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TheGreatOne
Saturday, 29 May 2004
Anti-Americanism
Appeasement is No Answer to Anti-Americanism
By Daniel G. Jennings
One of the greatest problems facing the United States today is the threat of Anti-Americanism, that is the widespread hatred of America and Americans by people around the world. Fortunately we can overcome Anti-Americanism by holding fast to our values and beliefs and keeping our faith in America.
The worst thing America can do at this time in history is to listen to the Anti-Americans and give into their demands as many American intellectuals would have us do. Our media, the Peace Movement, many intellectuals, university professors, movie stars and others claim that America itself is responsible for Anti-Americanism. They believe the claims of the Anti-Americans who brand America and Americans as greedy, warlike, ignorant, uncouth, barbaric, militaristic, materialistic, shallow and imperialistic. Then they claim that America can only overcome these stereotypes by appeasement that is giving into every demand of the Anti-Americans.
Appeasement won't end Anti-Americanism because Anti-Americanism is a collection of prejudices based upon the beliefs of bigots around the world the rather than a legitimate set of grievances. All Americans who try to appease the Anti-Americans do is to empower and embolden the Anti-Americans by legitimizing their beliefs. When we agree with them, the Anti-Americans will hate us all the more for they'll see that we're weak and easy to manipulate.
The answer to Anti-Americanism is for America to stick to its beliefs and values and above all to remain America. That is we must remain the land of freedom, progress, opportunity, justice and hope rather than let our nation be turned into a cheap copy of a European welfare state.
The world today is in the throes of an incredible technological, political, social and cultural revolution that is transforming all aspects of human life for the better. Tyrannies and oligarchies of all sorts have been replaced by democratic governments, capitalism is replacing socialism, feudalism, communism and other primitive and ineffective economic systems, technology and science are improving the lives of almost everyone on the planet, people are enjoying unprecedented levels of social, political and cultural freedom and economic opportunity, and all of these revolutions began in America. The economic and political systems that are transforming the world began in America, so did the social revolutions, equality and empowerment of women, racial equality, gay rights, all began in the United States.
The hatred of the United States embodied in Anti-Americanism is the hatred of this revolution, the hatred of the modern world. To appease the Anti-Americans is admit that we hate America and we don't want to see the world transformed. To give into Anti-Americans is to say that we want the people of the world to live in a hell of poverty, oppression, ignorance and violence. To appease the Anti-Americans is to turn our back on the modern world and live in fear.
If we keep our faith in America and press on we'll overcome Anti-Americanism just as we overcame Communism and Nazism. Anti-Americanism will collapse like the tissue of lies that is leaving only a bad aftertaste, but only if we Americans resist it by keeping our faith in America.


Posted by thegreatone168 at 10:12 PM MDT
Thursday, 20 May 2004
Future of the Arab World
Future of the Arab World
By Daniel G. Jennings
The major conflict in the world today is the battle between certain radical elements in the Arab World and the modern world as embodied by the United States of America. This is the conflict that led to the Sept. 11 atrocity and the war in Iraq. So it is important to ask: what will the future of the Arab World and its conflict with the United States be?
Now my guess is the next development in the Arab world will be a sort of radical secularism that is secularism forced on the people by the government. This is what happened in the West: the religious fanaticism of the Reformation, the Counter-Reformation and the Wars of religion in the 16th Century were followed by the Enlightenment and the French Revolution. The French Revolution saw an attempt to abolish the Church and to impose a religion of reason on France.
Younger people in the Islamic World fed up with the intolerant religious fanaticism that characterizes today's Islam could very well turn to a rigid government imposed secularism. Polls indicate that these people prefer modern concepts of human rights to the Koran. There is already popular anger at traditionalists among young Muslims on the Internet and elsewhere. We have already seen vicious and violent government crackdowns on Islamic fundamentalists in Egypt and Algeria. We've also seen militaries in Algeria and Turkey force Islamic parties from power in the name of Secularism.
If such radical secularism breaks out in the Arab world, the effect on the rest of the world could be catastrophic. Al Qaeda started as Islamic Jihad, an Egyptian radical group dedicated to Islamic revolution. Islamic Jihad failed in its efforts to overthrow Egypt's secular government fled to Afghanistan and morphed into Al Qaeda. Then at the urging of its new leader and financier the Saudi millionaire Bin Laden redirected its attacks at America.
Al Qaeda's campaign against the West is not the result of the popularity of Islamic radicalism in the Arab World. It is the result of the failure of the Islamic revolutionaries to impose their will on their societies. Unable to win their war at home they exported it abroad.
This means that any future civil war between Arab secularists and Islamists would spill over into the rest of the world. Especially if America and other non-Islamic nations are seen as taking sides in such a war.
One thing is certain the Arab world will remain a source of strife and turmoil for decades to come. The challenge will be finding means of preventing that strife and turmoil from degenerating into all out warfare. Warfare that could destroy the Arab World and the non-Arab World alike.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 7:53 AM MDT
Tuesday, 11 May 2004
Iraq Prisoners and the Presidential Election
Could Iraqi Prisoner Abuse Affect the Presidential Election?
By Daniel G. Jennings
The Iraqi Prisoner Abuse scandal has the chattering classes, the European intellectuals, the media, and the Arab street all a blather but it doesn't seem to be having much effect here at home. Average Americans are paying no attention to the scandal.
So could this scandal have an impact upon the Presidential election? Yes, even though the American public is ignoring the scandal.
Bush's whole campaign is based upon the premise that he is a war time president who will deliver strong leadership like FDR did during World War II. If Bush caves in to international pressure and changes policies in Iraq the public could see him as weak. If Bush is seen as listening to intellectuals, the Europeans and peace activists his credibility is gone. There will be no difference between him and Kerry in terms of foreign policy.
An even graver danger to Bush could occur if American military personnel are put on trial for these crimes. Today, the GIs in the pictures are faceless monsters, but they won't be after weeks of trial and legal action. High priced defense attorneys and public relations firms will undoubtedly rush to the GIs' aid. The conservative media led by talk show hosts will join the charge and the regular media will jump on the bandwagon.
Television will be flooded with pictures of the GIs as kids, taking their first communion, going to the prom, playing high school football. We'll see the accused GIs' parents, teachers, clergy, friends, spouses, children, grandparents and countless others all over the talk show circuit telling the public what a wonderful boy or girl GI Joe and GI Jane is. At the same time, defense attorneys will be there saying that the real culprits are evil faceless CIA agents or the whole thing is a hoax.
The result will be that average Americans guilty or not will look like the victims of a witch hunt. The public will sympathize with the men and women in uniform and Bush will look like a modern day Lyndon Johnston sacrificing military personnel for politics.
This could create a real opening for John Kerry, which Kerry already seems to be exploiting. Kerry has all but said that as President he would accept responsibility for the prisoner scandal and not sacrifice military personnel.
Kerry who has no real strategy for Iraq and a history of anti-war activism can't match Bush in foreign policy. Yet he could make Bush look like the weakling if he plays his cards right as the Prisoner Abuse Scandal unfolds.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 9:21 AM MDT
Monday, 3 May 2004
Liberals at War
Guess What Liberals, We've Been at War for a Long Time!!
By Daniel G. Jennings
One of the few advantages of reading The Denver Post every morning is to see the idiocy of liberal thought processes in action. Case in point the column by Cindy Rodriguez that occasionally appears in the B section, or the Tuesday, April 26, 2004, column "Nightmare of Iraq War far from over."
The gist of the column is that Rodriguez recently woke up and learned from National Public Radio the astonishing fact that the United States is at war with Iraq. She is suddenly concerned because American military personnel, working class types she probably wouldn't talk to are dying over there. This one year after the American invasion and occupation of Iraq. Where has Ms. Rodriguez been for the last year? Or for the matter for the last 14 years? America has been at war with Iraq since 1990 when Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait and started threatening our oil supply. We fought a major land campaign against Iraq in 1991 and were fighting air battles with Iraq between 1991 and 2003.
On another level America has been at war with extremist elements in the Arab and Islamic World since the early 1980s. These extremists have been killing American military personnel on a regular basis since then. These extremists have blown up our embassies overseas, and have even attacked America twice since then. On Sept. 11, they killed nearly 3,000 people in the heart of New York City. If the destruction of the World Trade Center wasn't evidence that we were at war with these people what was? No Saddam didn't commit that atrocity but other extremists who are now waging war on us in Iraq did.
Yet, Ms. Rodriguez can't see this, she blames George W. Bush for deceiving the American people. According to her it was George Bush and his lies that created this war, not the Koran thumping morons and Arab nationalist idiots who started the violence. This is nonsense Bush didn't start the war he committed the terrible crime (in the liberal mind) of actually trying to fight and win it.
Her broken record says Bush's lies caused this war, so if we just vote Mr. Bush out in November the terrible war will go away. This is garbage if Mr. Kerry is elected the war will still be going on, then who will we blame then? Will in two or three or years the liberals brand Mr. Kerry an evil warmonger and try to destroy him for waging war on the terrorists?
Ms. Rodriguez's column demonstrates what is wrong with the news media and the liberal elite that runs much of it today. They can't see what's happening out in the world beyond America's borders: we are at war. Vicious fanatics are trying to kill us and destroy our way of life. They will stop at nothing to destroy us and they will die for the chance to do that. The only way we'll probably be able to stop them is to kill them or beat them on the battlefield.
So why do liberals have so much trouble seeing this obvious reality? Simple, it contradicts the whole view of the world taught them by their college professors. The professors said if we just embraced multiculturalism, placed our faith in the UN and tried to be nice to everyone else we would have world peace. The existence of vicious fanatics that want to destroy us and the UN disproves these fantasies and places their whole world view in jeopardy.
The liberal reaction to this reality is to stick one's head in the sand and pretend it isn't so. Then when that fails to look for a bogie man to blame the mess upon, since Islamic terrorists couldn't have started the war the Republicans must have.
Hopefully the liberals will wake up and in the near future realize that the only way to end the nightmare of this horrible war is to win it by actually defeating the bad guys on the battlefield. I believe that'll happen, the problem is that it'll take the dead bodies of hundreds perhaps thousands more Americans and probably tens of thousands of Arabs, civilian and military to convince these people that we're at war and that we have to fight.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 8:55 AM MDT
Tuesday, 30 March 2004
Ideology Paralyzes Politics
Ideology Paralyzes Politics
By Daniel G. Jennings
The major contradiction of modern American politics is this: politics and politicians seem to be almost totally driven by ideology at time when average people seem to be almost completely disinterested in ideology. So why has ideology become the dominant force in American politics, when most Americans don't care about ideology or are hostile to ideology?
Part of the answer to our question lies in the liberal arts departments of our universities where most of our politicos and their retainers receive their educations. Taking their cue from mostly Marxist European intellectuals, modern liberal arts faculties base all their judgements upon ideology. Everything is analyzed for its ideological content including philosophy, education, history, law, art and literature. Art is not valued for its artistic content, history is evaluated or reinterpreted along ideological lines, education, literature and entertainment are reduced to methods of ideological indoctrination.
Since most American politicians are lawyers, teachers, journalists or clergy who received most of their education from such liberal arts faculties they too view the world through an ideological lens. That is they base every judgement on ideology and evaluate every occurrence for its ideological meaning. Even the basic thinking of many politicians is grounded in ideology rather than practical experience, which leads to a world view based upon ideology and little else.
Another part of the answer lies in the media which is also ideologically driven. Since most journalists are the products of the same liberal arts schools as the politicians they tend to the view the world through an ideological lens. That is the journalists evaluate the politicians and their actions through ideology. Politicians actions are judged by ideology and nothing else. The practical effects and actions of political agendas are never considered, only the ideological charged campaign slogans are reported upon.
Worse, the ideologically conscious journalists tend to have a good guys bad view of the world. Those politicians whose ideology they like are the good guys capable of doing no wrong, while those politicians whose ideology they dislike are the villains capable of doing no good. When a politician whose ideology is unpopular does something good or constructive it is ignored, when a politician who passes the ideological litness test does something bad, it is ignored.
Ideology is also entertaining, moderate hard working politicians who get things done and work for the common good are often boring. Extremists and ideologues are almost always colorful and interesting. They are also combative and put on a good show for the TV audience so they are invited back to the television interview shows time and time again. That is why cable TV can't get enough of Al Sharpton, Pat Buchanan, Jesse Jackson, James Carville, Anne Coulter and countless others. Their ideologically charged squabbling is entertaining even if it is essentially meaningless.
Beyond the media and the new breed of university educated politician, the corn belt intellectuals whose major expertise is raising money, who have replaced the old time politicos who were often practical self made men there is the new American intelligentsia. The gigantic new universities created by the GI Bill have given rise to a highly educated class of pseudo intellectuals, mostly professional people like lawyers and doctors, these intellectuals take their cue from college professors and European intellectuals who have taught them to view everything through the tinted glasses of ideology.
This new class of intellectuals is very interested in politics and demands that politicians pander to their crackpot notions. These people are more likely to vote, make campaign donations and work on political campaigns so politicians listen to them. The Internet and other modern tools of communications allow the new intellectuals to network and coordinate their activities on a nationwide basis. Even though they are only a small segment of society, the intellectuals can shape political dialog and set the political agenda. Naturally, this agenda must reflect their ideology or they will ignore politics.
This discussion gives rise to a more important question: how can Americans rescue our politics from the narrow straight jacket of ideology and create a political culture based upon practicality and concern for the common good?

Posted by thegreatone168 at 10:37 PM MST
Monday, 15 March 2004
Bush Kerry and History

Bush, Kerry and History
By Daniel G. Jennings
Since I am a student of history, I have to wonder whose side is history on in this year's Presidential election: George W. Bush or John Kerry? That's a difficult one to answer because history appears to be against both the incumbent President and his opponent.
History is against Bush because no president who got the United States involved in an avoidable major war has been reelected since William McKinley in 1900. McKinley got America into the Spanish American War in 1898 but that was a short conflict with few casualties and little effect on the home front, there was no draft and casualties were minimal. Since then every President who got America involved in an avoidable major foreign conflict lost reelection or was driven from office.
Woodrow Wilson didn't run in 1920 after World War I, and the candidate from his party the Democrats lost. Harry Truman decided not to run in 1952 after the Korean War's unpopularity became apparent, Lyndon Johnson decided not to run in 1968 after seeing the unpopularity of the Vietnam War and George Bush I, lost reelection in 1992 after getting America involved in the Gulf War. The public forgave FDR for World War II largely because the enemy started the conflict and he tried to avoid it, or more precisely claimed he was trying to avoid it.
Of course the current conflict is very different from Vietnam, Korea and World War I, the really unpopular twentieth century wars; there is no draft and no mass casualties, only 600 hundred casualties compared to 60,000 in Vietnam. This current war bears an uncanny similarity to the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection that followed it. The war was a limited one fought by an all volunteer military force and it didn't impact the lives of average Americans. Like the Spanish American War, the Iraq War was followed by a lengthy and vicious guerrilla war and nation building effort the Philippine Insurrection. A war that was unpopular with the intellectual elite but supported or ignored by average Americans.
After that war, William McKinley was able to win reelection easily in 1900. McKinley won largely on domestic issues, he was able to easily best William Jennings Bryan the Howard Dean of his day as he had already done in 1898.
Of course, there was one difference, women who are less tolerant of war than men, didn't have the vote in 1900, they have the vote in 2004. Whether this will make a difference I don't know but it could tip the scales against Bush.
History has three major strikes against John Kerry: he is an incumbent US Senator, he's running against an incumbent president and he's from Massachusetts, a Northeastern state. No incumbent US Senator has been elected President since John F. Kennedy in 1960 and he barely won that election. Voters don't like Congress very much, only two Senators were elected President in the 20th Century Harding and Kennedy and no member of the House of Representatives has won the White House since John Garfield in 1880. Voters refer incumbent Presidents, governors, vice presidents and war heros to legislators. Ex legislators like Truman, Nixon and George Bush get a pass but only after they've served in other offices.
Nor has any Northeastern candidate been elected since Kennedy in 1960, and JFK won that battle with Richard Nixon by a hare. Since 1964, every elected President has been from a Southern, or Western Sunbelt State. Lyndon Johnson and the Bushes were from Texas, Nixon and Reagan were from California, Carter was from Georgia and Clinton was from Arkansas. Every candidate from a Northern or Midwestern state has lost, Humphrey, McGovern, Ford, Mondale, Dukakis, and Dole.
An incumbent President is also a tough obstacle to overcome. In 1912, Woodrow Wilson only beat Taft because a popular third party candidate Theodore Roosevelt (a popular ex president) split the vote, FDR only beat Herbert Hoover because of the Great Depression, Carter defeated Ford because of Watergate, Reagan beat Carter because of a bad economy and Carter's perceived weakness in the face of the Soviet threat only Bill Clinton beat an incumbent President without unforseen circumstances. Since nothing has turned the public against Bush the way the depression turned the public against Hoover and Watergate soured the public on Ford Kerry will have a tough battle.
The question is which candidate will be able to overcome history; Bush or Kerry. I'm betting on Bush because seems to favor him.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 5:37 PM MST
Wednesday, 10 March 2004
The SHIELD
Mood:  energetic
Capsule TV Review: The SHIELD

By Daniel G. Jennings

Forget "The Sopranos," the best drama on American TV is "The SHIELD" a brilliant hour long drama that appears on the FX cable channel every Tuesday night.

The SHIELD is the best and most brilliant thing on American TV today because it is utterly relevant to the modern American experience in a way that the Sopranos is not. Basically the SHIELD is a drama about the police officers who work out of a decrepit Los Angeles precinct house but it is far more than that. On it's most basic level the SHIELD is a brilliant and provocative examination of the present day American experience.

The centerpiece of the show is veteran actor Michael Chiklis (who won an Emmy for best actor in a dramatic series a couple of years back shocking the entertainment industry), Chiklis plays Vic Mackey, a corrupt white police detective who leads an elite police squad in present LA. Mackey is a brutal, greedy and corrupt cop with a heart of gold who wants to do the right thing for the people he is pledged to protect and cash in at the same time.

The SHIELD is effective and entertaining because it is relevant to the present day American experience in a way that the Sopranos is not. The Sopranos are a whiff of nostalgia, an old time mob family from the old neighborhood transferred to the suburbs, the SHIELD is so starkly contemporary that it is frightening.

The cops on the SHIELD are all ruthless middle class professionals who are more interested in advancing their personal positions than anything else. The corrupt white working class cops simply want to steal enough money to leave town and forget about their jobs. The smarmy educated Hispanic police Captain is more interested in running for city council and becoming a rich and influential politician than doing his job. The arrogant intellectual detective is more interested in clearing lots of cases than the people whom he is supposed to protect. The white female cop is more interested in protecting her job which she worked hard to get than enforcing the law. The sexually ambiguous tough guy black cop is more interested in protecting his he man reputation than following orders.

The show centers around Vic Mackey, Mackey is the highly corrupt leader of a vicious squad of ruthless LA police detectives. Mackey, a good cop who wants to protect the people of Los Angles is also corrupt and self serving. Mackey is trying to enrich himself through involvement in the drug trade and other crimes. Yet we quickly learn that Mackey is not evil, his corruption is motivated by concern for his family and his retarded son who can't be helped by the public school system. The only way Mackey's kid can learn is in expensive private schools. Mackey pays for these by killing gangsters and stealing their loot. Mackey's violent and ruthless methods are tolerated by his superiors because he takes lots of bad guys off the streets. He often goes after criminals that other cops are afraid or unwilling to do anything about. Mackey isn't a villain, he is a decent man whose corruption and violence may actually be justifiable.

Unlike the Sopranos the SHIELD is set in a cotemporary Western American city where race and other traditional American distinctions of life mean little or nothing. The greedy black gang banger and the corrupt white cop do business together because they want the money the drug trade can bring in. The sleazy Hispanic police Captain is more interested in getting into political office and winning the power and money that comes with it than the people in the barrio. A race riot in the ghetto is sparked by a crooked Irish American police official who diverts cops away from a crime ridden apartment house in order to drive down property values so he can buy up real estate at a low price. The only things the characters on the SHIELD care about are money, power and personal honor.

The SHIELD is a frightening view of the dog eat dog existence in the modern American urban jungle. A place where none of the traditional values or stereotypes seem to apply.

The show is made all the more frightening by the presence of vicious foreign gangsters, Armenians who have far more money than any of the Americans. The third world Armenians have a far easier time adapting and thriving in this post modern American urban landscape than the native born Americans. The only way Mackey and his boys can make real money is to rob the Armenians then live with the fear that their utterly sadistic and psychotic boss will return in search of his cash.

The SHIELD is the best show on present day American TV, the only problem is that it is too provocative a work to become the kind of pop culture phenomenon that the Sopranos is.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 8:27 AM MST
Thursday, 4 March 2004
Movies The Passion
Movie Analysis: "The Passion of the Christ"
By Daniel G. Jennings
Okay, I did it I went and saw the controversial movie of the moment, Mel Gibson's "Passion of the Christ. " And yes I enjoyed it, this is a great and in its own way very interesting and entertaining movie.
Even though I enjoyed the movie, I didn't run out buy a Bible, get born again and start going to church nor did I put on a Brownshirt and start beating up Jews in the streets. Yes, this is a great movie that presents a theologically accurate version of the last day of Christ's life that's very faithful to the Biblical account but it's not powerful enough to profoundly change people's lives.
The reports of the Passion being full of vicious ethnic stereotypes are also true the movie is full of nasty Jewish priests and seedy Jewish figures who condemn Jesus, yet its portrayal of Italians is just as bad. The most vicious and ugly characters in the movie are the brutal Roman soldiers who are visibly and blatantly Italian in both manner and actions. If anything this movie is more anti-Italian than it is Anti-Semitic, these sadistic Roman soldiers who spend all their time whipping and beating Jesus make the mob crew on the Sopranos seem like wonderful human beings in comparison.
There are also some nasty stereotypes of gays both of King Herod and his court and of Satan who looks and acts gay. Satan's appearances in this film are a very effective but decidedly unbiblical touch Satan doesn't appear in any of the Gospel accounts of Jesus's last days. Interestingly enough neither the Italian or Gay stereotypes have made headlines.
It might also be noted that Jesus and the Apostles as presented in this film are completely and totally Jewish in manner and appearance. Jesus is even called Rabbi and the potentially most despicable Jewish character in the film, Judas; is shown in a decidedly sympathetic light.
Okay onto the movie itself Mel Gibson is a great film maker combining both traditional Hollywood storytelling and modern cinematic style. Gibson, like Quenton Tarantino and Ridley Scott, is a master of the modern art of visual storytelling as learned from Spaghetti Westerns, Samurai epics and Hong Kong action flicks. Instead of copying the traditional boring big budget Bible epic with its Sunday school theology and sanitized history Gibson takes his story from the real Gospels and uses avant garde film making technique to tell the story.
Just as he did in Braveheart, Gibson uses modern Asian cinematic techniques to recast a story taken form Western Civilization. By doing so, Gibson gives us a glimpse of one of the underpinnings of our civilization in a totally new and frightening way.
By emphasizing the violence of Jesus's death in a gory and bloody way, Mel is reminding us that Christianity; like its sister faiths of Islam and Judaism, is an inherently violent religion. Historically Christianity has not been the gentle faith of United Methodist Sunday Schools it has been a violent religion of holy wars, inquisitions, crusades and witch hunts. Most, if not a majority of American Christians prefer the historic Christianity of the bloody cross to the boring platitudes that many of our college educated clergy pump out. The success of this movie and of fundamentalist Christian churches proves that.
Gibson has made a great movie that lives up to the spirit of Christianity, (in the Bible Jesus said he came to divide not unite) the question is whether America is ready for this film or not. My guess it is, there won't be anti-Semitic violence in America because of the Passion (most modern Anti-Semites base their hatred on elaborate conspiracy theories about rich Jews manipulating government and the economy not tales of Jesus's death). However, I bet there will be some nasty incidents after this film plays before less sophisticated audiences in Latin America, Africa and Eastern Europe.
My guess is that the Passion will become a classic but it's influence on popular culture will be far less than people imagine. It's effect on audiences is interesting, when I saw it the audience was quiet like that in a church. Which means they were could have been caught up in the movie, frozen in thought and action because they were horrified by it or thinking about what they were watching. The film is having a profound effect on thought and behavior what effect that is I don't know.
The major change is whether this movie will change the way Hollywood looks at Christianity? I don't know that answer to that one.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 10:43 AM MST
Tuesday, 2 March 2004
Who is the Conservative??
Who is the Conservative: Bush or Kerry?
By Daniel G. Jennings
There is one interesting question we must ask about this year's presidential election: who is the conservative and who is the liberal?
A quick analysis of the candidates' behavior shows us that this is not a silly question because Republican George W. Bush is behaving like a liberal and Democrat John Kerry is acting like a conservative. That is if we consider a liberal someone who takes bold and radical steps for change and a conservative somebody who defends and upholds the status quo at all costs.
Since his election Bush has taken one radical step after another: he proposed giving government funds to religious charities (faith based initiative), greatly increased federal aid to education, put the federal government in the business of evaluating and regulating public schools (No Child Left Behind), invaded Afghanistan after Sept. 11, adopted a new policy of seizing foreign terror suspects and imprisoning them in US military facilities, greatly expanded the federal government's police powers, launched a preemptive war in Iraq, adopted a new policy of nation rebuilding, ran up a vast deficit, proposed the construction of a moon base and a manned mission to Mars, and announced his support for the most radical constitutional amendment since Prohibition. Even Bush's seemingly conservative actions are radical in nature the faith based initiative would be a complete break with American traditions while the 28th Amendment which would ban gay marriage would take the unprecedented step of using constitutional law to set social policy (something nor president has done since prohibition in the 1920s).
Kerry at the same time has acted like a conservative defending the status quo of affirmative action and public education, demanding a return to traditional foreign trade practices, demanding a return to traditional democracy, attacked Bush's expansion of federal police powers, attacking Bush's policy in Iraq but demanding the use of American troops to shore up an existing foreign government in Haiti, he's even attacked Bush's out of control spending. In terms of social policy Kerry has opposed both the radical step of gay marriage and the radical policy of using the constitution to ban gay marriage. Kerry hasn't proposed an expansion of environmental law and protection simply a continuation of existing policies. The only radical measure Kerry has backed has been national healthcare, something that has been Democratic policy since Harry Truman's day fifty-five years ago.
The old rules and definitions no longer seem to apply to American politics. The world is turned upside down, the Left-wing Democrat John Kerry is mindlessly defending the status quo, while the Right-wing Republican George W. Bush is trying his best to tear it down.
What sort of nation will these new politics create? I don't know but it'll be a very different nation from the one we're living in today.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 8:42 PM MST
Monday, 1 March 2004
Dateline Hollywood
Dateline Hollywood,
Nerd of the Wings Director and Best Picture Winner Peter Jackson was astounded to learn from the other individuals at the Academy Awards that there is something called a razor and people called hair stylists and barbers who will actually cut people's hair. He said he wished somebody had told him this before the Oscar ceremony. In other news movie goers are advised to avoid the vast number of very boring fantasy epics full of bad special effects that will soon be hitting theaters.
Also in Hollywood, Mel Gibson apologized to the public in advance for the dozens of very boring, very long and very bad mind numbing Bible epics that will soon be flooding into theaters.

Posted by thegreatone168 at 8:19 AM MST

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