The Western Experience

Isn’t a Tennessee state trooper’s belief in white pride part of diversity?

November 14, 2009 · Leave a Comment

by Jason

It is important that I reiterate from the start nothing is considered wrong, divisive, or dangerous about one’s feelings on culture, ethnicity, or religion in this country. That is why our intellectual betters created Tolerance. And the more you can tolerate the more beautiful and enlightened of a person you are. So don’t get mad at me. It’s not like I wrote the rule or anything. I am only exposing the game and the broken system. In other words, it is either all OK, or it isn’t. If the knife cuts at all, it cuts both ways.

The Story

A Tennessee state trooper accidentally sent a circular email about White Pride (I’ve seen the same email before in the past) to hundreds of state employees. The article doesn’t go into detail about the contents of the email aside from:

The e-mail from Trooper Brent Gobbell states, in part, “You rob us, carjack us, and shoot at us. But, when a white police officer shoots a black gang member … you call him a racist.” It also includes a list of racist epithets.

If I recall the email correctly it wasn’t a overtly racist email, but more of a design to show the hypocrisy of diversity, the limits on political correctness as it applies to some and not others, and the increasingly marginalization of white Americans and native traditional values and culture in America. The racial epithets part list the acceptable derogatory terms designated for white men that have been deemed approved for consumption.

In other words, in a larger point-of-view, there is a absolute demand of tolerance in this country to those who require it so they do not feel isolated or indifferent by their own choice to partake in bad behavior or alternate lifestyles that would and should, otherwise, isolate them. After all, since when do we have to tolerate adopting babies or feeding hungry  children? You don’t.

But you do have to tolerate abortion, female abuse and genitalia mutilation (I am looking at you Europe). Any thought that questions this approach or is critical to those choices becomes intolerant and that person is no longer tolerable or fit for debate.

Aside from the fact the trooper violated numerous polices that all state and federal employees have to adhere to when operating computer systems, shouldn’t those who enforced his punishment be more tolerable to his views on white America?

[he] has been suspended for 15 days without pay and will have to attend diversity training.

Diversity training? In the name of diversity doesn’t his views and beliefs in his background and roots add to the pool of diversity? Why does he need diversity training if he is adding thought to the diversity theory? He sounds like he is right on track. According to the rules, the authorities are not being very tolerant of the state trooper. Maybe the state authorities in Tennessee have missed the larger picture of the goodness — no, the necessity — of diversity.

Categories: American Society · Opinion
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Mother of fallen soldier pleads for President Obama to act now on Afghanistan

November 13, 2009 · 2 Comments

by Jason

The U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan have picked up the tempo in many parts of the country. They are fighting more, driving further, and mixing it up with the enemy more often. As this continues more soldiers will inevitably fall. Our military is carrying out these operations inspite of being short on men and equipment. And they are short on men and equipment inspite of the top commander requesting more troops.

The debate has raged over if President Obama is taking too long to make his decision. After all, the only experts he should be listening to are the guys on the ground, and their thoughts on the situation are unanimous: Send in more troops. Calls from the military, the Senate, the House, and pundits and outside experts alike have gone unanswered by the Obama administration. In fact, it has done little to even pry a revealing thought on what’s next in Afghanistan.

Boston TV | Paratrooper’s Mom Begs Obama: ‘End It’

PLYMOUTH, Mass. — As family and friends mourn a fallen U.S. paratrooper on Veteran’s Day, his mother made an emotional plea to President Barack Obama that it’s time to either bring home the troops or end the war in Afghanistan.

The body of Benjamin Sherman, 21, was recovered in Afghanistan Tuesday.
“It’s time we do something. This has gone on too long. They either need to come home or we need to end it,” a tearful Denise Sherman said.

Sherman was on his second tour of duty when he disappeared in Afghanistan last week during a mission to resupply troops in the western part of the country. He was a paratrooper with the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, based in Fort Bragg, N.C.

To think we are nearly a year into the Obama administration and the president has yet to make a decision as Commander in Chief in Afghanistan. A total reversal from his campaign rhetoric as he made Afghanistan the centerpiece of his foreign policy, and a piece of the campaign he used as proof that Democrats, too, could be tough on our nation’s enemies. Things have changed in a year.

In the part of the world I grew up in we would say, “it is time to pee or get off the pot.”

Categories: Foreign Policy · Military
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Well said, Mr. President. Your best moment yet.

November 10, 2009 · 4 Comments

by Jason

To say we’ve been critical of President Obama on here in the past would be charitable. We’ve met him at every turn when we thought the need warranted it. But we have never been rabid, baseless, nor reactionary hyper-partisans while doing so. There have been times, albeit only a few, where we have applauded or agreed with him on one subject, action, or other. This is one of those moments. (I can almost speak for Mike on this one). This speech wasn’t about a shining moment for Obama as the title wrongly suggest. It was about a grieving military and shocked nation being consoled by its Commander in Chief and president.

President Obama’s remarks for the Memorial Service at Fort Hood (full transcript) will go beside Reagan’s as one of the best in recent history. There was no unicorn and rainbows. No cheap talk of healing the planet or the blind. No hope. No change. It was none of those things. Instead, it was simply direct, passionate, strong, uplifting, unapologetic, determined and, most of all, entirely American.  It was that good – and he may even start liking that “whole Americanism” thing.

It may be hard to comprehend the twisted logic that led to this tragedy.  But this much we do know – no faith justifies these murderous and craven acts; no just and loving God looks upon them with favor. And for what he has done, we know that the killer will be met with justice – in this world, and the next.

These are trying times for our country. In Afghanistan and Pakistan, the same extremists who killed nearly 3,000 Americans continue to endanger America, our allies, and innocent Afghans and Pakistanis. In Iraq, we are working to bring a war to a successful end, as there are still those who would deny the Iraqi people the future that Americans and Iraqis have sacrificed so much for.

As we face these challenges, the stories of those at Fort Hood reaffirm the core values that we are fighting for, and the strength that we must draw upon. Theirs are tales of American men and women answering an extraordinary call – the call to serve their comrades, their communities, and their country. In an age of selfishness, they embody responsibility. In an era of division, they call upon us to come together. In a time of cynicism, they remind us of who we are as Americans.

We are a nation that endures because of the courage of those who defend it. We saw that valor in those who braved bullets here at Fort Hood, just as surely as we see it in those who signed up knowing that they would serve in harm’s way.

We are a nation of laws whose commitment to justice is so enduring that we would treat a gunman and give him due process, just as surely as we will see that he pays for his crimes.

We are a nation that guarantees the freedom to worship as one chooses. And instead of claiming God for our side, we remember Lincoln’s words, and always pray to be on the side of God.

Commentary

Categories: American Society
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Now this is a Nobel Peace Prize winner: Sgt. Kimberly Munley

November 6, 2009 · 1 Comment

by Jason

Police Sgt. Kimberly Munley is credited with ending the Fort Hood mass shooting before even more people were shot.

New York Daily News | Police Sgt. Kimberly Munley credited with ending Fort Hood gunman Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan’s rampage

The hero cop who ended the bloody rampage at Fort Hood by pumping four bullets into the crazed gunman even though she was wounded is known for her toughness, friends say.

Before relocating to Texas, civilian police Sgt. Kimberly Munley spent about five years as a cop in North Carolina where she forged a reputation as a no-nonsense officer.

“I’d like to say I’m surprised, but I’m really not,” said close friend Drew Peterson, 27.

“She was born and bred to be a police officer. If you were ever to be in a fight, she’d be the first person to stand up next to you and back you up. She’s a tough cookie.”

Munley’s toughness and grace under pressure were on display Thursday when she and her partner responded within three minutes of reported gunfire, said Army Lt. Gen. Bob Cone.

Munley, who had been trained in active-response tactics, rushed into the building and confronted the shooter as he was turning a corner, Cone said.

“It was an amazing and an aggressive performance by this police officer,” Cone said.

Munley was only a few feet from Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan when she opened fire.

Wounded in the exchange of bullets, the 34-year-old Munley was reported in stable condition at a local hospital.

In a posting on her Twitter page before the shooting, she wrote: “I live a good life….a hard one, but I go to sleep peacefully @ night knowing that I may have made a difference in someone’s life.”

Munley’s brother Daniel Barbour told ABC News that his sister had been shot three times in the hand and the leg.
One of the bullets pierced an artery, requiring her to undergo surgery Friday.

The diminutive Munley – she stands 5-foot-4 and weighs about 120 pounds – served as a cop in Wrightsville Beach,
N.C., before she moved to Texas to enlist in the military, friends said.

She is married with two daughters and is no longer in the armed forces.

Also read Pajama Media, Fort Hood Massacre: A Day of Courage and Cowardice

The brave soldiers who were massacred at Fort Hood had trained to fight the jihadist enemy abroad. But they seem to have ended up being murdered by the same enemy on American soil, in a place where they thought they were safe — murdered, apparently, because a series of military and medical officials recognized what was going on with this major and chose to do nothing about it.

Commentary

Categories: American Society
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U.S. soldiers gunned down on U.S. soil

November 5, 2009 · 11 Comments

by Jason

I’ll cut to the chase. This was planned and carried out as evident from multiple shooters. One of the shooters, Major Malik Nadal Hasan, is a convert to Islam — the religion we’ve all grown to know over the last decade. We’ll see how long it takes for those kind of details to come out as this story develops and spreads tomorrow. President Obama is said to be horrified at what took place. I think that is an appropriate feeling for right now.

ABC News | 12 People Killed and 31 Wounded in Fort Hood Shooting

Twelve people have been killed and 31 wounded in a shooting spree at a Texas military base in a murderous rampage that officials believe was carried out by an Army officer.

The suspected gunman was identified by ABC News as Major Malik Nadal Hasan.

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, R-Texas, told Fox News that military sources informed her that the gunman was about to be deployed to Iraq.

The shooter was killed and two other suspects, who are also soldiers, have been apprehended, Lt. Gen. Robert W. Cone said.

Hasan allegedly opened fire and killed 11 people on the base before he was shot, bringing the total number of fatalities to 12.

The general said there were “eyewitness accounts of more than one shooter,” and the others were tracked to an adjacent facility.

We’ll be sure to followup on this.

Commentary

Categories: American Society · Military
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Outside experts and former officials say Obama’s national security team is ‘incredibly weak’

November 5, 2009 · Leave a Comment

by Jason

President Clinton once quipped, “foreign policy is not what I came here to do,” I think we can make the same case for President Obama. Except unlike Clinton, Obama inherited two wars and highly focused GWOT policies on international terrorism and our battle against al Qaeda and the Taliban. As a member of the U.S. Senate and the successor to Bush, Obama should be well up to speed on what needs to be done and exactly what the country is facing even if his decisions and ideas to those challenges are different from his predecessors. President Clinton inherited the end of the Cold War and believed that foreign policy had changed. When that turned out to not be the case, he showed weakness because of it.

President Obama had no illusions of global peace and the march of democracy. He just seems uninterested or reluctant to put his feet in the water for whatever reasons. Like Clinton, Obama seems to view the military as too much of a part of national security and American foreign policy decisions. No where is this more apparent than in his efforts to demilitarize the intelligence community, investigations on the CIA and interrogation units, pursuing the closing of Gitmo, preemptive strikes and his dithering on Afghanistan even after the well publicized advise from his top commander in Afghanistan asked him to move quickly on a troop transfer.

Foreign Policy | Report: Obama’s national security team ‘incredibly weak

“Reform must take place,” said James Locher, President & CEO of the Project on National Security Reform (PNSR), “If you did not like what happened in the last 7 or 8 years… you’re not going to like what’s coming in the future.”

“Momentum for reform is building, but it is largely rhetoric and good intentions,” reads PNSR’s new report . The congressionally funded group was begun as the result of a cooperative agreement between the Defense Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. “Strategic management of the national security system remains absent and is desperately needed to make it integrated, cohesive, and agile,” the report continues.

Calling reform of the national security infrastructure “the number one national security issue,” Locher said that America’s ability to operate in international arenas the world over is “crippled” by the dysfunction within the system.

He called the White House’s national security staff “incredibly weak,” preventing integration and coordination that the National Security Council should be doing.

“There’s almost no strategic guidance from the president or the executive office of the president,” Locher said, adding, “We have almost no knowledge management in the national security system.”

There’s also no effective means for delegating the president’s authority, he added.

Locher spoke a an event rolling out the latest PNSR report at the New American Foundation, hosted by its foreign policy chief and editor of The Washington Note Steve Clemons.

Clemons noted that according to the Goldwater-Nichols act, President Obama was required to submit a national security strategy by June 18, 150 days into his presidency, but he failed to do so.

The fact that President Obama has paid far more attention to his domestic agenda, fundraising, TV appearances, and waging the “good fight” here at home, shows that maybe foreign policy is not what he came here to do either. His selections of individuals to carry out his economic and domestic policies demonstrate that his main concern is domestic and economic, and foreign policy would go on autopilot until he found out away to end America’s wars. His economic team is a well regarded, star-studded cast that was highly publicized. His national security team received less fanfare and was created in away that highlighted the various individuals differing world views they had with each other and with Obama. However watching Secretary of Defense Gates go along with some of the Obama administrations most recent decisions to reverse policies on Reliable Replacement Warhead for our strategic missile force, national missile defense at home, and missile defense in Poland and the Czech Republic shows without a a doubt only one person is calling the shots.

The two notable individuals that were brought in under the illusion that they would often initiate vigorous debate with the president were Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton. They actually turn out to be the safest picks for the president totally sold on his agenda. Biden factors in as a mouthpiece to relay the differences over Afghanistan and Iraq to the public and the press on Capital Hill. Hillary Clinton was chosen for political reasons and not for an impact on American foreign policy, only as a rubber stamp with a notable name. The reason for this approach is to create the perception of disagreement and disillusionment from the top on the wars as away to soften public resolve and support. This approach would give Obama the popular mandate that the Democrats want so badly in order to bring the two wars to a close and reverse the policies of the Bush administration. And bring back the focus to their bold domestic agenda and “fundamental” changes to America.

Instead, however, Obama just looks weak and confused.

Categories: Foreign Policy
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Conservatism and Western Civilization: A Historical Tradition

November 5, 2009 · 2 Comments

If I were super smart, talented, and motivated I may be able to write something like this one day. But I am none of those things. At least not to the point to where I could produce and essay like this. So I’ll resign and just post some of it here.

At the site First Principles (thank you Mike for recommending it and adding it to our links) there is an amazing essay on conservatism and how it has shaped, defended, empowered — and may just prevent decline — our Western Civilization. The essay covers the intellectual, philosophical, political and historical basis conservatism has injected into our civilization and covers the many international conflicts, and the great Western leaders that arose from them. This is the type of reading you print out and keep.

The essay is too big to post here in its entirety. Go to Western Civilization, Our Tradition to read the entire essay. I’ve included two excerpts to get you started:

Conservatism is distinguished from other modern political movements in that it concerns memory more than desire; it is primarily defensive, not progressive. The conservative seeks to hold fast to that which is good—and experienced as such—whereas other political movements, tendencies, and ideologies reach for a posited good, one that is not yet possessed. Characteristically, the imagined goods of modern progressive or leftist ideologies are conceived to be “universal” values (such as liberty, equality, and fraternity), whereas the goods and values defended by conservatives are more readily understood as contingent particulars. There does not appear to be a single substance knowable as Tradition per se, but rather many historical traditions, great and small, each making a claim for allegiance and conservation on its own particular terms. As a result, while there may be a Socialist International or a Communist International—one may even speak of a Liberal International—there has never been a Conservative International.

Return of Odysseus by Claude Lorrain

There is, however, one “quasi-universal” that conservatives of many nations, and American conservatives among them, have understood themselves to be conserving:the West. Obviously, the very word indicates that this good or value is not truly universal: it excludes, at least, the East. On the other hand, insofar as the term denotes a civilization transcending in space any particular Western state, transcending in time the history of any particular Western nation, and transcending in intellectual scope or catholicity any particular Western philosophy or doctrine, “the West” stretches toward a kind of universality. To speak of the West is to speak of something cosmopolitan, and yet not deracinated. If it is not an eternal essence, then perhaps it is something sempiternal. The defense of the West is close to the heart of what it means to be a conservative in the modern world—yet the definition of the West and the identification of the threats to it is also a source of disagreement among conservatives of various sorts.

+++

That the West is approached by modern conservatives with solicitude for its vulnerabilities is an artifact of the time of troubles that was the twentieth century. Earlier and particularly nineteenth-century presumptions about the West were nearly always whiggish celebrations of the historically “inevitable” progress of Western European civilization to its rightful place in the imperial sun: “Wider still and wider shall thy bounds be set, / God, who made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet” was a British invocation, but it summed up a more general sense that the West was simply “the best”—and destined for indefinite global dominion. That confidence, however, was profoundly shaken by the civilizational self-immolation of the First World War. For many on the Left, the carnage of the Great War was evidence of the structural flaws of Western “bourgeois democracy,” requiring the remedy of revolution. For conservatives, however, the conflict powerfully tempered any disposition to celebrate our civilization’s achievements with a pronounced sense of challenge and threat.

Against whom or what is it, then, that the West finds itself in need of defense? Two general forms of threat may be identified. First, over the course of the twentieth century it was frequently contended that the West must be defended frominternal decay or decline. Conservative reflection on this theme was prompted in the first instance by an engagement with the thought of Oswald Spengler, whose book The Decline of the West was a publishing sensation in Germany and Europe immediately after the First World War. In a resonant, even poetic, though not altogether scientific manner, this prophet of pessimism argued that civilizations are organic wholes organized around a High Culture with a particular “Soul.” Civilizations throughout history have risen and fallen in a pattern of birth, growth, apex, decline, and death—and our Western civilization is no different.

[Snip]

Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin at Yalta, 1945Beyond the threat of internal decline, “the West” has also been understood to require defense against threats arising externally, in international conflict. By invoking loyalty to the West as a whole, one may make “one’s own” the political concerns of other peoples who are not fellow citizens of one’s nation-state. In other words, the West is a basis or rationale for “natural” alliance in time of war. Thus, the British during the First World War were eager for that conflict to be seen by their potential allies as one pitting the liberal and civilized traditions of the West against invading hordes from the East, “the Hun.” In this way, isolationist America and unenthusiastic Commonwealth countries could be brought into the conflict as allies in the common defense of (Western) civilization itself—rather than in defense of British imperial interests. The inclusion of the Soviet Union among the Allies of the Second World War tended to obstruct recourse to the language of the West, but even still, both Churchill and De Gaulle in their wartime speeches spoke of the defense of “liberal and Christian civilization,” a good short description of the meaning of the West in contrast with Nazi barbarism. With the Nazi defeat and the advent of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, the defense of the West could serve as the basis for the NATO alliance against the totalitarian barbarism of the Eastern Bloc.

It was in the context of the Cold War that the West became an especially important concept for a nascent American conservatism. Given that context, the term carried in the first instance both geostrategic and economic connotations—mirroring the fact that our Soviet Communist adversaries understood economics to be at the “base” of all political, cultural, and spiritual life. Thus, despite its cultural dissimilarities, Japan could be understood to stand among the “Western” nations, since it was a free-market democracy and a U.S. ally (having been reconstructed as such by the Americans after World War II), while Spain under Franco might be understood to stand outside the West, since it was not (yet) a NATO member, nor a democracy. During the Cold War, the world was more or less neatly divided between the Communist Eastern Bloc, the so-called Western alliance (NATO), and those nations which held themselves to be Non-Aligned.

Yet throughout the Cold War period, conservative thinkers worked to reach a deeper level of analysis of the manifold crises of the twentieth century. Many, following Eric Voegelin, concluded that Soviet communism was an extreme instance of “Gnostic revolt”—in effect, a characteristic heresy within the Western experience, rather than something arising from outside the West. If the “armed doctrine” threatening the West was itself a bastard child of the West’s own traditions, however, then the defense of the West began not on the tense military frontier dividing the two Germanies; rather, the defense of the West must begin with an effort to educate Western publics about the orthodox strains of the Western heritage. But what exactly were the “orthodox” traditions of the West?

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Categories: Political Thought · Western Society
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Israeli commandos seize ship carrying Iranian weapons intended for Hezbollah (for peaceful purposes, of course)

November 5, 2009 · 8 Comments

by Jason

Yet again, Israel starts more trouble by being nosy, paranoid, and overly protective of its citizens. After all, one would really have to stretch the imagination to assume that the various arms, guns, ammunition, explosives, and rockets sent from Iran to Hezbollah were for anything other than peaceful purposes. I am sure this is part of Iran’s unilateral disarmament program. They were simply giving the now useless weapons to Hezbollah so that they could in turn melt them into plowshares. Or “parts for bulldozers” as the official story goes.

Washington Post | Israel says seized ship contained Iranian arms

As part of its routine inspection of ships in the Mediterranean Sea, the Israeli navy intercepted the vessel Tuesday night near Cyprus, roughly 100 miles off the Israeli coast. There was no resistance from the ship’s crew, and once Israeli special forces boarded, they found an estimated 600 tons of rockets, guns and other munitions, said Rear Adm. Rani Ben-Yehuda, deputy head of the Israeli navy.

Flying under an Antiguan flag, the ship, called the Francop, was carrying cargo loaded in Damietta, Egypt, and bound for Latakia in Syria, Israeli defense officials said. Some of the ship’s 500 containers were stamped with the insignia of the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, and 36 of them were found to contain arms. Other documents found on board identified the cargo as originating in Iran, Ben-Yehuda said.

Commentary Magazine | The New Karine A

Israeli Navy commandos seized a cargo ship last night en route from Iran to Syria. It contained 10 times the arms that the Karine A attempted to deliver from Iran to the Palestinians in 2002, enough weapons, according to the head of the Israeli Navy, to keep Hezbollah supplied in a hot war for a month. Along with 3,000 rockets, the ship contained:

107-millimeter rockets, 60-millimeter mortars, 7.62-rifle Kalashnikov-ammunition, F-1 grenades and 122-millimeter Katyusha rockets. On the side of some of the cases inside the containers the words “parts of bulldozers” was written.

The Syrian foreign minister, Walid Moallem, soared to Baghdad Bob levels of hilarity by trying to deny the reality of what the Israelis discovered.

“Unfortunately there are official pirates disrupting the movement of goods between Iran and Syria,” he told reporters on a visit to Teheran. “I stress, the ship was not carrying Iranian arms bound for Syria, nor was it carrying material for manufacturing weapons in Syria. It was carrying [commercial] goods from Syria to Iran.”

Moallem says there were no arms on board. The IDF has released a video of the ship’s weapons being unloaded in the port of Ashdod. There are rows and rows of mortar shells, rockets, and crates filled with grenades.

What will Obama say about all this? Being that evidence of Iranian-Syrian hostile intent complicates the administration’s desire for “engagement,” whatever that means anymore, the answer is: probably nothing.

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Israel’s other peaceful neighbor is also in the news.

Categories: Current Events · Foreign Affairs
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The Liberal Paradigm: Always in need of sheep so that there may be shepherds

November 4, 2009 · 1 Comment

by Jason

John Steele Gordon writing for the Wall Street Journal nails the liberal ideology that permeates in our political system. Today’s leftist liberal ideology is a decedent of progressivism in the early 20th century. They were the crusaders that penned their movement on “groups” in society (as the article addresses). Sons and daughters of abolitionist, these progressives sought to bypass the civic squabbles and do away with localism and states’ rights. They dared not to suffer the ignorant nor their peculiar low class habits and traditions. They only wished to guide and instruct them to a better way. Therefore they engineered a path towards an activist government that would permanently address and watch over the other half that was, in their view, incapable of watching over themselves. After all, they new better. On this went and developed into New Liberalism, Socialism and Communism here in the U.S. And the perpetual struggle for justice, “speaking truth to power,” and embracing victimhood proudly instead of opportunity and success — gave birth to the modern Democrat Party.

Wall Street Journal | Obama and the Liberal Paradigm

Valerie Jarrett, senior adviser to President Barack Obama, recently explained the White House war on Fox News as an example of “speaking truth to power.” Much of the American political world collapsed in laughter, pointing out that her boss was president of the United States, the most powerful man on earth. His every word is news around the world. Fox News is a cable channel rarely watched by more than a few million people at a time. How could she have so blithely said something completely out-of-sync with reality?

Simple: She’s a liberal.

As a liberal she carries around in her head the liberal paradigm of how the world works and what needs to be done to make it work better. There’s nothing wrong with that. We all use paradigms to make sense of what we see around us and couldn’t get along without them. Unfortunately, the basic liberal paradigm hasn’t shifted in a hundred years, while the world we live in has changed utterly since the late 19th century, when modern liberalism was born.

What is that paradigm? The basic premise is that the population is divided into three groups. By far the largest group consists of ordinary people. They are good, God fearing and hard working. But they are also often ignorant of their true self-interest (“What’s the matter with Kansas?”) and thus easily misled. They are also politically weak and thus need to be protected from the second group, which is politically strong.

The second group, far smaller, are the affluent, successful businessmen, corporate executives and financiers. Capitalists in other words. They are the establishment and it is the establishment that, by definition, runs the country. They are, in the liberal paradigm, smart, ruthless and totally self-interested. They care only about personal gain.

And then there is the third group, those few, those happy few, that band of brothers, the educated and enlightened liberals, who understand what is really going on and want to help the members of the first group to live a better and more satisfying life. Unlike the establishment, which supposedly cares only for itself, liberals supposedly care for society as a whole and have no personal self-interest.

Thus the liberal paradigm divides the American body politic into sheep, wolves, and would-be shepherds. The shepherds must defeat the efforts of the wolves.

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Categories: American Politics · Opinion · Political Thought
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They’re just not that into you.

November 3, 2009 · 3 Comments

by Jason

A referendum? Probably not. That will come in 2010 more than likely. But a message to Washington and the Obama administration? You bet it is. Those who will pay the most attention to the victories in New Jersey and Virginia and the upheaval in New York-23 will be the moderate Democrats who are in competitive districts.

The similarities between these victories in Virginia and New Jersey, and the ones that took place in 1993, are too apparent not to be considered. Conversely, the Democrats took both states in 2005, which started the blue deluge. The rebuttal to those points is to say that Virginia is following a historical trend, and it wasn’t totally out of the question for New Jersey to buck the party in power during tough economic times. But again, these are two states, especially Virginia, that solidified Obama’s path to the White House and allowed him to lead the Democrats to majority status. Obama tried to rally that support he received in 2008 to help his fellow Democrats. The fact that they both lost does not make President Obama central to those losses but does show discontent, and at the least, President Obama long ago hit his peak in terms of popularity and political reach. That such a reversal took place, and so soon, is a good indicator of the Democrats’ dwindling chances to hold onto power. Go here to see the complete domination McDonnell had over his opponent, Deeds.

Quite simply, the GOP are enjoying the news coming out of Virginia and New Jersey and most certainly like their chances headed into 2010. Head over to the Claremont Institute and check out Henry Olsen’s, “The Reemerging Republican Majority?”

Virginia

New Jersey

As of this writing, Doug Hoffman, 45%,  in New York-23 is in a close race with his opponent Bill Owens 49%. Dede Scozzafava has managed to capture roughly 5,000 votes despite dropping out. Those few votes may be enough to put Owens in the win column.

Commentary

Categories: American Politics
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Obamania winding down in Europe

November 3, 2009 · 8 Comments

This is a guest post by Bill Dawson, an American who has lived in Austria for the last nine years. Though Bill blogs regularly about German History rather than contemporary politics, he’s tuned in to the German-language media and can therefore offer some interesting insights.

Two of Jason’s recent posts here at Western Experience — those concerning President Obama’s political ceiling and his choice to take on Fox News — got me thinking about a trend I’ve been kind of half-consciously noticing of late here in Europe: the gradual end to the Europeans’ love affair with President Barack Obama. It started simply as a general impression I was getting, so I set off to look for some real empirical examples, a few of which I’ve selected to point out here in this guest post graciously offered to me by Mike and Jason. First let me correct myself slightly and admit that I am not really in a position to judge the entire European continent’s impressions of President Obama; I really just pay attention to German-language news sources. Germany is a mighty big chunk of Europe, particularly when we omit Russia from “Europe”, as I and many others generally do. So while views and trends in the German media cannot be justly considered the same as those in all of Europe, they are surely indicative of something, given Germany’s size and influence in the region.

I would guess that the single biggest catalyst towards the recent diminution of European Obamania was the Nobel Peace Prize. President Obama’s selection for the prize was almost universally recognized (outside of Norway!) as nonsense, so I don’t think much of the fact that even the European press found it within themselves to ridicule the selection. Instead, I’m impressed by more subtle skepticism of President Obama in European media sources, such as the center-left Sueddeutsche Zeitung’s (SZ) decision to publish an article about those New Jersey elementary school children who were taught songs praising President Obama. The article is fairly straightforward news reporting, but the very fact that the topic interested SZ and that the article was published at all was interesting to me, particularly considering the German translation of some of the children’s lyrics. If you understand the German, you might be able to imagine what some Germans might think of these lyrics, given the history of their own country.

“Mmm, mmm, mmm, Barack Hussein Obama, er hat gesagt, dass alle mit anpacken müssen, um dieses Land wieder stark zu machen“. … “Hurra, Mister President, Sie sind die Nummer eins, der erste Afro-Amerikaner, der diese Nation anführt. Hurra, Mister President, wir verehren Ihre großartigen Pläne, die die Wirtschaft dieses Landes wieder an die Weltspitze führen.” (my emphases)

That’s how SZ translated it. Not knowing the actual words that the children sang, I would translate that back into English as:

“Mmm, mmm, mmm, Barack Hussein Obama, he tells us that we all must take part in making this country strong again. … Hurray, Mister President. You are the number one, the first African-American to lead this nation. Hurray, Mister President, we admire your great plans to lead this country’s economy back to world’s best.

(By the way, I’ve been a bit out of touch over here with American politics, but I can’t help but notice that it’s apparently okay now to say the President’s middle name, since he’s safely ensconced in office.) Personality cults have been out of fashion in Germany for a good 60 years now, and for reasons that you don’t need me to explain. (Though the Obamania here in 2008 and early 2009 came awfully close to a personality cult: perhaps the first of its kind in German-speaking lands since those dark days?) Imagine suggesting to Germans — any Germans, of any political leaning (well, except maybe the true neo-nazis) — that young students should sing in unison the praises of whichever Bundeskanzler (or Bundeskanzlerin) who currently occupies that office. You’d get a hearty laugh. (Come to think of it, you’d get one from most Americans too, which makes the New Jersey incident all the sadder.) I was also struck by an article from the center-right Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (“FAZ”, in my mind the best newspaper in Germany) in which Matthias Rüb — FAZ’s man in Washington — tells the story of President Obama’s war with Fox News. It’s interesting that FAZ chose to quote Chris Wallace for the title of the article: “Ein Haufen von Heulsusen” (“A bunch of crybabies”). The subtitle, however, can perhaps be seen as a hit against Fox: “Fox polemicizes against Obama.”

I find the tone of the rest of the article to be markedly critical of the President. Rüb points out that several U.S. media companies — including those who cannot be considered Fox’s allies, meaning basically everybody else — are expressing disfavour with the White House staff’s decision to go down this road of challenging one of their peers, however unruly that peer may be. He also mentions that the biggest effect of the White House’s stance against Fox has so far been an improvement in Fox’s ratings. In all, I get the sense that Rüb himself finds it all a bit ridiculous. Those two anecdotal articles are now well over a week old — I’ve had them tagged for a while now in order to remind myself to write about them. Since then, President Obama has been met with even more skepticism in the German media, particularly about two issues which are very prominent within Germany:

  • Afghanistan: The complaint here is that Germany — and the world — is waiting for and not receiving leadership on this issue from President Obama.
  • Climate Change: News that President Obama would not attend the upcoming Copenhagen meetings was greeted very, very sourly here.

So while the Germans are not about to rethink their feelings towards President George W. Bush, they do seem to be rethinking the unwavering admiration with which they greeted President Barack Obama. In closing, a quick side note about that Matthias Rüb article in FAZ: I particularly enjoy the fact that Rüb comes right out and truthfully describes the New York Times as “markedly affectionate” (“ausgesprochen zugeneigt“) towards the President. Similarly, the SZ article calls CBS “liberal.” You have probably heard it said before that the Europeans are generally less sensitive about identifying the political slants of their media organs; that, in fact, many media companies are quite open about their affiliations. Wouldn’t it be refreshing to see the New York Times as candid about itself and its marked affection for our President?

Categories: Foreign Affairs · Opinion · Western Society
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A year in and discouragement defines President Obama’s foreign policy

November 3, 2009 · Leave a Comment

by Jason

Instead of walking through each area of failure that has been highlighted and written about over the course of the year (and we have compiled a lot), two articles from the Wall Street Journal and the Politico capture the problems President Obama has faced quite well.

The Politico article summarizes the problems over the whole international landscape and the angles and strategy Obama has used to implement his brand of diplomacy since capturing the White House. His “mutual interests” calls and even taking critical tones of America on foreign soil has had minimal effects, if any at all. Obama’s so-called “realist” approach to foreign policy has been exposed as naiveté.

The Wall Street Journal focuses on the failed pursuit of Iran and the continuous rebuffing and even insulting responses Iran has given. But a piece of Obama’s ego is attached to diplomacy with Iran as part of his “smart” power and break-neck pace to distance his self from Bush. Those motivations will likely give further discussion on holding discussions with Iran life that far exceeds the actual usefulness of the idea.

Politico | ‘Back down to earth’ for W.H. diplomacy

Foreign policy never goes according to campaign plan, but for President Barack Obama, who promised a hardheaded new engagement with the world, the last week and the weeks he sees looming ahead must be discouraging.

Across a region spanning Pakistan to the Mediterranean, foreign leaders seem to be challenging the very premise of his policy: that foreign countries can reasonably be persuaded to move in the direction of common interests, and that a better-loved America can get more done.

In Afghanistan, an all-out effort to promote a legitimate election turned into a scramble to prevent a civil war and ease the defrauded challenger off the stage. Iran persuaded the White House to drop its late-September deadline for action and then appears to have rejected a deal on nuclear fuel. Great powers such as Russia and China show no appetite for crucial concessions, while the U.S. Congress continues to block major action on a pillar of Obama’s policy goals — international action on climate change.

Wall Street Journal | When No Means No

In October 2003, the European diplomatic troika of France, Germany and Britain extracted a promise from Iran to suspend most of its nuclear work and promise “full transparency” in its dealings with the International Atomic Energy Agency. In exchange, the EU3 offered a menu of commercial and technological incentives. Then-French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin hailed the deal as “a promising start.”

It soon became apparent that Iran had no intention of becoming transparent, as repeated IAEA reports made abundantly clear. As for the idea that Iran could be made to abandon its nuclear ambitions, then-Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi was unequivocal: “We won’t accept any new obligations. Iran has a high technical capability and has to be recognized by the international community as a member of the nuclear club,” he said. “This is an irreversible path.”

So there was the first Iranian “No.” In November 2004, however, Tehran made a second deal with the EU3, this time with an even sweeter package of incentives for Iran. The so-called Paris Agreement lasted a few months, until Iran again spurned the Europeans. “Definitely we can’t stop our nuclear program and won’t stop it,” former Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani said in March 2005—a second resounding “No.”

Still, the wheels of diplomacy kept spinning, thanks to a Russian offer to enrich Iran’s uranium for it. The Iranians “studied” the proposal and even reached what an Iranian diplomat called a “basic agreement” with Moscow. But again they turned it down, on the basis that it is “logical that every country be in charge of its own fate regarding energy and not put its future in the hands of another country.” Call that the third “No.”

Four months later, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced Iran had successfully enriched uranium. Over the course of the next two years the Security Council approved four successive resolutions demanding that Iran cease enriching and imposing some mild sanctions. Ahmadinejad replied by insisting that all the Security Council resolutions in the world couldn’t do a “damn thing” to stop Iran from developing its nuclear programs. That would be the fourth and clearest “No.”

Yet even as Tehran’s rejections piled up, a view developed that all would be well if only the U.S. would drop the harsh rhetoric and meet with the Iranians face-to-face. So President Obama began making one overture after another to Iran, including a videotaped message praising its “great civilization.” Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei replied that Mr. Obama had “insulted the Islamic Republic of Iran from the first day.”

Now American negotiators are dealing directly with their Iranian counterparts, which is just fine with Ahmadinejad. “As long as this government is in power, it will not retreat one iota on the undeniable rights of the Iranian nation,” he said last week. “A few years ago, they said we had to completely stop all our nuclear activities. Now look where we are today.”

Categories: Foreign Policy · Opinion
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Technology reveals gruesome details of abortion and changes minds in the process

November 2, 2009 · 2 Comments

By Jason

Modern science and technology have done wonders for American society. There is not much in our immediate world that we don’t at least have a grasp on or currently gaining knowledge in. That is not to say science deserves a blanket endorsement as away to cure all ills and conquer all the hills of the unknown. Science and technology do, however, assist and put into place a mechanism for intellectual reasoning, understanding, and development. Our scientist at one point thought it possible to put a man on the moon. And through science and technology they did. Science can also set limitations on our potentials as well as shine light on the previously unknown and enlighten the ignorant.

The gruesome practice of abortion is no different as science is delivering consequences there too. Progressing ultrasound technology is paving the way in bringing out the absurdity of calling abortion a simple medical procedure.

One widely reported finding from the 2003 CBS/New York Times poll is that only 35 percent of women in the 18-29 age group now support unrestricted abortion rights, a big drop from the 50 percent level reported in 1993.

Perhaps that’s because today’s young women grew up as once-ground-breaking medical technologies became routine tools in pregnancy care. Science has shaped their ethics.

Most of all, it’s a strategy that allows pro-lifers to talk about abortion in a more complete way: not only in terms of the unborn child’s right to life, but also in terms of a woman’s right to full information. So while abortion supporters speak of protecting and expanding women’s right to choose, pro-lifers — seizing the liberal mantle of science and free inquiry — now focus on informing women exactly what it is they are choosing.

It turns out that a director Planned Parenthood — viewed as a more devoted agency for abortion — was no different once she witnessed an abortion through ultrasound technology. The result was an intellectual change of heart that the procedure wasn’t simply an abortion. It was murder.

KBTX | Planned Parenthood Director Leaves, Has Change of Heart

Planned Parenthood has been a part of Abby Johnson’s life for the past eight years; that is until last month, when Abby resigned. Johnson said she realized she wanted to leave, after watching an ultrasound of an abortion procedure.

“I just thought I can’t do this anymore, and it was just like a flash that hit me and I thought that’s it,” said Jonhson.

She handed in her resignation October 6. Johnson worked as the Bryan Planned Parenthood Director for two years.

According to Johnson, the non-profit was struggling under the weight of a tough economy, and changing it’s business model from one that pushed prevention, to one that focused on abortion.

“It seemed like maybe that’s not what a lot of people were believing any more because that’s not where the money was. The money wasn’t in family planning, the money wasn’t in prevention, the money was in abortion and so I had a problem with that,” said Johnson.

Johnson said she was told to bring in more women who wanted abortions, something the Episcopalian church goer recently became convicted about.

“I feel so pure in heart (since leaving). I don’t have this guilt, I don’t have this burden on me anymore that’s how I know this conversion was a spiritual conversion.”

Johnson now supports the Coalition For Life, the pro-life group with a building down the street from Planned Parenthood. Coalition volunteers can regularly be seen praying on the sidewalk in front of Planned Parenthood. Johnson has been meeting with the coalition’s executive director, Shawn Carney, and has prayed with volunteers outside Planned Parenthood.

It is no coincidence that this past decade has seen a rise in individuals who consider themselves pro-life. In fact, Gallup released a poll in May that revealed that more people identified themselves as prolife as opposed to proabortion since regular surveys have been taken on the issue.

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Commentary

Categories: American Society
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Politics is atmospheric and conservatives are calling down the thunder

November 2, 2009 · 3 Comments

by Jason

Conservatism seems to be in the air right now. Perhaps President Obama will finally deliver on that change mantra after all. Though you can bet it won’t be the kind he was hoping for.

Despite the Left’s attempt to undermine a truly legitimate civic movement against government, debt, and politics as usual, using gimmicks like calling Hoffman the “Glenn Beck candidate” and painting the picture that he is some wild eyed right-wing fringe candidate, something unique and quite the opposite is taking shape. Of course while doing this the same people are painting an entirely different picture of Owens and Scozzafava as being moderates — closer to the practical center. That is a lie and should be exposed as one. That, at least, in part, is the very reason Hoffman will more than likely win this election. The folks on the left just don’t get what is happening. If he is a rightwing goon than what does that make the thousands of voters who intend to vote for him? By the very implication being made in this race they too are wild eyed rightwing fanatics. If the blade cuts at all, it cuts both ways. However, that is not what lies beneath the Hoffman candidacy no matter how hard the partisan hacks on teh Left push the idea.

The truth is simpler in regards to the respective candidates and there actually exist a far more principled election in NY-23. Owens and Scozzafava are both liberals, fiscally and socially. Scozzafava has even hinted at pulling a Specter for crying out loud. They both support gay marriage, abortion, and taxes to fuel government. They are hardly moderates just as this race was hardly hijacked by the Brown Shirts. Hoffman’s entrance merely supplied the demand of the genuine wants and needs for thousands in the district. His success in that endeavor proves that there is a majority out there who demand traditional conservative candidates looking after their needs in Washington. Americans have always demanded balance — a suitable equilibrium between progressivism and traditionalism — and the current administration has pushed too hard, too fast, and too certain to the Left. Races like Hoffman in New York, McDonnell in Virginia, and Christie in New Jersey are just part of the blowback Democrats are facing.

Anywhere there is a need for supply and demand, an equilibrium will be established. That goes in the market for the free exchange for ideas as much as it does in a market for the free exchange of goods.

Lastly, there is no civil war brewing within the GOP. In fact, the real civil war is brewing with the Democrats. The liberal and moderate wings of the party cannot seem to agree on much of anything right now — domestically or in foreign policy.  Therefore this race is not indicative of a nation wide scenario of horror for the GOP that will unfold across the nation. However, there will be similar fights in places where they are needed to be sure. The real lesson, then, is this: If the New York GOP had fielded a viable candidate for the people of NY-23, there would be no Doug Hoffman. See Virginia for those details. This is simply a case where voters are out in force doing what was asked of them since the creation of this country — holding our elected officials accountable and demanding obedience to the wants, needs, and desires of the people. And when those things are in shortage one would be hard pressed to find a more passionate group of people, who will demand them, than conservatives.

Just a quick note, the last time New Jersey and Virginia both went Republican in the same year was in 1993. We all know what happened then.

Conservative charge in New York

Public Policy Polling | Hoffman leads big

Doug Hoffman has a commanding lead in the special election for New York’s 23rd Congressional District.  —  In a three way contest with Democrat Bill Owens and Republican Dede Scozzafava Hoffman leads with 51% to 34% for Owens and 13% for Scozzafava.

Wall Street Journal | Revolt in New York

The voter revolt ought to be a lesson to the GOP’s backroom boys, especially in New York state, where the old Al D’Amato insider club has led the party to irrelevance. GOP state chairman Joe Mondello, now thankfully retired, and Beltway bigs misjudged public dismay against the Democratic agenda in Washington. Nominating a candidate who “can win” in the Northeast does not have to mean someone whose voting record is more liberal on taxes and unions than that of most Blue Dog Democrats.

Politico | Conservatives take aim at leaders, Crist, other races

This energy on the right seems to exist outside the control of the conventional political structure, and GOP politicians and operatives are as likely to be victims of this anger as beneficiaries.

Conservative charge in New Jersey

Quinnipiac University | New Jersey Gov Race Tips To Christie By 2 Points

Quinnipiac University Poll Finds; Daggett Voters Key As Race Is Too Close To Call  —  In the see-saw New Jersey Governor’s race, Republican challenger Christopher Christie has 42 percent to Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine’s 40 points.

Public Policy Polling | Christie leads

Chris Christie leads Jon Corzine 47-41 in PPP’s final poll of the New Jersey Governor’s race, with Chris Daggett at 11%.

Commentary

Update: Some input from a thoughtful reader. Thanks, Bryan. And yes, the info was very helpful! Bryan sent:

The Siena poll released today shows:

Hoffman – 41 (+6 in 3 days)
Owens – 36 (no change – has he peaked?)
Scozzafava – 6 (-14)
undecided – 18 (+9)

Some of the more interesting numbers:

  • Hoffman and Owens are tied in the northwest. Watertown, where the mayor endorsed Hoffman on his blog, should be an interesting fight.
  • Owens now leads among independents. 13 out of the 20 points Dede lost among Republicans went to Hoffman, and only 1 point went to Owens.
  • Hoffman’s net favorable rating jumped from a +4 to a +14 in three days. His unfavorable rating actually dropped 4 points.
  • Owens dropped from +4 to -1 favorable net, and Dede is at a -21.
  • Joe Biden’s favorability is rather strong among Democrats (64-18), but only +4 for the district as a whole. So he’s polarizing.
  • This still looks good, but not as good as the PPP poll. Keeps the fire lit under us. We really need to focus on turnout.

Categories: American Politics · Political Thought
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