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An
Open Letter to Conservatives
by
P.M. Carpenter
Dear friends on the right:
How do you live with yourselves?
For years you fumed and sputtered about a dissembling Democrat occupying
the White House, a man so vile and unprincipled that from his wretched
beginnings he evaded service to his country and experimented with illegal
substances. Later, in the nation's highest office, he was willing to
say anything and do anything to hold power. The pattern never varied.
He was corrupt to the bone. From start to finish, Slick Willie's career
disgusted you. You demanded change; good, old-time-values conservative
change.
Now ponder what you have. Reflect for a moment, with as much soul-searching
as you can muster, on how in heaven's name you can tolerate George
W. Bush. From youthful indiscretions to presidential abuses, here's
a man who has surpassed his predecessor in every way. Yet you offer
Dubya nothing but thumbs up.
How is that? No kidding, most of us on this side are sincerely baffled.
Your stock apology for Bush, I suppose, might be that politics is
a rough game requiring considerable corner cutting, compromises and
occasional sell-outs. George does nothing that Bill didn't practice,
if not pioneer, from triangulating his little heart out to vulgarly
catering to his base to shifting positions at will. The question then
becomes one of two wrongs and all that. That's not a smart defense
and I doubt you want to go there.
But the apologies get even stickier, don't you think, when one contemplates
modern conservatism's philosophical foundations that George W. is supposed
to uphold. Its bedrock principles were laid down in the late 1950s
and early 1960s, an era in which conservative strategists melded the
right's theretofore competing philosophies of economic libertarianism
and Christian traditionalism. In the realm of libertarianism alone,
however, Bush has chucked even the pretense of adherence.
From committing free-trade apostasies to promulgating big-government
programs, he has bounced around with only self-serving politics as
his guide. If you're a true believer in individualism and free markets
-- the holy grails of conservative economic doctrine -- over collectivism
and protectionism, you have got to think that W. is the last man on
Earth to be leading your charge.
And then there's Christian traditionalism, a big part of which, naturally,
entails the Christian creed, a big part of which just as naturally
entails the unwavering belief that truth shall set you free. Truth
-- the whole ball of wax, including speaking it and upholding personal
integrity in dealing with others. Really, fellows, it's hard to write
about this in relation to W. with a straight face.
We needn't review all of Mr. Bush's abortive encounters with the truth
to make the point. There aren't enough megabytes of memory on this
website for that anyway. But if nothing else, one would think merely
the most recent revelation of his programmatic dishonesty would be
enough to make honest members of the right finally -- finally -- give
Bush a thumbs down.
I speak of course about former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill's disclosures
on the timing -- or should I say scheduling -- of the Iraq War; disclosures
that are, in a word, irrefutable. Not even the White House has attacked
O'Neill's message. It has, true to form, only attacked the messenger.
By now the story is well known. As O'Neill related the out-of-school
tale, the president lied about the causes and timing of his preemptive
military planning against Iraq. It makes no difference that you believe
it was right to take down Saddam Hussein. The essential point is that
Bush lied -- to us and the world -- every pre-invasion step of the way.
He didn't lie to save American lives or deceive a legitimate foe; he
lied to achieve a predetermined goal established with no national debate
and formulated with the most questionable of motives. His was a dictatorial
act at variance with every democratic impulse and the entire spirit
of personal integrity at the heart of Christian precepts.
So again I ask you members of the right: How do you justify support
for a man so steeped in the Clintonian kind of politics you once claimed
to despise? -- and so at odds with the most basic conservative foundations
you claim to revere?
Extolling hypocrisy and praising crass violations of principle aren't
customary rallying cries in a presidential campaign, but what are you
left with? Excuse the naivete, but a lot of us would really like to
know.
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