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Exploiting Tragedy
The American Spectator ^ | 09 December 2004 | Shawn Macomber

Posted on 12/09/2004 4:08:04 PM PST by Lando Lincoln

The simple existence of a connection to an event may be a personally tragic and heartrending thing, but it does not bestow carte blanche moral authority upon one's beliefs. My grandfather, for example, was shot several times during the course of the Korean War, but that does not suddenly make any opinion I have about that war sacrosanct. Likewise, if my father were to die in a hot air balloon accident, I might criticize the company that made the basket or the sandbags or whatever failed, but I would not instantly become a qualified expert on how to reform the hot air balloon industry.

No one with a conscience would ever attempt to downgrade the pain and horror the families and friends of those murdered on September 11 have gone through. They have been caught up personally in a terrible moment of history. For the rest of us, the terrorist attacks are a national tragedy. For them, it is personal, with the world events since inevitably colored by their own shattered lives.

Nevertheless, just as one can mourn Christopher Reeve without being morally willing to accept his call for embryonic stem cell research, there is no reason why those who see the obvious flaws in the current intelligence bill should feel as if they are somehow breaking faith en masse with the 9/11 families. Callous as it may sound, the vocal support of some 9/11 family members has no bearing whatsoever on whether the reforms in it are useful or not.

It is never a good sign when support for a measure is based on emotion rather than reasoned debate, and the intelligence bill is a textbook scenario. The bill's supporters have been shamelessly exploiting select victims to intimidate anyone who dares to question the counter-intuitive wisdom of solving a bureaucratic problem by adding another layer of bureaucracy and politicizing defense intelligence funding. They want to equate dissent with attacking the victim, and it has been a successful ploy.

"It was the persistence of the 9/11 families that created this commission, over the objection of the Bush Administration, and that demanded these reforms go forward," Democratic Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro said in a typical example of this rhetoric. "It is these families who remind us that we will not stop fighting to keep America's towns and cities safe."

The subtext? We dare you to question. We dare you to stand in the way. The set-up all sounds so heroic, doesn't it? Victims speaking truth to power as the power structure shakes before them. The television spots almost film themselves!

As usual, the truth was a little messier. While there were many 9/11 family members holding vigils across the country and at Ground Zero demanding the passage of the bill, another group representing some 300 family members who lost loved ones in the same tragedy were lobbying against it. This group, Families for a Stronger America, wanted tougher immigration and driver's licenses standards included in the bill or no bill at all. Apparently that took some of the romance out of the whole cause, so the vast majority of the media establishment quietly left those sound bites on the cutting room floor.

And it goes beyond the crass exploitation of 9/11 victims. Republican Congressman Joe Wilson appeared on MSNBC this week to somehow try and latch intelligence legislation to Pearl Harbor Day, making the asinine suggestion that the Japanese sneak attack could have somehow been prevented by the bill. Who will stand up and argue against statements like, "No more Pearl Harbors"? Not to be outdone, Democrats played the same card shortly thereafter.

"While we as a nation are united in this fight, there are clearly deep divisions within the Republican Party, divisions that are impeding our fight against terrorism," McAuliffe said. "Moving forward, it is my sincere hope that the Republicans running Washington will stop playing their political games and start fighting for the American people, just as our honored veterans did 63 years ago."

First of all, someone send these guys a memo: The Japanese are our friends now and there isn't going to be another Pearl Harbor, whether they pass their grandstanding little bill or not. A little more care and focus on Islamic extremists plotting the next attack -- not 9/11, which has already come and gone -- would be nice. Aside from a few vague possibilities that may or may not come to fruition, I'm still waiting for someone to show me the practical utility of the bill, aside from create a great PR opportunity for folks like McAuliffe and Wilson. But, then, there's plenty of regression and obstructionism in the bill, so it's not as if it won't accomplish anything. But beyond that, do today's political powerbrokers really believe they are so touched with brilliance that they could have prevented all past wrongs, including Pearl Harbor? Do they really believe they alone can guarantee all future safety? One would think failure on so many fronts -- political, economic, social -- these last four years would eliminate some of the hubris. Instead, it only grows.

So now they tell us -- the 9/11 families, the Pearl Harbor families, and all the rest of the common-folk -- that this is the most important bill that has ever lain before our nation. They invoke every fear and insist that they are the only ones who have any idea how to keep us safe.

And why again are we supposed to believe them? Were these or were these not the same lawmakers who sat on their hands throughout the '90s in a rare example of bipartisanship as terrorists planned, plotted, threatened and attacked at will? Yet now because some enterprising politicians cherry-picked victims to score political points, we're supposed to all shut up and accept Nancy Pelosi's wild promises of total salvation because of a single piece of legislation? This is a game of political brinksmanship, and nothing more. Our leaders today believe only audacious claims will ever capture our attention, so they forego truth and reason in search of a promise unlike any other we've heard before. Then they issue a press release and forget the whole thing ever happened, because it's off to the next race. These people's words and deeds should deliver them shame, not trust; ridicule, not fawning respect. And we will never be safe so long as our leaders are so pathetically craven and weak.


Shawn Macomber is a reporter for The American Spectator. He runs the website Return of the Primitive.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: intelligencereform

Lando

1 posted on 12/09/2004 4:08:04 PM PST by Lando Lincoln
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To: Lando Lincoln
"Callous as it may sound, the vocal support of some 9/11 family members has no bearing whatsoever on whether the reforms in it are useful or not."

This does not in the least sound callous. Naturally I find the author very insightful because I have been of this opinion since this whole "9/11 families" nonsense started.

2 posted on 12/09/2004 4:11:58 PM PST by Bahbah
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To: Lando Lincoln
Good read and the only statement I can take issue with is this:

Apparently that took some of the romance out of the whole cause, so the vast majority of the media establishment quietly left those sound bites on the cutting room floor.

The lamestream media can't cut what they never filmed.

3 posted on 12/09/2004 4:15:23 PM PST by Vigilanteman (crime would drop like a sprung trapdoor if we brought back good old-fashioned hangings)
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To: Lando Lincoln

BTTT


4 posted on 12/09/2004 4:16:22 PM PST by spodefly (I've posted nothing but BTTT over 1000 times!!!)
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To: Bahbah

Yes, but it's not politically correct to disagree with anyone with victim status.


5 posted on 12/09/2004 5:05:39 PM PST by tiki (Won one against the Flipper)
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To: Lando Lincoln

What did the 9/11 commission address that had not already been addressed and acted upon? Coordination of intelligence? That was supposed to be under Dept. of Homeland Security, the destruction of the "Gorelick wall" and The Patriot Act. No drivers license for illegals? There are folks at the state DMV's salivating at the profit potential of this scam to come(teenagers will be priced out of the market for good fake ID's though) I don't feel any safer after this legislation or any of the promised followup junk to come.


6 posted on 12/09/2004 5:31:53 PM PST by Figment (Ich bin ein Jesuslander)
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To: Lando Lincoln

Absolutamundo.

Well said - this is exactly how I feel.

The party on the Left, the grand appeasers, would still have us bury our heads in the sand and not bring the fight to the terrorists' back yard.

I'm sick and tired of and incredibly angry that they are so audacious and outrageous to try to paint themselves to be the defenders of freedom and protectors of us all when they reject 99.99999% of what it takes to make us safe.

NOTE TO LIBERALS: We can't defend ourselves to victory in the War on Islamofascist terrorists.


7 posted on 12/09/2004 9:26:39 PM PST by PowerPro (DOUBLE W - He's STILL the one. Now don't that feel GOOD????)
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To: Lando Lincoln

bttt


8 posted on 12/09/2004 11:03:03 PM PST by lainde
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