Dipping My Toes Into Politics

Thoughts on current events with great help from FoxNews and its fair and balanced journalists. This blog will focus mainly on the current Presidential election and the United Nations Oil-For-Food scandal. Occasional bouts of folly and conspiratorial fun will abound. Links to the original articles are provided in the main title of each post. FoxNews Oil-For-Food documents have been posted here in chronological order for further study and examination of the unfolding scandal.

Friday, August 20, 2004

Good Negative Campaigning And Bad Negative Campaigning

Good Negative Campaigning And Bad Negative Campaigning
By Bruce Walker (08/20/2004)

The battle of negative political campaign ads has begun again - thank goodness! - and criticism of pols, instead of back-scratching peace treaties on ethical flaws, has returned to its proper place as a weapon by citizens against cronyism in the centers of power.

What seems to irk Leftists is that anti-Leftist negative ads are unfair and untrue. This very accusation is unfair and untrue, but who is to blame for the situation which allowed this charge to even get traction? The Left!

Recall that when Clinton lied and lied and lied and lied, it was not important because "everyone lies"? Recall the pop psycho-babble that lying is actually good, that it saves people hurt feelings, that it releases tensions, that is cures acne and slims waistlines? Who said all this nonsense? The Left!

The Leftist love affair with lying, however, stretches back longer and deeper than just Clinton, the poster child for theraputic fibbing. The imperial and thoroughly corrupt New York Times and the equally imperial and equally corrupt CBS News made lying chic in the 1960s.

The right to lie was enshrined in the Supreme Court's odious and moronic decision New York Times v. Sullivan, which held that a series of outright false statements, all of which titled toward defaming Sullivan, was protected under the First Amendment unless actual malice was shown. This required something like asking an editor of that rich rag "So, did you intend to maliciously destroy Mr. Sullivan's reputation?"

What CBS News and its "documentaries" was even more ghastly. In The Selling of the Pentagon, the noble editors at CBS News thought it cute and clever to take the answer which an Assistant Secretary of Defense gave to one question and place it as an answer to an entirely unrelated question.

No one, by the way, questioned that CBS News did precisely that. But it was an eight hundred pound gorilla, like the New York Times, that few people had the guts to challenge. Soon other Leftist establish media, whose product to the consumer was information - why, I wonder, did Ralph Nader never challenge the outrages of these vast corporations? - were doing the same.

ABC News, a few weeks before the 1972 Presidential Election, had a "documentary" on national defense. Almost the first words were either deliberate lies or pure invention: The federal government spent six out of every ten tax dollars on national defense. Wow! That is a lot - except that the figure was less than four dollars out of every ten tax dollars.

The B-52 was a "supersonic bomber" so that plans for the B-1 Bomber were unnecessary. The "fact" that the B-52 was a "supersonic bomber" was certainly news to the engineers who designed it, the crews who flew it, or to Soviet interceptor pilots, but ABC News had spoken, so it must be true.

The problem is not, and never has been, with "negative ads" - attacks on the character of those who would seek power from the American people by their political opponents. The problem is negative political ads which are lies. This points out the crucial difference between negative ads about President Bush and the negative ads about Senator Kerry. The former are generally lies and the latter, if not always absolutely provable, ring true.

John Kerry was not Vice Chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee; that is a clear fact and Kerry has lied about that or, at a minimum, been grossly negligent in researching his own career. John Kerry was not in Cambodia at Christmas in 1968; indeed, he no longer even pretends that he was. John Kerry did not throw away his medals, as he said he did three decades ago.

Worse, if John Kerry was a war criminal, as he once alleged, then he is Albert Speer asking to be elected Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany without spending a day at Spandau Prison. If he countenanced atrocities then "I vass just following orders" in the finest tradition of the Schutzstaffell.

If he lied about his silent observation, as a decorated officer at the scene, of crimes against humanity, then he is content to slander men who did not have the luxury Kerry had of serving a quick stint, coming home to fawning Leftist elitists, and constructing a successful political career upon this vile slander.

President Bush, by contrast, volunteered that he had a drinking problem and he has never pretended otherwise. He has never pawned himself off as the war hero that his father was, but rather noted that he took the honorable course that many young American men did and served in the National Guard (Kerry's hippie friends insulted and assaulted these good servicemen too.)

Leftists love to manufacture moral symmetry where none exists. During the Cold War, the Soviet Union and America were both equally to blame. During our ongoing war on street crime, the police and the perpetrators are both equally to blame. Now, lies about Bush and honest statements about Kerry are equally wrong because both are "negative."

Truth and lies, however, are not the same thing, whatever Leftists may say. Churchill telling the truth about Hitler was not the same thing as Hitler telling lies about Churchill. Al Capone telling lies about Elliott Ness was not the same thing as Elliott Ness telling the truth about Al Capone. Truth is not the negation of anything but lies, and lies are wrong.

No Holiday From Hate - The Angry Left Invades Cape May NJ

No Holiday From Hate - The Angry Left Invades Cape May NJ
BY ALAN BROMLEY
Friday, August 20, 2004 12:01 a.m. EDT

CAPE MAY, N.J.--Last weekend my family took a minivacation at this bucolic seaside resort, where we enjoyed the calming charm of our Victorian inn, the rush of the ocean waves, the honky-tonk arcades and fine food.

Every afternoon from 4 to 5, we found ourselves on the inn's porch with a dozen or so other guests, genteelly sipping iced tea in our rocking chairs as the afternoon breeze cooled our new sunburns. One day, sitting next to a couple from Philadelphia, I was asked what I thought about the Democratic Convention and who would win the election.

Being in a state between relaxation and boredom, I wasn't sure if I wanted to enter this discussion, so I replied by asking them what they thought the biggest issue was.

"Restoring trust to government," the wife replied, sounding like a Kerry bumper sticker. Her husband, munching a cracker with cheese, nodded in agreement.

I sensed my 17-year-old daughter's ears perk beneath her black hair and my wife's spine straighten, both sensing a political storm brewing.

"You don't mean the legend on our currency, 'In God we trust,' do you?" I teased.

"No!" the husband, who had swallowed his snack, sharply responded. "We're in favor of separation of church and state, and would prefer that those words not appear on our dollar bills, just as we want 'under God' removed from our pledge of allegiance. And you know what we mean," he continued, ratcheting-up the tone. "Bush lied to us about the war in Iraq!" The chairs rocked faster.

"How's that?" I replied. Before he could answer, I added, "Saddam Hussein used weapons of mass destruction three times, once against the Kurds in the north of Iraq, once against his 'marsh' people in the south, and against Iran. And every intelligence agency in the world, including the French, believed he had WMD, and that he was trying to acquire nuclear materials in Africa. If it was an intelligence miscalculation, all Saddam had to do was comply with U.N. inspections, but he refused. There was no lie, at worst a mistake that removed a brutal dictator who supported terrorism and who killed over 1.5 million people during his reign of terror."

"Screw you!" someone shouted from across the porch. My daughter's head swerved to the yelling miscreant, then back to me, somewhat fearful of my reaction.

I said: "And to you sir, may I ask, don't you see the irony of the Democrats using 'restore trust' as their slogan. Did you not see their lineup of speakers?

"Let's count: we had Ted Kennedy, who lied about trying to save Mary Jo Kopechne. We had Hillary Clinton, who lied about her billing records, about her commodities trading prowess, about kissing Arafat's wife right after Arafat accused the Israelis of poisoning Palestinian children. We had Al Sharpton, of Tawana Brawley fame, who later incited an anti-Semitic riot in Harlem with fatal consequences--funny how you blindly embrace these leaders of liberty, isn't it?

"And then we had your sweetheart, President Clinton, who never saw a big hairdo or a little lie he couldn't resist. We had John Edwards, who made his fortune convincing juries of the evils of doctors, and finally, Kerry himself, who is living the biggest lie of all--marrying rich, then richer, and feigning empathy for the downtrodden as he jets from home to home to home. Are those the men and women in who's hands and hearts you want to place, if not restore, trust?"

By now some had moved their chairs closer, while others had left, grumbling about the afternoon being ruined by this political hailstorm.

"Let me ask you something," I said to those with grimaces. "Are you happy the employment figures were dismal? Are you happy that we are having more troubles than anticipated in Iraq?"

"Speaking for myself," the Philly wife declared, "any news that helps defeat Bush makes me happy." Hubby nodded, as did a couple of others swinging on the veranda.

"So let me get this straight: Without offering a remedy for perceived economic woes, or a plan to win the war in Iraq, it's OK with you if a couple hundred thousand additional Americans are unemployed, let's say for a year or so. Your liberal 'scales of justice, of humanity' say that's a beneficial scenario--presumably because it's their sacrifice, not yours. And if we continue to move slowly in Iraq, costing additional American lives, not to mention the lives and freedom of Iraqi's, you will be satisfied as long as President Bush isn't re-elected?"

"You're a fascist! We're leaving!" the husband shouted.

"Your freedom of speech, to preach hatred of President Bush and to hope for American setbacks, even if it costs Americans their lives and livelihoods, is fine," I said to their backs, "but my questioning of your shallowness is offensive, right? Enjoy your trip back to the City of Brotherly Love. I'm sure your neighbors will be happy to see you return."

I turned to the southwest corner of the porch to see how my wife and daughter had weathered my latest electric storm. I caught a glimpse of a smile from my wife and a strong wink from my daughter, as the sun bent its way around the Victorian inn.

Mr. Bromley, who lives and writes in New York City, is looking for a new vacation spot next summer.