Embryonic Research
What are we to make of the recent news that adult stem cells can be altered to revert to their embryonic forms for purposes of disease research? If true it brings us back to the 2004 election, and the Michael J. Fox commercials and campaigning, along with the references to Christopher Reeve. The overt message was that Bush’s insistence that we not harvest human embryos was somehow a murder sentence to those suffering life-threatening diseases, or spinal-cord injuries.
Now not a peep, of course, about the latest developments. But perhaps the lesson applies to global warming as well: we presently simply don’t know the exact truth about heating up the planet, or why the furor has crested now. But it may well be true in 4-5 years that comprehensive new research may make our current hysteria likewise ‘dated.’
The Edwards Surge
It is hard to believe in the latest Edwards’ “win” in the debate and his surge in the campaign. His hypocrisy hinges on the fact that he has been a trial lawyer, who, like many, found a way to match and trump the corporate elite—and enjoyed the spoils of such success, from his cushy lifestyle to expansive estate.
So it is laughable to hear his populist rhetoric when most of his professional life was geared to finding a way to live rather high off the hog from litigation. When he talks of “two nations” it is always in terms of a zero-sum game—in which for every single rich man (like him), several others less fortunate must do with less.
On the other hand, should the field have had been crowded with hard leftists, and there was an opening on the moderate/right wing of the Democratic Party, surely Edwards would have reverted back to his Southern senator mode who voted for the war, gave fiery speeches about worries over WMD in Iraq, and was once considered a “centrist” in his senatorial campaign.
So why the latest attention? As a trial lawyer famous for his summations, he knows how to pontificate and debate and those skills are beginning to show. Second, Edwards has finally found a way to translate his past abilities in shaking down corporations through law suits into a sort of populist rage in which government under his aegis would suffer the same—sort of like 300 million of us having Edwards suing our government for every sort of monetary recompense for our collective suffering.
Hoi Clintones
Conventional wisdom has it that Al Gore erred in banishing Bill Clinton from his 2000 campaign, on grounds of the disgrace of Monica et al. But Gore captured the popular vote anyway, and he knew well that Clinton had never won 50% of the presidential vote. So the question of Bill emeritus as a plus or minus hasn’t been settled.
I would err on the side of muzzling him. Bringing him in now (or both the mother and daughter) to balance Oprah is risky—it makes Hillary look panicky and in need of her husband to protect or energize her. And as a narcissist and egomaniac, he inevitably talks ad nauseam about himself. He is a distraction since he is prone both to untruth (cf. his “always against the war” claims) and hyperbole (such as his latest praise of Hillary, “I thought she was the most gifted person of our generation”). Mark my words: in one of every two speeches on the stump, he will say something inaccurate, self-serving, or gratuitously mean, and thereby take another day of attention away from Hillary.
Then there is the Freudian thing, in which, as mentioned here a few posts ago, it is not altogether clear he wants her to win (cf. his supposed offer to her years ago: “You know, you really should dump me and go back home to Chicago or go to New York and take one of those offers you’ve got and run for office.”)
By bringing up “dump” we immediate get transported back to all the things that would have justified just that—and none of them are Hillary’s multifarious job opportunities without him. Just the opposite: we think that while she should have dumped him, she stayed with him because she always thought such proximity to such a slick and gifted politician might eventually land her “offers”—as it did.
The Illegal Immigration Land Mine
Democrats and their apologists keep insisting that either illegal immigration is not really an issue, or, that to the extent it is, it only wins Democrats Latino voters. Three things: as of yet the vast voting Latino bloc simply has not emerged; two, all the polls show overwhelming opposition to illegal immigration; three, African-Americans are against it, as are Asians; so legitimate worry over wide-open borders is hardly the equivalent to a Lou Dobbsian “nativist” spasm.
This is a losing issue for Democrats. In today’s press releases and punditry, the National Council of La Raza is often referenced and approvingly quoted. So those alleging that others are nativists or tribalists have now aligned themselves with The National Council of—the Race?
Doesn’t anyone grasp that La Raza (“the race”) should be a toxic term—a 60’s separatist and racist rubric that should have long ago dropped from popular American parlance? Even the recent Univision debate is a reminder why one wouldn’t wish an officially bi-lingual society: the moderator Jorge Ramos is a tribalist of the first order, and the format, with clumsy translations, ear-pieces falling out, and repetition and confusion, reminds one how intellectual commerce simply comes to a halt when everything must be translated rather than simply communicated in a shared language.
All this is so silly: an attritionist position is all Democrats need to mouth: close the border, allow Mexico its privileged 150,000 or so green carders and legal citizens, and then deal with the 10-15 million illegal aliens on an ad hoc basis: some illegals will wish to return home; some can be deported who committed crimes or just arrived; some will marry American citizens; and some long-standing residents with solid work records can stay and apply for earned citizenship. Once the hundreds of thousands stop coming each year, the pool is static and the formidable powers of American assimilation will make all these worries over multiculturalism and bilingualism moot.
As long as Republicans avoid advocating blanket, mass deportations, the issue favors them.
The Clintons as Demosthenes?
It was quite entertaining to hear the Clinton people drudge up Obama’s confessionals about using drugs, proclaiming they were now airing them only in worry that the Republican attack machine might do worse later—classical praeteritio (e.g., ‘as far as my opponent’s drug use, let us not mention it’).
In the past we have seen the use of apophasis, in something like ‘As far as stories about Obama’s Muslim madrassa past, we think such slurs are entirely inappropriate’ (the use of denial to make a positive statement). Before the campaign is over, every classical rhetorical trope will be exhausted—and we haven’t even seen yet the entrance of the nasty relief staff like Begala and Carville.
The Old War Horse
Republicans have serially lambasted McCain for positions deemed hardly conservative—like the immigration bill, McCain-Feingold, opposition to the tax cuts, and extremely nasty past attacks on Rumsfeld, well beyond what was civil. He also looks tired and old, and at times not well. His temper is a matter of record.
And yet—of all the candidates McCain seems the most direct and principled. He did the country an enormous service by advocating the surge, defending it, and never inching away when most last spring were. I enjoy watching him debate. His line about being ‘tied up’ about the time of Woodstock was poignant and the best of the campaign. Give his past injuries and health problems, and his age, his current break-neck pace is nothing short of miraculous. I couldn’t last a week doing what he does in a day.
Whatever his supposed flaws as a candidate, his military service and candor, along with his energy, intelligence, character, and wit, make him a national treasure. If he doesn’t make it (and I’m not yet convinced he won’t), he would be a great VP candidate or cabinet official.
Marines
Last weekend I spoke to a number of returning Marines in San Diego. Some were veterans of Haditha tangentially involved in the incident and libeled by Congressman Murtha (e.g., “there was no firefight, there was no IED that killed these innocent people. Our troops overreacted because of the pressure on them, and they killed innocent civilians in cold blood.”)
They were all courageous young men, who shared their experiences candidly, and had fought with honor and professionally even while they were pitted against savage jihadists who used women and children, both actively and passively, to kill them, while they were libeled at home by their own representatives. Many are leaving the corps, despite excellent records of combat. When one reviews the Haditha coverage and Murtha’s charges, one is struck once again by the media’s use of unnamed sources to spin and fabricate.
I can’t think of any war in which there have been so few atrocities, but so many false allegations of them—going back to the flushed Koran at Guantanamo to the New Republic’s falsities. And all the while either few if any apologies arise from the fabulists.
In the end the rantings of a Sean Penn, Dick Durbin, Moveon.org, Tim Robbins, Harry Reid, Ted Kennedy and so on become just a blur, a sad reflection of some very unhappy maladjusted people of influence who have attacked the very military who protects them for either partisan advantage or some twisted sort of psychological penance.



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12 Comments
Bowden Russell:It is a pitty the Republican field is so, well “flacid”. I wouldn’t give a plug nickel for any of them, except Hunter and Thompson a distant second.
The real tragedy is that Hillary will take this election in a walk. Not because she is such a strong candidate, but because of the failings of the “free-trade” neo-cons who’ve accelerated the nightmare of illegal immigration with their open borders philosophy.
The future of this country isn’t worth a plug nickel I heard a SAC General lament once. I’m afraid he’s been proven true.
Dec 13, 2007 - 11:27 pm Richard:Sir:
I ask you what is your opinion of the SAVE act? Does it have a chance first of all and secondly, do you think it would be enforced and made to work?
In response to B.Russel, I would only say that many conservatives did not care much for the NAFTA treaty that opened the way for the free-trade philosphy, as it has proven to be a one way street and more of a bonus for Mexico than it has ever been for the United States of America. However that being said, it is a pity that you feel this way about our future, for I feel that with a little guts and “can do” work ethics we can and will sovle many problems that face this nation.
Dec 14, 2007 - 4:03 am Zabrina:I disagree with such dour pessimism right now. Hillary’s looking shakier than ever and, as always, unPresidential.
There’s never been, as long as I’ve been alive, so many good reasons for hope for our country’s future, now that so many voices like Dr. Hanson’s are being heard.
As usual, Dr. Hanson, you’ve said a mouthful. Thanks for sharing these apt thoughts, so well expressed.
Dec 14, 2007 - 5:39 am Dave Begley - Omaha:I had hoped the good people of PA would turn John Murtha out of office, but then I read in the WSJ that Murtha’s government pork made him essentially one of the largest employers in his district.
How Murtha lives with himself is hard to believe.
And check out John Edwards’ financial disclosure statement. It is essentially all tax free bonds. The guy won’t even invest in equities.
I heard on NPR this AM some Iowa Dem claiming that the “Republicans don’t have any candidates” and her Republican friends were going to vote Dem.
If you tried, you couldn’t put up a bigger group of losers, blowhards and failures than the current Dem candidates for President.
At least Edwards has tried jury cases. The others haven’t even done that!
Dec 14, 2007 - 7:23 am Allison Aller:It’s going to be Obama. He is talented, fresh, has a classy wife; it is too bad he is utterly wrong about everything, but how wonderful it will be to see the Clintons resoundingly repudiated.
Loved what you said about McCain.
Dec 14, 2007 - 7:45 am Bowden Russell:If you guys think Hillary won’t be President then how come I can’t find a single Republican to take a bet on that?
All my Republican friends, and I am a Republican myself, keep telling me she won’t win. I then ask them to put their money where their mouth is and they refuse!
Action speaks louder than words in my book.
Dr. Hanson agrees with me though about Hillary being the next President. He isnt’ as certain as I am, but he’s there.
Dec 14, 2007 - 11:22 am Stephen R. Maloney:On the comment about the people of Pennsylvania turning out Murtha, it will happen if Murtha’s opponent, Lt. Col. William Russell can receive national support. There are many people in Murtha’s district that believe he’s reached the quintessence of daffiness. Visit Russell’s site at: http://williamrussellforcongress.com
steve
Dec 14, 2007 - 5:00 pm narciso:Actually you would better classify Clinton as a Sophist; a parser of
words, an equivocator. He would be Cleon or Thrasymichus; if he at least really believed in the value
of military intervention. One recalls that his first words after Sept. 11th; referenced the now toxic semiotic rationale of the Crusades while staffers close to him muttered he had been cheated of the crisis. There was an ongoing
crisis, a war declared as of 1996; but as his reaction to the December
1998 PDB shows he did little to respond to it. As the cancelled attacks on Tarnak Farms or the falconer’s camp with UBL and the Emirati prince, show.
Demosthenes, to whom nothing came easy,(the story of his practicing with pebbles under the tongue to overcome his stutter is legendary)was a courageous figure, ala McCain pre surge or Churchill argued for not surrendering to the Macedonian Phillips. An unpopular and not inherently safe position to take up.
Oprah is just another sign that we’re this close to the world of
Dec 14, 2007 - 7:44 pm Jimmy J.:Paddy Chayevsky’s Network. Dobbs,
Olbermann, & Beck, each seem to
be auditioning for Howard Beal. A disturbing concern comes to mind if
Hillary is Johnson/Muskie, then that
makes McCarthy/RFK. With jihadists angling for a new offense on the US mainland, and the MSM’s endless Moebius loop of the 00s as the 60s
reborn. (Whereas the comparison is better to the other 00s a century ago,) Well you can see where I’m
going here; and what the
consequences may be here and abroad
But for the grace of God, I could have also been a guest at the Hanoi Hilton with John McCain.
I think your comments about him are right on. He’s tough and a fighter. His directness and principles have not always endeared him to the party faithful, but he rather enjoys being a maverick. I don’t agree with all his positions, but then I don’t agree totally with any of the candidates.
Like you, I marvel at his ability to soldier on at his age and with his health deficits from his days in Hanoi. He is a true hero and, as you say, a national treasure. Though he’s not my first choice for President, if he should be the candidate, I’ll support him wholeheartedly.
Dec 14, 2007 - 9:11 pm James- The Historian:Edwards is the lowest category of used car attorney: he is a greedy class action predator, not a leader. We’ve had a spinmiester in the Oval Office and we do not need to repeat that mistake.
http://www.greensrealworld.blogspot.com
Dec 15, 2007 - 1:35 pm Russell:The MSM {Marxist-Socialist Media} controls all major information sources and are now “waterboarding” us with their phony polls…Huckabee today…Thompson three months ago…Dean four years ago. They most fear Romney, elected in Mass. as Governor by an electorate overwhelmingly Democrat. Aside from the several unrealistic possibilities pushed to the media center stage [the Ron Paul blimp et al.] Ronney is touted incessantly, not as a Christian but a Morman. Scary. Neither Rudy nor McCain are feared as much as Romney by the MSM. Why? Perhaps because a large number of young soccer moms vote. They did in Mass.
Dec 16, 2007 - 11:02 am gs:Give his past injuries and health problems, and his age, his current break-neck pace is nothing short of miraculous.
Since human life expectancy continues to increase, McCain’s age (71) is not prohibitive–but note that his father died at 70, and his paternal grandfather at 61. If McCain is nominated, I will scrutinize his running mate more closely than usual.
IMO commenter Jimmy J. makes an important point about McCain:
Exactly. Even though McCain is closer to the mainstream than Ronald Reagan was in 1980, McCain comes across as a maverick. In contrast, Reagan presented himself as an alternative (and backed that up with his successful executive record as governor).
Dec 17, 2007 - 2:13 pm