Posted on 12/08/2003 7:30:39 AM PST by dead
OF the making of books there is no end, especially in the US on political topics.
Just now, though, there is a striking difference in the range.
Half the new titles read as if they had come straight from the Socialist Workers' Party bookshop. What about The Bush Haters' Handbook or Thieves in High Places: They've Stolen Our Country and it's Time to Take it Back. The theme of whole shelves is easy to summarise: George Bush is a lying, cheating, thieving dumb scumbag - and he was never elected President anyway.
If you believe, as all sensible persons should, that the liberal left has nothing of value to contribute to debate, this does simplify browsing. There is no need to waste time with books whose authors' envenomed dementia shrieks from the title page.
There is a new joke in Washington which also captures the anti-Bush mood. In a school for the children of the affluent, a teacher asks her class of little boys what their fathers do. The answers are predictable: lawyer, doctor, accountant - until little Johnny. "My dad's a stripper in a gay bar." "What!" "Yes, miss. He takes off all his clothes and people do unmentionable things to him." The schoolmistress rapidly changes the subject, but at the end of the lesson she asks Johnny if his father is really a gay stripper. "Oh no, miss, of course not. But you couldn't expect me to admit to the other kids that my dad works in the Bush administration."
All this will come as tidings of great joy to Bush haters international. In Paris, they will be delighted to learn that even in the imperial capital, the bookstores are aflame with revolt; surely the regime of the hated tyrant Bush must be approaching its end?
Well, actually, no.
On the contrary; the book wars will assist Mr Bush's re-election.
Most normal Americans do not want to hate their President and they resent those who try to incite them to do so.
All presidents have an electoral advantage. They are not merely politicians; they are the commander-in-chief and the head of state, which enables them to rise above partisanship and to take on some of the attributes of monarchy. On polling day, this is probably worth about 5pc. In close elections, that can be decisive. In the last century, only three presidents who were themselves elected to office were unseated at the next election.
The problems of attacking an incumbent president even made matters easier for Bill Clinton, who was an implausible monarch. In politics, hatred is a bad counsellor. Though Mr Clinton may have been a liar and an adulterer, he was not a drug dealer or a murderer.
In other circumstances, it might have been possible to undermine President Clinton by a light touch of mockery. But Mr Clinton's hard-right critics, not themselves long on humour, were not satisfied with laughing at his moral inadequacies. They were determined to portray him as a monster. This did not work.
President Bush is now the focus of hatred and wild allegations. This is equally unlikely to damage him, for its sole appeal is to those who would die under torture rather than vote Republican. It is also helping to ensure that when the Democratic Party selects its presidential candidate, it will choose the figure least likely to have a chance of beating Mr Bush. The magnetism of hatred is pulling the Democratic Party away from electability.
At moments, Howard Dean, the Democrats' front-runner, has seemed to revel in the hatred. Recently, he even appeared to give credence to the canard that the Saudis had given Mr Bush advance warning about 11 September, which the President disregarded because he wanted an excuse to invade Iraq and hand it over to big oil. That is as loony a tune as the certifiable ultra-right ever tried to play at President Clinton's non-funeral. The difference is that the Republicans' deranged supporters were never allowed near a presidential campaign, let alone at the head of the ticket.
Mr Dean was expected to make the early running in the Democrats' campaign by enthusing party activists. Then, as the serious candidates gained momentum, he would fade. That has not happened. The supposedly serious candidates have been bad at creating momentum. This is especially true of Joe Lieberman, the one Democrat who does look like a plausible president.
Mr Dean, on the other hand, has not slowed down. His team had a clever idea: to use the internet to raise support and money. As a result, Howard Dean appears to have more of both than the other Democratic challengers put together.
It makes sense for any candidate to appeal to his party's more extreme supporters in order to persuade them to turn out in the primary elections, where not that many people vote. Once the primaries are over, the victor will normally move back towards the centre, to have the best chance of winning the presidency. But Mr Dean seems so confident that he is already making the occasional centrist gesture, even before the primaries have started.
The other week, he reminded his party that it was necessary to win the support of southern white males: the sort of chaps who would have a Confederate flag in the back of their pick-up truck. Howard Dean was right. It would be very hard for the Democrats to capture the presidency without carrying some southern states. But all his Democratic rivals chose to ignore the psephological truth of Mr Dean's assessment, and tried to use the Confederate flag to damage him.
It has not succeeded. A lot could still go wrong for George Bush between now and the first Tuesday in November. In Iraq, he is at the mercy of events which he cannot control. But on present evidence, his political opponents seems determined to do everything possible to ensure his re-election.
Perot's effect, IMHO, was not limited to the number of votes cast for him, but also consisted of his constant criticism of President Bush, and little or no criticism of Clinton.
But lets say it again and again....President Bush would not have been defeated in 1992 if Ross Perot had not been there to manipulate the election. There would never have been a President Clinton. Why do journalist continually fail to mention this? It is a large factor in history.
Because Perot didnt manipulate anything. He ran a legal campaign for office, and received a small but substantial portion of the vote. How is that manipulation?
Bush I lost because he broke his promises to conservatives, and the Clinton machine was particularly adept at talking a minor economic downturn into the next great depression.
Are you certain, Mr. Anderson?
Good quote. I just hope its true..
He preyed on the gullible. He ran even though he never wanted to be president, as he said many times durng his campaign (didn't he even drop out for a while?). He ran to defeat Bush, who he hated, and for no other reason. He met all his objectives because he manipulated the voters...he knew "It's the voters, stupid." The combination of Perot voters and Clinton Conservatives did the rest of us in.
I wish the press could figure this out. We don't like being condesended upon. I've had it with this sactimonious, preachy press.
This weekend, my wife and I went to see an IMAX movie on the Coral Reef and got preached to for over half the movies length on how to save the reef. I came out feeling a bit ill (just as I do after listening to liberal reporters) and I asked myself, why do I pay good money to get preach propaganda, when I want entertainment?
It would be good for the press to think about this for a while.
Like Nader or Buchanan, I'm sure he really wanted to win, but did not realistically expect to.
I don't believe that we all have to toe the line to the two party system. Perot, Buchanan, Nader, Jon Anderson, Pat Paulson, the Libertarians, the Greens, whatever. As long as they run a legal campaign, I don't really care what their motivations are. They are welcome in the fray.
And as to "preying on the gullible", the gullible are the swing voters that every candidate and party chases with canned slogans and faux-pleasant imagery. I blame the gullible for their own gullibility.
I think Dean is going to pull HARD to the center once he gets the nomination. I think that is his plan all along, he is just USING the rabid hatred on the left to get him over that major hump.
I think Dean is going to pull HARD to the center once he gets the nomination. I think that is his plan all along, he is just USING the rabid hatred on the left to get him over that major hump.
The Deaniacs are going to squeal so loudly when that happens! Hell lose a significant portion of them to Nader, if hes running again.
Just further illustrating that Dean is the GOPs dream opponent.
Then was he lying when he said that he did not want to be president? Manipulation can be done legally; it happens every day. Don't be afraid to admit that he manipulated people.
True, but what are those people gonna do, "waste" their vote on Nader (if he even runs?). Like the author says, his support comes from those crazed democrats who this time, aren't going to vote "against" Dean.
Having said that, I think you are right, a Dean candidacy is the "briar patch" the GOP has been dreaming of. Recall how McCain came out looking like a crazed, angry guy during the race for the Republican nomination last time? Well Dean is gonna make that guy look like Ben Stein!
May have been? Was not?
He can try that all he wants. He's not going to succeed. In the world of New Media - the internet, talk radio, etc - presidential candidates can't sit back any longer, smugly assured that the "mainstream" news media will cover the campaign only as a horse race, not even remembering what happened the day before yesterday. Everything Dean is saying and doing right now is going to be thrown right back in his face every single day next fall.
This should have read "Though Mr Clinton was a liar and an adulterer, he may not have been a drug dealer or a murderer."
Writer got possibility and certainty reversed. Slip of the illiberal wrist.
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