Newt: Bush is worse than Carter

29 May 2007 at 10:02 pm | In Compassionate Conservatism, Cultural Decay, Philosophy, Politics, Rudy Giuliani, pro-choice republican | Leave a Comment

Newt Gingrich takes the Bush administration to school in an article in the New Yorker by comparing his incompetence to that of Jimmy Carter. Well I have to say the world is not as bad as it was under Carter, the incompetency of the Bush administration makes Carter’s look competent.

Carter and Bush both suffer from the same problem: They are both idealists blindly guided by their religious convictions. Carter believes everyone can live and peace and people are not evil. Bush believes its his crusade to set the world free and that it can be done. Both men are dangerously delusional.

Fundamentally, what the United States needs at the moment is someone who is competent and a realist. Not someone who governs with the love of the New Testament, but the realpolitik of Machiavelli and Hobbes. America’s problems cannot be solved by loving hugs and hoping people want to be free. We need someone who will show our enemies who is boss by restoring the fear of the Global Leviathan (the USA) and setting the American people free from the nanny state.

Newt also has a nice analysis of how Rove politics of religious warfare are bad for the Republican Party and America in general. Specifically he mentions an incident close to my heart – the Terri Schiavo saga. Remember in early 2005 I said this would be bad for the Republicans. Well Newt takes people to town for this one like I did over two years ago.

Who is worse?

20 May 2007 at 9:25 pm | In Compassionate Conservatism, Foreign Policy, Politics | 1 Comment

Who will history judge as a worse President, Bush or Carter?

I love to rip the Bush administration for not being effective or center-right enough, but Carter is easily the worst President of the last fifty years for a number of reasons:

1) Bush has got us into a war in Iraq, but we have not seen three dozen nations around the world overran by tyrannical regimes.

2) Bush came to office with a big mess dating back to the Carter years. Remember Hussein came to power in Iraq in 1978. Afghanistan was invaded by the Soviets in 1979. And the Islamic revolution in Iran happened in 1978-1979.

3) The economy is not in the tank. Unemployment was three times its current rate during the Carter years. Taxes were three times higher. Most important, the US GDP was shrinking during the Carter years.

Bush is a bad president, but when compared to Carter, he is pretty good.

People need to quit being afraid to be pro-choice…

11 April 2007 at 10:50 am | In Abortion, Compassionate Conservatism, Mitt Romney, Politics, Rudy Giuliani, pro-choice republican | Leave a Comment

Formerly pro-choice Republican Fred Thompson used to be right on the abortion issue:

“Government should stay out of it. No public financing. The ultimate decision must be made by the woman. Government should treat its citizens as adults capable of making moral decisions on their own.”

What a shocking concept: The “government should treat its citizens as adults capable of making moral decisions on their own!”

Too many on both sides of the political spectrum have fallen into this game of supporting big government when it supports their ends.

Maybe we should all take Thompson’s former view to heart and return to the Goldwater Republican vision instead of this big government nanny state compassion crap we got now under President George “Without Competence” Bush.

This philosophical condundrum has pushed me to reconsider my primary vote. As much as I like Mitt Romney, he has bought too much into this religious right crap and is catering too much to them.

While I dislike the Giuliani gun stance, he is probably the most for limited government of any major candidate. Furthermore, he is not pandering to the religious right one bit. Instead, he is focusing on the issues that matter to him and keeping his convictions. I admire this a lot.

Another Reason I quit Michigan College Republicans and why I hate emotional politics Part 3: Disregarding the rule of law…

13 March 2007 at 11:13 am | In Compassionate Conservatism, Nanny State, Philosophy, Politics | Leave a Comment

Katie Wilcox has made it clear again the law does not matter when it interferes with the narrow ideology of the emotional people like her by sending out emails announcing Terri Schiavo’s father is actively supporting Sam Brownback. She has sent out a press release from the Brownback campaign describing this and it lashes out at other Presidential candidates who respect the rule of law. I found a copy of the press release printed online here.

Now do I really care if someone sends out emails like this? No, but it serves as another example of why I ended my involvement with the statewide College Republicans. Miss Wilcox is one of countless “College Republicans” around the state who are devoid of reason or respect for the rule of law. Instead of holding reverence for the rule of law like any rational individual, Miss Wilcox is clearly driven by raw emotion and could care less about the law. For these individuals, the law is only a means to achieving a clearly ideological end. When the law goes against the spirit of the ends they subscribe, the law becomes an obstacle.

Selectively following the law of the United States is inherently dangerous for many reasons that I discussed in the article.

As I stated in the past, this case is tragic, but the rule of law must always prevail. If you do not like the law, you change it not ignore it. These are basic tenants of a constitutional democracy like ours.

Mr. Compassion realizes his folly…

8 March 2007 at 11:03 pm | In Compassionate Conservatism, Middle East, Politics | 1 Comment

I have been a critic for many years of the “Compassionate Conservatism” agenda of President Bush because I feel it goes against realities of human nature and its not conservative to boot. The Godfather of Compassionate Conservatism Marvin Olasky has basically repudiated his own theory when it comes to foreign policy.

In a Townhall.com column, Olasky says some interesting things including the following:

I thought the war that’s now almost four years old could be different. With “smart bombs” we would destroy military targets and leave adjacent civilian structures unharmed. With smart rules of engagement we could minimize Iraqi civilian discomfort. In a sense, George W. Bush’s war would be a compassionate conservative war.

Union Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman would have scoffed at such a campaign. His doctrine was, “War is cruelty. You cannot refine it.” He ravaged Georgia and South Carolina in 1864 and 1865, but had he not shown how devastating total war was, the surrender of Robert E. Lee might have been followed by years of guerrilla warfare.

Exactly right, Sherman did not engage in a campaign of love. He engaged in a campaign of total war where the militaristic spirit of the rebellious south was destroyed. Never again would the people of the south consider engaging in rebellion and were forced to accept peace.

It turns out that Sherman was right: When an army gains an advantage, it has to pound away, not let up. My early misassumption — and far more important, the Bush administration’s — became evident quickly

Of course Sherman was right. He understood basic realities and use this to his advantage while Bush and the compassionate conservative movement are blinded by Utopian thoughts of mankind. Its good to have faith, but do not let it blind you to reality.

Reducing civilian casualties by letting terrorists escape seemed right for both humanitarian and political reasons, but we were dealing with a culture that interprets compassion as a lack of seriousness. Muhammad and his successors spread their faith not by being nice but by wielding the sword. Following the smashing American victory in 2003, we had the opportunity to impress upon Iraqis who wanted to be winners the idea that terrorism is for losers. We missed that opportunity.

There are humanitarian concerns and there are basic realities. Most of the time, they are not mutually exclusive. The Iraq War is case in point. In the long run, engaging in total war early on probably would have kept the total number of deaths lower. Now we have a protracted conflict where people are dying left and right.

Most importantly, we have allowed ourselves to be characterized as international idiots and weaklings. This is worse than the human toll in Iraq because it has given other tyrants the opportunity to engage in campaigns of denying fundamental rights and general destabilization.

Losing in a Christian culture is not fatal, because many of us grow up believing that seemingly lost causes are the ones worth fighting for. Jesus and the apostles, and their disciples, spread Christianity by losing in worldly terms, even to the point of crucifixion. But Islam does not have a theology of losing. Muslim terrorists require momentum.

Again you cannot let your Utopian ideals based on faith dictate policy. You must look at the fundamental beliefs of your enemy and prepare to deal with them accordingly. Knowing your enemy is more important than knowing yourself. Islam is a religion of absolutes. There is no middle ground of shades of gray. It is either black or white. Right or wrong. Believer or infidel.

Just as 19th Century poverty fighters thought they had to be tough to produce results, so Sherman believed his cause was right and his harshness in war compassionate over the long term: Opponents would see that guerrilla warfare was useless. Were our recent rules of engagement really compassionate, when they gave terrorists new life and led to thousands of civilian deaths in terrorist bombings?

Of course our initial action in Iraq was weak and pathetic considering the situation. When you start war, you must be willing to wage it. George W. Bush and his faith based idealism failed to recognize the need for crushing the spirit of our opponents before trying to transform them. Instead, he wanted to build a new order on top of the existing tyrantical ethos not capable of sustaining a liberal democracy.

Last week I echoed this in a Hillsdale Collegian op-ed. To read it, click here.

Best way to summarize this is through a Machiavelli quote: “It is better to be feared than loved.”

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