Sunday, November 09, 2008

Even MORE Postmortems

A lot of folks… me included… typically respond with “Who gives a shit?” when Euro-Weenies opine on American politics. But there ARE exceptions to the “Who gives a shit?” rule, especially when it comes to the Brits. It’s that “special relationship” in play, in large part, and the fact that the Brits tend to look at America and see the best in us, rather than the worst (other Europeans do, too, although they’re in the minority on “the continent”). One such exception appears in today’s Daily Mail, under the heading of “The night we waved goodbye to America… our last best hope on earth.” Excerpts:

Anyone would think we had just elected a hip, skinny and youthful replacement for God, with a plan to modernise Heaven and Hell – or that at the very least John Lennon had come back from the dead.

The swooning frenzy over the choice of Barack Obama as President of the United States must be one of the most absurd waves of self-deception and swirling fantasy ever to sweep through an advanced civilisation. At least Mandela-worship – its nearest equivalent – is focused on a man who actually did something.

I really don’t see how the Obama devotees can ever in future mock the Moonies, the Scientologists or people who claim to have been abducted in flying saucers. This is a cult like the one which grew up around Princess Diana, bereft of reason and hostile to facts.

It already has all the signs of such a thing. The newspapers which recorded Obama’s victory have become valuable relics. You may buy Obama picture books and Obama calendars and if there isn’t yet a children’s picture version of his story, there soon will be.

Proper books, recording his sordid associates, his cowardly voting record, his astonishingly militant commitment to unrestricted abortion and his blundering trip to Africa, are little-read and hard to find.

If you can believe that this undistinguished and conventionally Left-wing machine politician is a sort of secular saviour, then you can believe anything. He plainly doesn’t believe it himself. His cliche-stuffed, PC clunker of an acceptance speech suffered badly from nerves. It was what you would expect from someone who knew he’d promised too much and that from now on the easy bit was over.

He needn’t worry too much. From now on, the rough boys and girls of America’s Democratic Party apparatus, many recycled from Bill Clinton’s stained and crumpled entourage, will crowd round him, to collect the rich spoils of his victory and also tell him what to do, which is what he is used to.

Dang. That’s harsh. Author Peter Hitchens (Christopher Hitchens' brother, oddly enough) goes on at some length, and his op-ed is pretty much on the money, for the most part. I tend to disagree with his evaluation of The One’s acceptance speech, but NOT with his views on The One’s qualifications for office. I’m also in semi-agreement with his views on how things are likely to unfold in an Obama administration, but less so with his gloomy outlook on what this all means. Peter Hitchens delivery tends to be a little hyperbolic, but he does articulate my objections to The One fairly accurately. The op-ed is worth a read.

―:☺:―

The postmortems continue… and my favorite author P.J. O’Rourke weighs in with his postmortem in the November 17th edition of the Weekly Standard (“We Blew It. A look back in remorse on the conservative opportunity that was squandered.”). And Boy-Howdy…is it ever a good one! Excerpts:

Let us bend over and kiss our ass goodbye. Our 28-year conservative opportunity to fix the moral and practical boundaries of government is gone--gone with the bear market and the Bear Stearns and the bear that's headed off to do you-know-what in the woods on our philosophy.

An entire generation has been born, grown up, and had families of its own since Ronald Reagan was elected. And where is the world we promised these children of the Conservative Age? Where is this land of freedom and responsibility, knowledge, opportunity, accomplishment, honor, truth, trust, and one boring hour each week spent in itchy clothes at church, synagogue, or mosque? It lies in ruins at our feet, as well it might, since we ourselves kicked the shining city upon a hill into dust and rubble. The progeny of the Reagan Revolution will live instead in the universe that revolves around Hyde Park.

[…]

It's not hard to move a voting bloc. And it should be especially easy to move voters to the right. Sensible adults are conservative in most aspects of their private lives. If this weren't so, imagine driving on I-95: The majority of drivers are drunk, stoned, making out, or watching TV, while the rest are trying to calculate the size of their carbon footprints on the backs of Whole Foods receipts while negotiating lane changes.

People are even more conservative if they have children. Nobody with kids is a liberal, except maybe one pothead in Marin County. Everybody wants his or her children to respect freedom, exercise responsibility, be honest, get educated, have opportunities, and own a bunch of guns. (The last is optional and includes, but is not limited to, me, my friends in New Hampshire, and Sarah Palin.)

Reagan managed to reach out to blue collar whites. But there his reach stopped, leaving many people on our side, but barely knowing it. There are enough yarmulkes among the neocons to show that Jews are not immune to conservatism. Few practicing Catholics vote Democratic anymore except in Massachusetts where they put something in the communion wafers. When it comes to a full-on, hemp-wearing, kelp-eating, mandala-tatted, fool-coifed liberal with socks in sandals, I have never met a Muslim like that or a Chinese and very few Hispanics. No U.S. immigrants from the Indian subcontinent fill that bill (the odd charlatan yogi excepted), nor do immigrants from Africa, Eastern Europe, or East Asia. And Japanese tourists may go so far as socks in sandals, but their liberal nonsense stops at the ankles.

We have all of this going for us, worldwide. And yet we chose to deliver our sermons only to the faithful or the already converted. Of course the trailer park Protestants yell "Amen." If you were handling rattlesnakes and keeping dinosaurs for pets, would you vote for the party that gets money from PETA?

In how many ways did we fail conservatism? And who can count that high? Take just one example of our unconserved tendency to poke our noses into other people's business: abortion. Democracy--be it howsoever conservative--is a manifestation of the will of the people. We may argue with the people as a man may argue with his wife, but in the end we must submit to the fact of being married. Get a pro-life friend drunk to the truth-telling stage and ask him what happens if his 14-year-old gets knocked up. What if it's rape? Some people truly have the courage of their convictions. I don't know if I'm one of them. I might kill the baby. I will kill the boy.

[…]

But are we men and women of principle? And I don't mean in the matter of tricky and private concerns like gay marriage. Civil marriage is an issue of contract law. A constitutional amendment against gay marriage? I don't get it. How about a constitutional amendment against first marriages? Now we're talking. No, I speak, once again, of the geological foundations of conservatism.

Where was the meum and the tuum in our shakedown of Washington lobbyists? It took a Democratic majority in the House of Representatives 40 years--from 1954 to 1994--to get that corrupt and arrogant. And we managed it in just 12. (Who says Republicans don't have much on the ball?)

Our attitude toward immigration has been repulsive. Are we not pro-life? Are not immigrants alive? Unfortunately, no, a lot of them aren't after attempting to cross our borders. Conservative immigration policies are as stupid as conservative attitudes are gross. Fence the border and give a huge boost to the Mexican ladder industry. Put the National Guard on the Rio Grande and know that U.S. troops are standing between you and yard care. George W. Bush, at his most beneficent, said if illegal immigrants wanted citizenship they would have to do three things: Pay taxes, learn English, and work in a meaningful job. Bush doesn't meet two out of three of those qualifications. And where would you rather eat? At a Vietnamese restaurant? Or in the Ayn Rand Café? Hey, waiter, are the burgers any good? Atlas shrugged. (We would, however, be able to have a smoke at the latter establishment.)

Those are lengthy excerpts from an article that is long, and I’ve barely scratched the surface. Yes, the article is long, but more importantly… it’s GOOD. I don’t believe I’ve read a more perceptive (and humorous) catalog of conservative failings… ever. There’s more than one reason I claim P.J. as one of my favorite authors… not the least of which is his sense of humor… but I love him primarily because of his sensibilities and his uncanny ability to put his finger directly on the pulse of sensible conservatives. “Sensible conservatives, of course, is defined at El Casa Móvil De Pennington as me and those who think like me. My tongue isn’t completely in my cheek as I write this, ya know. I've been having friendly discussions (heh) with other, more strident conservatives in this space throughout the election season. To no avail, mostly.

I know a lot of folks who visit EIP don’t chase all the links I post. We all have limits on our time… understood. But if you read anything I link at all, then please read this. Especially if you claim to be a conservative… and even if you’re not (Lori!). You may disagree with O’Rourke in the end, but I’ll wager he’ll give you a LOT to think about.

17 comments:

  1. OUTSTANDING READS!
    Thank you for the great links!

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  2. PS - I am now calling myself a 'sensible conservative' - as I broke away from the others LONG ago... Thanks, PJ

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  3. Thanks, Cynthia... most appreciated. I fear I'm going to offend a lot of my readers by going out on this "sensible conservative" limb, but so be it.

    We lost the middle in the last election, precisely for the reasons PJ articulated, IMHO. We'll have to re-think our policies and strategies (not to mention our collective congressional ethics) unless we want to be a forever-minority party. The flip side of the forever-minority coin is the Dems become a lasting MAJORITY, and I sure as Hell don't wanna see THAT. But some folks on the right have a death-wish... at least it looks that way to me.

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  4. I'm trying to get over my depression.....these columns are not helping!!!!!! LOL

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  5. I'll admit the first column I posted WAS depressing... but I put it up as a counter-point to all the hosannas The One is supposedly getting overseas... well actually getting, to be honest. Not ALL Euro-weenies are madly in love with The One.

    O'Rourke's column, OTOH, is a rational contribution to the "what went wrong" debate we conservatives will be indulging in for the next couple of years or so. At least from now until the mid-terms.... where we'll hopefully see some "change" that we'll like.

    And, FWIW, Sharon... I'm pretty danged depressed, as well.

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  6. I've been in NYC for several days now, immediately since the election, and I'm "freaked out" by people walking down the street, being loud and walking in front of cars, etc, which is 'normal'... but what isn't is the shout outs "yo mother effers, he's MY president... I can do whatever the eff I want."
    Is this for real!?
    crazy

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  7. yeowch! I wish they'd say what they really think! *wink*

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  8. Wow - pretty scathing in both cases. And neither is wholly untrue either. My depression is lifting, slowly. At least I'm not wearing all black anymore.

    Sensible conservative - never put a name to myself and my beliefs but that would just about cover it.

    We're in for a long 4 years.

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  9. Pretty serious reading here, really thought provoking and well said! I believe I'm actually starting to understand politics a little more this past year. (since making you one of my reads) and I've said this before Buck but it's worth saying again, I do appreciate your honesty!

    I sure like the new profile picture too :)

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  10. O'Rourke is magnificent. He almost always hits it square on the head. Thanks for sharing that.

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  11. Michele sez: but what isn't is the shout outs "yo mother effers, he's MY president... I can do whatever the eff I want."
    Is this for real!?
    crazy


    Crazy is right! We're not getting that sort of reaction here, Thank God. But then... we wouldn't. Roosevelt County was Red by a 2:1 margin.

    Phlegmmy: Ya. Don't ya just HATE it when people pull their punches? ;-)

    Kris sez: My depression is lifting, slowly. At least I'm not wearing all black anymore.

    Good news, that! As for me... I'm already tired...VERY tired... of all the fawning over The One in the media, ALL media.

    Dawn sez: I believe I'm actually starting to understand politics a little more this past year. (since making you one of my reads) and I've said this before Buck but it's worth saying again, I do appreciate your honesty!

    Thanks, Dawn... MOST appreciated!
    ::blushing deeply::

    Jim sez: O'Rourke is magnificent. He almost always hits it square on the head.

    You're most correct, Jim. I love the guy.

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  12. Hard to Believe that Peter and Chris are from the same gene pool. P.J. I have always liked, of course however, the abortion issue I will never move away from. As a follower of Christ, it is my opinion, abortion is nothing less than murder of the innocent and unborn....it would be the worst move to the left I could ever make.

    Therein lies a problem...we may be the minority within the minority{although most GOP voters are pro life IMO} but a large chuck of the 25 million hard core voting Pro Lifers will not change, party be damned.

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  13. I have long wondered why we choose to put labels on ourselves and others and then either claim or deny that they really apply to us. However, I see people stating that they are Conservative of Liberal and not qualifying the status of either position.
    To me, this kind of polarization ignores the fact that some liberal things are good and some conservative things are good. I wonder why we would even argue about them.
    I really have no wish to debate with anyone who cannot respect the various truths each side (in any discussion) has as their points are brought forth. There is no such thing, IMHO, as an absolute in human relations of any kind. Opinions can only be dented by facts (such as: Illegal aliens cost every American taxpayer a huge wad of dough.) This is a non-arguable fact.
    PJ (Man?Woman?) has got a bit of a purple pen for my taste, although he makes for fun reading.
    I still prefer your writing, Buck.

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  14. Pat: I'm pro-life, too... in the sense that I would NEVER be a party to abortion. But I also believe abortion is one of those "morality" issues (as in: "you can't legislate..."), most especially in the first few weeks of a pregnancy up until the end of the first trimester. Abortion is perhaps THE hot button issue in the Culture Wars and it's one I really don't like to discuss, at all.


    Cat sez: To me, this kind of polarization ignores the fact that some liberal things are good and some conservative things are good. I wonder why we would even argue about them.

    Bingo! Nail, head. I don't think I know anyone who is straight "party line" in each and every respect, YrHmblScrb included.

    And thank you VERY much for your closing line... more blushing, here! ;-)

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  15. I wonder how many Brits do feel this way? If Britain were to hold a mock election for OUR president, who would they have chosen? I'm just wondering if people like us are a dying breed.

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  16. Jenny: I'm obviously not as "in touch" with the Brits as much as I used to be, but I'm sure a sizable minority really DO feel like Mr. Hitchens. The Left (Labour) has been in power for a looong time but the Conservatives are resurgent and may take the next election... the pendulum is due to swing Right any ol' time now.

    If the Brits could have voted I think Obama might have won by a factor of 80-20. Pres. Bush is pretty hated... which is a manifestation of the liberal media there, too. My opinion, of course.

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  17. I read O'Rourke's piece -- and love it, for a whole bunch of reasons. Thanks, Buck!

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Just be polite... that's all I ask.