-me-with-facts-I’d-rather-have-emotionalism phenomenon
across the aisle—that is, among libertarian ideologues.  For example,
the Cato Institute’s A. Trevor Thrall wrote on November 23, “Paris Changed Nothing.  We Still Have Every Reason to Welcome Syrian Refugees.”  And lest he be misunderstood, Thrall followed up two days later with this advice to Obama: “Dear Mr. President: It’s Time to Ignore the Polls on Syrian Refugees.”


Indeed, mirroring the leftist multiculturalists, the libertarian
multiculturalists are passionate in their disdain for traditional
patriotism.  So nobody should doubt that an open-borders Democrat would
defeat a closed-border Republican inside the rarified precincts of Cato,
a billionaire-funded, glass-and-steel highrise on Massachusetts Avenue,
up in Northwest Washington, DC.


Of course, a Republican presidential candidate winning 70 or 75
million votes nationwide next year might not care if he loses 100 or so
Ayn Rand readers.


Yes, Republicans are most likely headed toward a big victory in
2016—along the lines, perhaps, of Ronald Reagan’s win in 1980.  In fact,
it might be worth noting that, already, the Democrats are at their
lowest ebb, in Congress and in the states, since the 1920s.


Thus the wheel turns—especially when it has been given a good, hard shove by recent events.


Not so long ago, back in 2002, a book appeared with the ambitious title, The Emerging Democratic Majority
In it, co-authors John Judis and Ruy Teixeira argued that a youngish
black-brown-red-yellow “coalition of the ascendant” was going to take
over Democratic politics and the country.  And sure enough, after the
2006 and 2008 elections swept Republicans from their majorities in
Congress, as well as their perch in the White House, it seemed that
Judis and Teixeira’s prophesy was coming true.


And yet, as we know, it didn’t.  And why not?  Most obviously, for
all the talk about “diversity,” the reality is that the U.S. is still
more than three-fourths white.  Yes, the “coalition of the ascendant” is
ascending, numerically, but it is starting from a small base. 
Meanwhile, if the white majority is mobilized, it is, well, a majority.


Hence we had the 2010 and 2014 midterms, which were, of course, huge victories for Republicans.  And today, the 2016 polls show most GOP presidential candidates defeating any Democrat.  Indeed, even the pundit class, which has long predicted an inevitable Hillary victory, is now conceding that the GOP has the edge for the White House.  Indeed, in Virgil’s view, the ’16 elections are likely to be the most favorable to Republicans since 1920, when the national GOP ticket won by 26 percentage points.


So with apologies to Judis and Teixeira, someone could write a new book–titled The Submerging Democratic Majority.


As we can see, the Democrats, seeking to get patted on the head by
the Eurocracy, and pandering to win a few more Hispanic votes for a
party dominated by Wall Street and Silicon Valley—leaving the rest of
the country adrift—have been willing to dismantle the patriotic nation
state, disassemble public support for the old New Deal-type welfare
state, and dissociate themselves from the majority, thereby putting
themselves in a politically perilous state.  And to think!  People used
to say that the Republicans were the stupid party!


VI.  Could the Republicans Yet Rescue the Democrats?

So yes, the Democrats are in a heap of trouble.  Here at home, more
Americans seem to be agreeing with Ann Coulter when she argues that
current U.S. policy is “importing terrorism”—even if they have never heard of Ann Coulter.


So this spells big trouble for the Democrats.  Except for one Columbo-ish thing: The GOP could yet save them. 


And how could that happen?  How could Republicans snatch defeat from the jaws of victory?


And the answer, of course, is that Republicans, currently surfing
high and handsome on a nationalist-patriotic wave, could yet wipe
themselves out on the rocks of Cato-type libertarianism, which becomes,
after a while, almost indistinguishable from Euro-style leftism.  Yes,
the Republican ship might still be lured in, and wrecked, by the siren
song of globalism.  After all, that’s where the money is—Wall Street,
the Koch Brothers, and so on.


As Breitbart executive chairman Stephen K. Bannon recently told The Daily Beast in a profile of Breitbart’s Matt Boyle, the story of American politics over the last few decades has been the emergence of two “Davos Parties”:
That is, both Democrats and Republicans have been happy lapdogs for the
jet-set of globetrotting, globalizing, mostly green, mostly
gay-friendly, all-outsourcing, all-tax-dodging, all-open-bordering,
stratum of billionaires.  So if both parties take the same position on
the issue of no-limits immigration, then, by definition, the
open-borders forces can’t lose.


Yet eventually, the cold arithmetic of political opportunism will
tell at least one of the two parties to break ranks—to go where the
votes are.  And today, that’s the Republicans.  That is, Republicans are
rejecting the once-reigning open-borders Davos orthodoxy.


Of course, this GOP shift will cause some internal pain.  As Mark
Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, and
a stalwart immigration hawk, explained recently about Republican thinking as it has seesawed between the elites and the masses: “At
some point they’re going to have to choose between the voters and the
billionaires.”  And recent history shows that the billionaires have
usually  gotten the long straw; the plutocrats, along with their
platoons of propagandists, have won the hearts and minds of many top
Republicans in recent years, including George W. Bush,

Rep. John Boehner (R-OH)
32%
, Eric Cantor,
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC)
43%
, and, until very recently at least,
Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI)
58%
and
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL)
80%
.
Of course, not every conservative trusts the sincerity of Rubio’s conversion.  Indeed, some see his recent attempts to tar

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX)
97%
with his own brush as yet more desperate cunning.  As recalled by Daniel Horowitz, writing for Conservative Review under the headline, “Cruz Fought Amnesty, Rubio Fought Conservatives”:
When it mattered, Cruz wasn’t just a vote for sovereignty
and security, he was a voice for it.  Rubio wasn’t just a vote for
Obama’s prize agenda, he was a voice for it.  For those of us who fought
with everything we had to defeat the Gang of 8 despite Rubio’s best
effort to score the ultimate game-winning touchdown for Obama, we can’t
just let this go.
And yes, even those of us who are not fans of Donald Trump, that rude and unpresidential man, must give full credit to Trumpism,
the daring and iconoclastic ideology.  In the past year, Trumpism seems
to have  broken the plutocratic spell that has ensorceled Republicans
over the last three decades; today, leading Republicans such as
Cruz—joined by many others, but not including Jeb “Act of Love” Bush—are
coming to newfound populist-nationalist positions.  And so today,
GOPers such as

Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL)
82%
, who were once notable for their lonely courage—are no longer lonely.
Of course, as Barry Goldwater, the long-lived and long-perspectived
senator and presidential candidate, liked to say, “There are no final
victories.”


Yes, Republicans, “lizard-brained” as we might be, are headed toward a
smashing victory next year.  But then will come the usual sordid
politicking; then, and only then, we will find out if the citizenry
capable of voting against globalization is also the citizenry capable of
paying attention to legislative and regulatory details.  For sure, we
onlookers will be reminded that the donor class has pile-driven its
influence deep into the foundations of both parties.  And that influence
will be hard to uproot; it will certainly take more than one good
presidential election.


But we can close on a happy note: Next year bids to be an auspicious beginning.



 

Monday, November 23, 2015

“ISIS Delenda Est”—What the Romans Knew About Winning a War

“ISIS Delenda Est”—What the Romans Knew About Winning a War

‘ISIS Delenda Est’—What the Romans Knew About Winning a War

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

I. The Roman Way
In writing about the Paris massacre in The Wall Street JournalPeggy Noonan was blunt:
These primitive, ferocious young men will not stop until we stop them.  The question is how.  That’s the only discussion.
Okay, let’s take up Noonan’s challenge: How do we stop ISIS? Once and for all?
Let’s stipulate that President Obama, who has been waging a phony war against ISIS for over a year, is not the man for the job.  And let’s stipulate, also, that Islam is not “peace,” as George W. Bush so famously suggested back in 2001.
Islam is something different. Not all Muslims are terrorists, not by a long shot, but in its current form, Islam provides safe harbor for way-y-y too many Salafi jihadists, aka, terrorists.  Here at Breitbart, Pamela Geller provides a handy itemization; her list of Islamic terrorist groups runs a full 27 lines.
As the late Samuel Huntington wrote in his landmark 1998 bookThe Clash of Civilizationsa work approvingly cited by 
 earlier this month—Islam has “bloody borders.”

History tells us that no attitude is permanent.  Yet for now, extremist elements within Muslim societies make it impossible for many Muslim states to get along with their neighbors, either near, in Eurasia, or far, in America.
So what should we do in the face of a relentless, and remorseless, enemy?  The Roman Empire had a good answer.  Yes, 2,000 years before Ronald Reagan summed up his Cold War strategy as, “We win, they lose,” the Romans had the same idea.
Rome’s dogged determination to prevail is perhaps best exemplified by its long struggle against the rival empire of Carthage, in what’s now Tunisia.
The Rome-Carthage conflict—the so-called Punic Wars, of which there were three—raged all over the Mediterranean littoral and lasted, on land and sea, for over a century, from 264 BC to 146 BC.  Interestingly, the single best general on either side was the Carthaginian, Hannibal.  His smashing pincer-movement victory over the Romans atCannae in 216 BC is still studied at West Point and other military academies.
And yet the Romans were more organized and resourceful, as well as determined, and, over time, those qualities gave them the edge. For literally decades, the Roman senator Cato the Elder closed every speech to his colleagues with the ringing words, Carthago delenda est—“Carthage must be destroyed.”  And yet Cato, who died in 149 BC, didn’t actually live to see the final victory, which came three years later, when the Roman legionnaires besieged and and conquered the city of Carthage itself.
Appian of Alexandria described the final victory in his Historia Romana, written in the second century AD.  Here’s Appian describing Rome’s final military operations against Carthage; as we can see, under the leadership of General Scipio Africanus, the Roman legionarii were not nice:
Now Scipio hastened to the attack [on] the strongest part of the city, where the greater part of the inhabitants had taken refuge… All places were filled with groans, shrieks, shouts, and every kind of agony. Some were stabbed, others were hurled alive from the roofs to the pavement, some of them alighting on the heads of spears or other pointed weapons, or swords. . . . Then came new scenes of horror.  As the fire spread and carried everything down, the soldiers did not wait to destroy the buildings little by little, but all in a heap. So the crashing grew louder, and many corpses fell with the stones into the midst.  Others were seen still living, especially old men, women, and young children who had hidden in the inmost nooks of the houses, some of them wounded, some more or less burned, and uttering piteous cries.  Still others, thrust out and falling from such a height with the stones, timbers, and fire, were torn asunder in all shapes of horror, crushed and mangled.
You get the idea. Tough stuff, to be sure, but after Scipio’s triumph, Carthage was never again a problem for Rome.  In fact, the Romans not only razed the city but, for good measure, plowed the ground with salt to make sure that nothing would ever grow there.
The Roman historian Tacitus quoted a barbarian enemy to make an approving point about the Roman strategic approach: “And where they make a desert, they call it peace.”  Yes, when the Romans wanted to make a point—they made a point.  We might note that the Roman Empire endured for another 622 years after the fall of Carthage, all the way to 476 AD.
Of course, Americans would never do anything like obliterating Carthage, even if the few German survivors of the 1945 firebombing of Dresden, or the even fewer Japanese survivors of Hiroshima, later that same year, might beg to differ.  Still, we might pause to note that both Germany and Japan—two countries once both full of fight—haven’t so much as raised their fist at us even once in the last 70 years.
II. The Challenge in Our Time
Today, there’s an echo of the old Roman resolve in the voice of many Republicans.  As
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX)
97%
, who frequently quotes Reagan’s we-win-they-lose maxim, declared the other day, “In a Cruz administration, we will say to militants, if you wage war against America, you are signing your death warrant.”

Needless to say, Cruz doesn’t speak for the intellectually fashionable, who preach a kind of defeatist sophistry.  Among the smart set, it is often said that we shouldn’t attack ISIS because that’s just what they want.   CNN’s Fareed Zakaria, for example, writing of possible US retaliation in the wake of the Paris raid, assures us that ISIS “wants all of this.”  And Sally Kohn, also of CNN, adds her voice: “Bombing terrorists feeds their ideology.”
We’re already caving to ISIS: Bloodthirsty jingoism is precisely what the terrorists want: The chief goal of these terrorists is to launch a “cosmic war.” Bigotry and calls for invasion provide exactly that.
Well, maybe the leftists are correct: Maybe it would be a mistake for us if we defeated ISIS—but maybe not.  Indeed, it sure seems that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of ISIS, is doing his best to survive.  To be sure, he says he’s ready for martyrdom, but he’s not seeking it out.  If he really wanted to be dead, he already would be.
Yes, there’s something to be said for winning, not losing—for living, not dying.  As Osama bin Laden himself observed, “When people see a strong horse and a weak horse, by nature, they will like the strong horse.” And of course, it’s no accident that Al Qaeda went into eclipse after bin Laden was killed by US forces in 2011, to be replaced, alas, by ISIS.
To put the matter starkly, being killed suggests that maybe God is not on your side.  It’s perhaps glorious to die for a winning cause, but not so glorious to die for a losing cause.
So let’s hereby resolve that we will be on the winning side.  And let’s get right down to it, and name—yes, name—the central challenge of our time: Defeating the Salafi terrorists once and for all.
Michael Vickers, a counter-terrorism subcabinet official in the Obama and Bush administrations—and an operative with a record going back to the CIA campaign against the Soviets in Afghanistan—is flatly declarative about what must be done; we must defeat ISIS, or ISIL, by depriving it of its territory.  By any name, they—including the remnants of Al Qaeda—need to be defeated and their home-base destroyed:
ISIL, as its name implies, is a de facto state. It holds territory, controls population, and funds its operations from resources that it exploits on territory it controls. If there’s one thing the American military knows how to do it is defeating an opposing force trying to hold ground.
So yes, we must defeat ISIS.  ISIS delenda est.  But yet there are more variables to consider: Unless we plan to do to the Jihadi Zone exactly what the Romans did to the Carthaginians—that is, kill them all—we need a plan for not only pacifying the area, but also for keeping it pacified.
III. Needed: A Grand Alliance
As we think about delenda est-ing ISIS, we need to realize that it won’t be easy—not because ISIS itself is strong, but because it has powerful friends, potentially.
In a nutshell, if we want to be victorious, and be able to keep our victory, we will need the largest possible alliance.
Why?  Because in history, if a small power can get help from bigger powers, then it becomes difficult to defeat that small power, at least at an acceptable cost.
And the US, mighty as it has been, has not been exempt from this rule.   We might recall the history of two frustrating wars in the second half of the last century, Korea and Vietnam.  In the Korean War, the Pyongyang regime could get help from China and the Soviet Union.  And in the Vietnam War, the Hanoi regime could also get help from the same pair of big countries.  In the strategic context of the times, it just wasn’t advisable for us to escalate either conflict and risk World War Three.   The result for America, of course, was a stalemate in Korea and outright defeat in Vietnam.
More recently, in Afghanistan, the insurgents have been getting overt help from Pakistan and covert help from Saudi Arabia and other rich oil states.  And the situation in Iraq was even more of a mess: The Sunni insurgents were getting help from Saudi Arabia, while the Shia insurgents were getting help from Iran.  And, ultimately, our enemies in both Afghanistan and Iraq were being backstopped by China and Russia.
To use the geopolitical jargon, our enemies in North Korea, North Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq all had strategic depth.
And if our opponents have strategic depth, we can fight all we want, and inflict lots of casualties—while suffering more than a few casualties ourselves—and yet still, we won’t win.
Thus the geopolitical lesson: If we want to win, we have to have the bad guys surrounded, cut off from their sources of supply.
That is, we must eliminate the foe’s strategic depth, and that can only be accomplished with diplomacy.  Up to now, as we have seen, American ambitions in the Middle East have been vexed, even thwarted, by deep-strategic enemies.  China and Russia have never wanted to see the US win in Iraq if it meant that Uncle Sam would gain total sway in the oil-rich region.  And so Beijing and Moscow were willing tacitly to support the Iranians, who, of course, hate us and oppose everything we do.  Bush 43 tried to ignore the reality of those countervailing powers, and, as a result, he failed.  Yes, Obama gave away everything in Iraq, but even before he took office in 2009, the Iranians had already effectively taken control of Baghdad.
We’re a strong country, to be sure, but not strong enough to go it alone, or without a carefully thought-through plan.   Yes, we can win battles in the short run, but if we have too many enemies, we can’t make those victories stick.
So we need a strategy—a strategy of alliance.  Yes, that’s the great goal: Build a Grand Alliance against ISIS.
Fortunately, the elements of an alliance are already in place, because, as noted, Islam has “bloody borders,” and that fact makes for many enemies.  Just in the past 15 years, Islamic terrorists have lashed out in every direction.  They have attacked not only Paris, but alsoLondon and Madrid.  Moreover, they have attacked IndiaRussiaChina, and manycountries in Africa.  And oh yes, the United States.  More than once.   The cumulative death toll from Islamist terror reaches into the tens of thousands.
So with patient diplomacy, as well as overwhelming force, the opportunity exists to build a Grand Alliance against ISIS and other murderous extremists.  The big powers—the US, Russia, and China— might not agree on much, but they can agree on the mission of destroying a common foe.   And that’s the beginning of a fruitful alliance.
Moreover, there’s plenty of precedent for dealing even with the devil himself in pursuit of a higher objective.  During World War Two, we were in league with Josef Stalin, who was barely better than Hitler.  And yet Stalin, evil man that he was, proved to be a valuable ally in the fight against the Axis.  Some 80 percent of Nazi German casualties were suffered on the Eastern Front.  We might pause to reflect that if we had been forced to fight the Wehrmacht by ourselves, our losses would have been a lot more than the 213,000 dead that we suffered in the European Theater, and a lot closer to the 8.8 million that the Soviet Red Army lost as it bore the brunt of fighting the same opponent.
So now, today, another Russian, Vladimir Putin, is making the same offer: We will join with you in killing our common enemies.  If we could work together with Russia, ISIS would lose much of its potential strategic depth.  Yet today, plenty of Americans oppose cooperating with the Russians; the Center for Islamic Pluralism, for example, warns of “the Putin trap,” and The Washington Post editorial page, bizarrely, described Secretary of State John Kerry’s critique of Russia as “rather elegant,” before going on to warn that an alliance with Russia would be “a dangerous false step for the United States.”
Yes, Putin is a nogoodnik, and yes, it would be nice, in some utopian world, if the US could avoid messy alliances and stay “clean.”
But here’s the point: Either we have the Russians on our side, or we have them as an enemy.  And if they are working against us on ISIS, we might not win.   Again, our poor track record in the Middle East reminds us that we can’t do everything on our own.
And the same need for cooperation holds true for China.  The People’s Republic contains some 50 million Muslims; Beijing, like Moscow, knows it has a severe internal problem with Islamic radicalism.
The same as Russia, China has openly said that it wants to work with other countries.  Indeed in the wake of the recent ISIS murder of one of its citizens, the governmentdeclared, “China will continue to strengthen anti-terrorism cooperation with the international community to maintain peace and tranquillity in the world.”
And yet Western hostility to China, too, is deep.  For example, Reuters put sneer quotes around the word “terrorists” in a story about Chinese counter-terror, as a way of delegitimizing the Chinese effort.  Here’s the headline: “China says 28 foreign-led ‘terrorists’ killed after attack on mine.”
So once again we must say: If the overriding mission is destroying ISIS, then all other concerns have to be subordinated.  And that means working with all foes of ISIS, including Moscow and Beijing.  At that point, ISIS will have no hope.
Of course, we can’t expect victory right away.  As we know, President Obama is not in the least bit interested in defeating ISIS.  He is much more interested in smearing his fellow Americans as racists, and, of course, combating “climate change.”
But things will change in January 2017.  So we can say: If the next American president truly wants to win the war against ISIS, he or she will need to build that Grand Alliance.  So early on, the 45th president should trot the globe, visiting the bloodied and hallowed sites of Paris, Beslan, Mumbai, and some of the many other places around the world where the Salafist terrorists have struck, laying a wreath at each.
That’s how we can achieve ISIS delenda est, permanently.  This is not a call for the total annihilation of the enemy-harboring population; it is simply a plan for guaranteeing that the bad guys are isolated, receiving no help, as well as no quarter.
And of course, if and when we win, we will have to learn the lessons of the previous decade: no more of the dead end of attempted democratic nation-building.  We should be prepared to install a secular strong man atop the post-ISIS rubble of a partitioned Syria and Iraq—where’s Saddam Hussein when you need him?—and then be equally prepared to spend heavily on foreign aid.  And who knows: Perhaps we can even entice the rich Arab countries to help.
Perhaps there will always be Islamist terrorists.  But the more defeats they suffer, the less appeal they will have.  There used to be lots of militant anarchists and Marxists—but hey, young people aren’t attracted to loser causes.
So let’s make it utterly, totally, absolutely clear that Salafi terrorism is a loser cause.  This is how a great, and enduring, nation takes care of business.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Blog: Don't break our food chain

Blog: Don't break our food chain



Don't break our food chain



Napoleon once said: "Only a foolish horse fights with his nose bag."



Today we have many foolish people fighting their nose bag.  They are weakening Earth's food chain with a war on carbon.
Carbon
is the building block of life.  "Organic" means "containing carbon,"
and every bit of plant and animal life is built around the carbon atom.




Carbon
enters Earth's cycle of life via plants, which extract it from the rare
and precious carbon dioxide plant food in the atmosphere.  Living
things use this carbon, plus water, oxygen, and minerals, to create the
proteins, fats, carbohydrates, and skeletons they need.
Plant
growth responds quickly to the amount of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere.  However, today's levels are far below those that sustained
the abundant forests, grasslands, wetlands, herbivores, and carnivores
of past eras.
The
biggest long-term threat to abundant life on Earth is natural carbon
sequestration, especially during the recurring cold, dry eras, when
cooling oceans absorb huge amounts of carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere, and growing ice sheets capture most of its water.




Nature
is very efficient at carbon capture and burial.  Enormous quantities of
carbon and hydrogen have been removed from past atmospheres and buried
under ancient sediments in extensive beds of coal, oil shale, limestone,
marble, dolomite, and magnesite, and in diffuse deposits of hydrocarbon
liquids and gases.  The result is that the carbon dioxide level in
today's atmosphere is not far above the minimum needed to sustain plant
life (which is why nurserymen pump more carbon dioxide into their
greenhouses).




However,
in a rare piece of environmental serendipity, man's extraction and use
of coal, oil, gas, limestone, and dolomite for power generation,
transport, steel, cement, and fertilizers is recycling a tiny part of
this storehouse of buried carbon.  For example, for every ton of coal
burned, 2.75 tons of carbon dioxide plant food plus one ton of fresh
water are added to the atmosphere, and producing one ton of cement
releases about one ton of carbon dioxide.




Every
ton of wheat grown needs a ton of carbon dioxide to get its carbon, and
other foods have similar needs.  Carbon industries thus help to feed
all of Earth's plants and animals.




Industrial
use of carbon-bearing mineral resources also recycles valuable trace
elements like nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorus, which are present in
variable amounts in coal, oil, and carbonates.  Any of these byproduct
gases can be toxic if concentrated in confined spaces, and all of man's
activities can pollute crowded cities, but in the open atmosphere, plant
life often suffers because of a deficiency of these key nutrients.




Those
waging a war on hydrocarbons and carbon dioxide are enemies of the
biosphere.  Their foolish policies like carbon taxes, emissions trading,
and "Carbon Capture and Burial" are denying essential nutrients to the
food chain.  The failed global warming forecasts show that these
policies will have no effect on climate, but they will reduce the
atmospheric supply of food nutrients and fresh water for all life on
Earth.
Life is a carbon cycle – don't break the food chain.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Articles: Liberals: Not Loyal to Anything

Articles: Liberals: Not Loyal to Anything

Liberals: Not Loyal to Anything



A new report
from Pew Research confirms what most of us have known all along:
Democrats tend to have no religious affiliation (28%, to be exact).
 Among the other 72%, only 16% are evangelical Protestants (versus 38%
for Republicans).  Large numbers belong to liberal "universalist"
churches and non-Christian groups, including black Muslims.




The
Pew "Religious Landscape Study" reveals a lot about liberals in
America.  In increasing numbers, they are rejecting Christianity.
 Millions are self-professed atheists or agnostics.  Politically, they
identify as socialists, a fact that underlies the appeal of socialist
candidate Bernie Sanders.  Vast numbers of Democrats have relinquished
their faith in God and, at the same time, in capitalism, both of which
are at the heart of American identity.




This
loss of faith in American values, if it continues, has dire
implications for the future of our country.  In essence, religious faith
amounts to faith in the benevolence and purposefulness of creation.
 Once a nation loses this faith, its people become cynical and
demoralized.  Economic and cultural decline is the inevitable result, as
seen in every communist regime.  The Soviet Union failed because its
people lost faith in the goodness of life.  Cuba is impoverished because
its people have no free-market incentives to work.




Liberals
like to think they are "above" those ordinary Americans who "cling to
their guns or religion," as President Obama put it.  They believe in
universalism, social justice, and saving the Earth.  These "beliefs,"
however, are not the same thing as religion.  They are a rejection of
religious faith, and they are intended to undermine the competitive
instinct at the heart of capitalism.




For
example, the belief in universalism – the idea that one's own nation is
no more exceptional than any other, and that all cultures are equally
viable – is by definition a rejection of faith in the superiority of
one's own country.  Liberals do not "believe in" America.  They believe
in "humanity," and they believe that world government, supported by
world courts, international armies, and global economic arbitration,
should govern all nations, including their own.  To the liberal mind,
Obama's failure to assert American power on the global stage is a
virtue.  It is a perfect expression of a key tenet of liberal beliefs.




This
is why Obama and Clinton have scorned our allies while showing
themselves willing to engage with our deadliest enemies.  From the
liberal point of view, there is no such thing as an ally or an enemy.
 The particular loyalty of the USA to its traditional allies – Britain,
Canada, Australia, and more recently Germany and Japan – means nothing
to the liberal mind.  One is just as willing to "reset" with Russia,
kibbutz with Kim, or engage with Castro.




Hillary
Clinton's part in the Arab Spring is a case in point.  Hillary was
cheerleader-in-chief in bringing about the fall of pro-American regimes
in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, and Libya, and in promoting the
destabilization of pro-American regimes in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.
 Just as Jimmy Carter helped to bring about the fall of the shah of Iran
and thus the rise of Islamic extremism in Iran, Hillary's rash foreign
policy has brought about the rise of ISIS across the Middle East.  As a
consequence of the chaos in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, and Egypt,
millions of lives have been lost.




Had
the pro-American strongmen been left in power in these and other
countries, order would have been maintained.  But Hillary was too
high-minded to think she should remain loyal to our allies, however
unsavory some of them may have been.  She wanted to bring about a
perfect world, a utopia with no favorites, no loyalties, no strongmen,
no use of force.




It's Jeane Kirkpatrick's "Dictators and Double Standards"
all over again.  That masterful essay has been around for 40 years, but
liberals never got around to reading it.  Had they done so, the Arab
Spring would have been suppressed from the start, with U.S. assistance,
and ISIS would never have gained footing in the region.




It's
not just foreign policy.  Liberals are willing to throw their own
country under the bus just as much economically as in terms of national
security.  Like Obama, Hillary opposes restraints on immigration and
supports bringing hundreds of thousands of Muslim refugees to our
shores.  She supposes that we are all just one  people – human beings,
not Christians, Muslims, Jews, Hindus, or any other particular religion,
not Westerners with a firm sense of democracy as opposed to Middle
Easterners who have never known anything but tyranny.  She thinks that
once those hundreds of thousands of Islamic refugees make it to our
shores, they will enroll their kids in Y soccer and sign up for
multifaith picnics with their Christian and Jewish neighbors.  All will
be kumbaya.  No worries.




Likewise,
liberals believe that social justice trumps capitalism.  But again, the
liberal belief in equality amounts to a rejection of a fundamental
pillar of Western civilization: the belief in individual
self-responsibility and the freedom to pursue opportunity in a free
market.  Social justice, with its goal of universal equality, is a
rejection of economic liberty.  To achieve equality, liberals such as
Ms. Clinton always return to the same proposition: increased taxation
and redistribution of capital.




Social
justice is not a benign form of liberation; it is a cynical theft of
assets that are the product of hard work on the part of others.  There
is nothing noble, or even remotely righteous, about the belief in social
justice.  From a political point of view, those who demand enforced
equality, as Hillary Clinton has just done with her $12 minimum wage
proposal, are simply buying the votes of the poor in the most cynical
manner.  Redistributionist schemes in America are no less cynical than
in Peronist Argentina, Chavez's Venezuela, or any other failed socialist
state.




Surprisingly,
those same liberals who support universal equality are among the
stingiest when it comes to charitable giving.  It seems they are ardent
supporters of social justice in the abstract, but they are less likely to contribute to their churches or local communities than are conservatives.




The reason for this lack of charitable giving, I believe, is that liberals have no particular faith
in anything.  They believe in "the environment," but what is that?  It
is something far away, diffuse, distant in time and place.  Global
warming cannot be seen or felt.  "Climate change" is a mantra, a magic
potion, a cult-like incantation.  It is the opposite of one particular
gardener's affection for one particular planting of hydrangeas, or the
touching concern of a pet owner's feelings for her aging black lab.
 Just as universalism is the opposite of patriotism, and income equality
is the opposite of faith in education and hard work.




In
their faithlessness, liberals are on the wrong side of history.
 America is going to survive and prosper, and it will do so because the
vast majority of Americans are conservative by nature.  Americans
believe in the goodness of life; they believe that the pursuit of
happiness is a fundamental right; they love their families and their
country, and they believe that both are exceptional and deserving of
their special loyalty.




For
their part, liberals believe in nothing other than abstractions like
universalism, social justice, and the environment.  No great
civilization has ever prospered by believing that it is just average or
that it should redistribute the results of its success to those who are
too weak or too corrupt to achieve anything.  Democrats may well
continue on their faithless way, but America, I believe, will not be
joining them.




Jeffrey Folks is the author of many books and articles on American culture including Heartland of the Imagination (2011).

Friday, October 9, 2015

Articles: A Nation of Discontent

Articles: A Nation of Discontent



A Nation of Discontent



Not
since the presidential election of 1932 has the American electorate
been so mired in discontent.  Despite the best efforts of the media to
portray this discontentment as limited to the Republican base, numerous
polls have confirmed a vast majority of the populace shares this same
sense of disgruntlement.  Yet the nation’s political, academic and
corporate classes, whose lifestyles have never been better than they are
today, are surprised and dumbfounded by this phenomenon.  These elites
prefer to look at this chapter in America’s political history as just
the ranting of an immature and essentially ignorant citizenry who will,
in time, see the error of their ways and settle for whatever crumbs the
ruling class throws their direction.




Perhaps
the explanation for this overarching angst can be made more readily
apparent to the elites by painting a portrait of the America they have
created since 1988 -- the high water mark of America’s power and
influence -- and the near irreparable damage that has been done to this
nation and its people.   




Beginning
in the years following the end of the Second World War, the American
populace was the benefactor of unprecedented peace, growth and
prosperity -- the most resounding in the history of mankind.  Living in a
nation whose future prospects seemed limitless, the people increasingly
turned inward in the pursuit of leisure and lifestyle leaving the
governance of the country to the various elements of the ruling class
secure in the thinking that this nation’s upward trajectory was
unstoppable.




The Economy



The
cognoscenti declared that expansive government spending, globalization
and free trade combined with a comprehensive and overarching regulatory
regime determined to root out so-called corruption and inequality as
well as save the planet from the over blown evils of global warming
should be the course for the nation to pursue.  The result of this
foolhardy and myopic scheme:




  1. In
    1988 the national debt of the United States stood at $2.6 Trillion,
    today it is approaching $18.6 Trillion-- an increase of 615%.  On the
    other hand the debt of all the nations on earth has increased by only 135% since 1988.
  2. The American Gross Domestic Product has recorded a growth of 110% over the past 27 years.  By comparison global growth has been 218% and in the case of China it has been a staggering 1,900%.
  3. Among
    the reasons for Chinese and global growth is the American trade
    deficit. In 1988 this nation experienced a non-oil trade deficit of
    $71.1 Billion;   by 2014 this same deficit had ballooned to $458.3
    Billion.  An increase of 545%.  
  4. The
    impact of the above in combination with an excessive regulatory regime:
    in 1988 23% of all jobs were in the goods producing arena, in 2015 it
    is 13%.  If these
    percentages had remained the same together with the current working age
    population, 34.3 million as compared to the actual level of 19.5 million
    would be employed in this high paying arena. Instead a significant
    majority of all the new job growth over the past 27 years has been in
    fields that pay on the average 40% less than the goods producing sector.
  5. The
    nation’s population has grown by 35% since 1988; however the number of
    employed Americans has only increased by 27% while those who have
    dropped out and are no longer in the labor force has escalated by 50%. 
    Further the number of Americans living in poverty has increased by 61%.
  6. Another
    factor impacting on the economic health of the American people is
    immigration.  In 1988 there were 16 million immigrants (including less
    than a million illegal aliens) living in the United States.  Today that
    number has skyrocketed to 42.4 million (including an estimated 12
    million illegal aliens).  This enormous increase
    (165%) in the immigrant population has not only put pressure on a
    stagnant job market but it has also been a major factor in the decline
    of median income in the country.
  7. The
    upshot of all the above is that the median income for all Americans has
    only increased (adjusted for inflation) by 6% over the past 27 years
    and has declined by 4.3% since 1999.  Since 1988 the income of the top 5% has risen 39.3% (adjusted for inflation) while the income of the bottom 60% has increased just 0.5%.
One
of the primary hallmarks of the United States was that of a classless
society wherein economic factors allowed the citizenry to take advantage
of the marketplace in order to move up or down based on their efforts
and willingness to work.  However, this scenario is disappearing as the
opportunities for upward mobility cease to exist and for a class driven
society to dominate.  This is now a rapidly eroding economy based almost
solely on consumption which cannot be sustained without a vibrant
wealth creating (goods and proprietary services) sectors.




The Political Parties



As
the federal government has grown exponentially through the monies it
spends and its regulatory regime, the political class (which includes
the bureaucracy) has become the most powerful entity in the nation. 
While the nation’s economy has grown by 110% since 1988, federal
government spending has skyrocketed 275% and is now approaching $4.0
Trillion (larger than the economy of Germany) making it financially the
largest single entity in the history of mankind. 




There
is no business, institution or private individual in the United States
that does not come under the influence of this leviathan.  With so much
power and opportunity to enrich oneself, the overwhelming majority of
the elected and appointed members of this fraternity will do anything to
remain in office. As a consequence there is now a permanent cycle of
corruption at play in Washington D.C.  Large corporate interests
(including unions and Wall Street), assorted large special interest
organizations and the super wealthy, through their financial
contributions to the political parties, either make certain that their
interests are protected or that they have access to government largess. 
 




Because
of the corrupting influence of an unimaginable amount of money and
power and the fact that this nation can only function politically with
two national parties, the founding fathers’ vision of a government of
the people, by the people and for the people is rapidly becoming one
that is by and for the ruling class.




Education



Rather
than view education as the means for the people to attain success in a
competitive world, the nation’s elites have recast it into a vehicle for
their pet theories and political views.  Whether it is the promulgation
of self-esteem, the obsession with the evils of the nation’s past, or
the perils the planet faces due to mankind’s very existence, among other
inane curricula, the education establishment has assured that the
American people are rapidly becoming among the least well-educated
populations in the world.




In 2013 American 15 year olds ranked 32nd among industrialized countries in math, 20th in reading and 24th
in science.  In 1988 this same age group ranked among the top 5-10
nations in the world in these same categories.  Yet by 2013 the per
student spending in the United States, the highest in the world, had increased by 58% since 1988 (adjusted for inflation) while the median income of the American people has only increased by 6%.




The Culture



Perhaps
no area of the American society has been so adversely impacted since
1988 as the culture. This erosion has been driven in large part by a
majority of the elites determined to impose their lifestyle choices on
the rest of the population.  Using the cudgel of the mainstream media
and the entertainment complex, they have successfully inculcated a
plurality of the American people into believing that there are no moral
absolutes and that the state can grant any rights that it so chooses to
whomever they choose.




Thus
abortion and the subsequent sale of human body parts as well as the
loss of respect for human life, the erosion of religious freedom,
runaway out of wedlock birth, the glorification of violence in
entertainment, and the undermining of any ethical or behavioral
standards combined with a woeful educational regime has resulted in a
nation without a rudder and two generations of Americans unsure of who
they are and unable to cope with whatever the future may bring.




Summary



The
American Ruling Class since 1988 has accomplished the unthinkable: they
have placed the nation on a collision course with chaos and decline. 
Virtually all their actions have either benefitted them financially or
socially to the detriment of the rest of society.  Whether they are
those on Wall Street making untold millions shuffling money, or the
public sector unions and their never ending financial demands, or the
education establishment’s obsession with ideology and funding, or the
political class and their avarice and narcissism, or those whose
religion is extreme but personally profitable environmentalism -- they
all hide behind the fig leaf of caring and compassion for their fellow
Americans.




As
the 2016 election approaches a majority of the populace is beginning to
realize that they have been conned and manipulated.  That, in fact, the
future of the United States and that of their progeny is in serious
jeopardy.  If wholesale changes are not instituted soon there will be no
turning back and potentially violent internal chaos and external
threats will be inevitable.  The American elites, comfortable in their
current lifestyle, had better wake up to the rumbling beneath their feet
before the volcano erupts.