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Jimmy Carter and the Dark Side - (Exposes Carter)
GREG LEWIS.ORG ^ | AUGUST 26, 2003 | GREG LEWIS

Posted on 12/14/2004 8:02:15 PM PST by CHARLITE

The ineptitude of the administration of President James Earl ("Jumma") Carter seemed to me for a long time simply to be what happens when you put a bumbling, indecisive naif in a position of serious power. Lately, however, I've come to see the dark side of Jimmy Carter, and let me tell you, it's not only ugly and disgusting, it's pathologically dangerous.

Neither Jumma nor Bubba, the two surviving Democrat ex-Presidents, has the decency or the respect for the office he once held to keep his pie-hole shut and refrain from criticizing the current Commander-in-Chief. But of the two, although Clinton is perhaps the peskier (he is somewhat more direct and certainly commands greater immediate influence), since we've seen nothing but his dark side, at least we know what we're dealing with. Where Carter is concerned, the fact that his efforts at international statesmanship appear to come from a well-meaning, God-fearing man actually makes him much more dangerous than Clinton.

That mushy, feel-good persona Carter manages to project is in fact a blind for a man who sympathizes with and overtly supports murderous dictatorships of every stripe. If I had to describe it in psychological terms, I'd say that Carter is a masochist who will do anything to validate his sense of his own worthlessness by ceding power to sadists happy to oblige him as he acts out, on an international stage, a string of perverse fantasies. The most appropriate image I can think of to characterize Carter's dark side is that of the ex-President in leather underwear, blindfolded and hogtied, awaiting the sting of the lash at the hands of a tyrannical monster, perhaps a Kim Jong Il or an Ayatollah Khomeini. It's a nightmare worthy of Michel Foucault. In such situations, the submissive become no less monstrous than their torturers.

While professed-Christian Carter publicly lamented (in a Playboy Magazine interview, for God's sake) the fact that he had "lusted in [his] heart" after women (a perfectly normal minor failing of most human males, and some human females, I would assert), he seemed equally unable to resist the lure of totalitarianism, which lure unfortunately managed to escape the relative inconsequentiality of confinement in his heart to become something that led him to sell U.S. interests down the river on more than one occasion.

Among Carter's crowning legislative achievements, for instance, was that he "gave back" the Panama Canal to its host nation on the flimsiest of pretenses, namely that the Canal somehow rightfully belonged to Panamanians. This had to be Carter's masochistic dark side kicking in, causing him to bend over in the name of some perverse notion of justice which presumed that big old, nasty old America had, in a fit of imperialist expansionism, snatched the Panama Canal from its rightful owners and, for the past three quarters of a century, had used it as if it were her (America's) own. Nothing could be further from the truth.

In fact, in 1903, after helping Panama gain its independence from Colombia — which, to be fair, had rejected America's proposals for taking over completion of the Canal — the U.S. paid the newly independent nation $10 million for the purchase of the property on which the Canal was then being constructed. We also paid France $40 million for the rights to take over the Canal project, which the French at the time controlled. Not only was the Canal not Carter's to give away, by doing so he weakened both America's economic and security interests in Central America and her standing with regard to how she honored her agreements and protected her interests around the world. All in the name, I would assert, of Carter's utterly naive and perversely masochistic understanding of the dynamics of international affairs.

The Panama Canal giveaway is one of many examples of how Carter has demonstrated in his dealings and policies that he is not much more than a bewildered schoolboy, way out of his depth, a fundamentally good kid who has taken the lessons of his youth too literally and has allowed them to skew his ability to make sense of what's going on around him by forcing him to view events in terms of absolutes.

Nowhere is this perverse propensity of Carter's better demonstrated than in his "handling" of Iran. Early in his Presidency, Carter began putting pressure on the Shah of Iran to correct "human rights" violations. These pressures eventually took the form of impossible demands that, because acquiescing to them weakened the Shah's position, were instrumental in the overthrow of the Iranian government (which was, if not a model of western liberal democracy, at least a U.S. ally and a westernizing influence in the Middle East) and the installation of the Marxist-Islamist government of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Let the record of the past 50 years show that human rights in Iran never looked so good as in the quarter century preceding the 1979 regime change precipitated by the Carter administration's policies. Carter, true to the form that would come to characterize his diplomatic forays, took the side of the real human-rights monster, in this case Khomeini, when faced with a choice.

This debacle would come back to bite Carter in the ass big-time, and very quickly, in the form of the Iran hostage crisis. His bungling of that situation was arguably the straw that broke the camel's back with regard to his chances for re-election. The lack of principled resolve which characterized his handling of the crisis would become another hallmark of his approach to international affairs.

You'd think that Carter might have learned the lesson that despots are not to be dealt with in good faith after, in the passive-aggressive fashion that typifies so many masochists' relationships, he had paved the way for Khomeini to assume power, only to have the Islamist despot plunge a knife into his (Carter's) back. But no-o-o-o. Not Jumma. Not this unapologetic schoolboy who perversely can see no wrong in true wrongdoers and who can see no right in those who uphold justice and democracy.

Since the decisive termination of his Presidency by Ronald Reagan in 1980, Carter has continued to make the ill-advised advocacy for human rights his theme. He has been a conspicuous member of numerous teams of international monitors assembled to insure the legitimacy of elections in Jamaica, Palestine, and Nicaragua, to name a few of many. One somewhat ungenerous commentator nailed the utter frivolity of Carter's efforts on this front by christening them "Bowling For Ballots."

Where matters of truly serious import are concerned, Carter has consistently been a veritable poster boy for giving in to tyrants around the world. This tendency reached its apogee during the Clinton Administration when Carter "negotiated" what amounted to the payment by the United States of hush money (in the form of oil and food shipments) to North Korea in return for the latter's "promise" to discontinue its nuclear weapons development programs.

Never mind that then-President Clinton actually gave credence to the Carter agreement. The fact is that no one with so much as a fortnight's experience in international diplomacy at the level of administrative assistant to the associate ambassador to whatever nation you want to name would have been so naive as to actually believe that Kim Jong Il had any intention of holding up his end of the bargain.

In the words of the rock group Devo's song "Space Girl Blues": "Sado-maso is the rule / You want them they don't want you." Carter is the very exemplar of the "maso" side of the sado-maso equation. He always seems to need to masochistically put U.S. interests at risk, perhaps in order to validate his twisted psyche, to demonstrate his utterly naive and erroneous assumption that, if we'll all just adopt a posture of submission, well, that guy wearing the black mask and the studded leather collar and brandishing the cat-o'-nine-tails will actually turn out to be a really good person. You'll see.

The point is that Carter, while he would (presumably) never consciously imperil the cause of democracy or the interests of the United States (I'm giving him the benefit of the doubt here), nonetheless, because he was (and is) clearly psychologically unequipped to deal with adult realities, has managed to influence international affairs in ways that promote tyranny and despotism and undermine the cause of freedom and democracy throughout the world. Carter has become, though he is no doubt incapable of realizing it, the unwitting tool of the current iteration of the Dark Side.

Comment:glewis9000@aol.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: ayatollahs; chineseruncanal; crackercommie; crisis; disasters; foreignpolicy; hostage; imbecile; iran; jimmycarter; khomeini; masochism; panamacanal; peanutbrain; revolution; shah
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To: Calpernia

Thanks for the ping!


41 posted on 12/14/2004 9:32:12 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: CHARLITE
Big item overlooked in this article, I think, is Jimmy met with Breshnev and declared the 80's were going to be this great decade of peaceful coexistence, after which Breshnev rained on his parade by invading Afghanistan. Also, Jimmy deliberately denied the Shah non-lethal riot control gear so the Shah's troops would have to fire into crowds (or not) thus insuring the success of the revolution.

It is not an overstatement that everything related to Islamic terror traces back to Carter's sell out of the Shah. Carter was viewed as pathetically inept when he lost reelection but his post presidency showed a real bent for leftist idiocy. Note that many democrat officials have done the same. (Mcnamara, Ramsey Clark, etc.)

42 posted on 12/14/2004 10:36:02 PM PST by Williams
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To: CHARLITE; All
-Recalling the Shah of Iran--

(C)old War Ghost- Cubans in Angola

43 posted on 12/15/2004 12:11:38 AM PST by backhoe (Just an old Keyboard Cowboy, ridin' the Trackball into the Dawn of Information...)
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To: mdhunter

I was an Army Intelligence Analyst, and in that type of position, you are thrust into positions of responsibility very quickly. Yes, I briefed Secretary of Defense Brown at 18, and I was 19 years old when I first took part in a briefing for the president, and 21 the next time. Do you know how old Alexander the Great was when he started to conquer the World? Did you know there were teenage Colonels in the Army Air Force in WWII? General Custer was barely out of West Point when he was brevetted to that rank, therefore in his early twenties. I can go on, but hopefully you're getting my point. Age is a number. Maturity is the thing. There are teenagers I would rely on for my life, and 40 year olds I wouldn't let walk my dog!


44 posted on 12/15/2004 1:25:55 AM PST by The Loan Arranger (The modern definition of 'racist' is someone who is winning an argument with a liberal.)
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To: CHARLITE

I've never understood Carter. I heard long ago that he was a closet Communist, but took it as just another rumor.

Carter's agreement with every single dictator and anti-West theorist out there makes me wonder if that first assessment isn't true. There are a whole lot of people who can hide behind religion and some who believe that Christ was a socialist.

Well, maybe in a couple of hundred years some biographer will write an insightful, incisive tome. Too bad I won't be around to read it!


45 posted on 12/15/2004 4:27:35 AM PST by OpusatFR
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To: Anti-Bubba182

Carter the prodigal communist peanut farmer with the sense of a dead snail.


46 posted on 12/15/2004 4:47:53 AM PST by No Surrender No Retreat
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To: CHARLITE
Yep. He and Slick Willy - the dynamic duo all right. Dynamite Duo might be more appropriate.
47 posted on 12/15/2004 5:44:55 AM PST by b4its2late (It's frustrating when you know all the answers, but nobody bothers to ask you the questions.)
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To: The Loan Arranger
Thank you for your service. Obviously, Carter didn't pay much attention to the briefings.
48 posted on 12/15/2004 5:46:48 AM PST by b4its2late (It's frustrating when you know all the answers, but nobody bothers to ask you the questions.)
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To: Rocky
He WANTS America to be brought low. There is absolutely, absolutely no other possible explanation for his behavior since leaving entering the White House.

Fixed it for ya.

Qwinn

49 posted on 12/15/2004 5:56:34 AM PST by Qwinn
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To: Qwinn
a fundamentally good kid.....

I do not agree. he is a bad kid and his recent defense of his grandson and the attack on Zell prove that..He has no decorum and while he tries to play this good warm man many of us know what "LUSTS IN HIS HEART."

50 posted on 12/15/2004 6:28:49 AM PST by alisasny (We get 4 more years, you get OBAMA...: ))
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To: alisasny

I don't disagree at all, so I'm not sure why you addressed that to me ;)

Qwinn


51 posted on 12/15/2004 6:41:06 AM PST by Qwinn
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To: Qwinn

OH I think you were the last post after mine so i accidentaly clicked the reply...

should have been to ALL : )


52 posted on 12/15/2004 6:42:49 AM PST by alisasny (We get 4 more years, you get OBAMA...: ))
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To: 0scill8r
Here you go:

CLICK HERE 
(14.6KB)

53 posted on 12/15/2004 10:04:31 AM PST by FreeKeys ("The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." -- Edmund Burke)
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To: Verginius Rufus
Good one! Here's another:

I'm a COMMUNIST DICTATOR, you USEFUL IDIOT!!!!!!
image source:  http://www.capmag.com/images2y346y/comics/cf/DuplomacyII-X.gif
found at:   http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?id=3024

54 posted on 12/15/2004 10:16:08 AM PST by FreeKeys (See "THE ANTI-AMERICANS" at http://freedomkeys.com/anti-americans.htm)
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To: SandRat

The comparison is unfair to Neville Chamberlain. He may have been fooled by Hitler at Munich, but he wasn't the worst of the lot among British politicians at that time...Churchill has some good things to say about him. About Carter, on the other hand...he may have done something right in his four years (even a stopped clock...) but it's hard to think of what it might have been.


55 posted on 12/15/2004 11:23:20 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: xJones

I always thought his wife looked strained and unhappy. Jimmy was such a phony. Maybe he browbeats her. Who knows. I only always felt she wasn't a very happy person.


56 posted on 12/15/2004 11:32:57 AM PST by Marysecretary (Thank you, Lord, for FOUR MORE YEARS!!!)
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To: SandRat
You seem to have figured a way to bring Neville Chamberlain back to life

Lol...That Brit hit the nail on the head!
57 posted on 12/15/2004 11:34:23 AM PST by mugs99 (Restore the Constitution)
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To: stevem

I agree with your assessment of Carter. A long time ago, I believed that Carter was just a bumbling, foolish, do-gooder. In recent years, I have come to see him for the evil America-hating commie that he has always been.


58 posted on 12/15/2004 12:14:21 PM PST by penowa
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To: CHARLITE

Although the Norwegians liked him enough to confer the Nobel prize on his unworthy self, the guy is a total loser in every respect. Of all the loser RAT presidents, he is the only one who almost every week insists upon proving his incompetence and lack of natural brain power. Clinton, at least, usually waits a month before getting media coverage, but not Jimmuh. He was on TV the other night pontificating and I could scarcely stant to watch, so I cut him off.


59 posted on 12/15/2004 12:46:50 PM PST by Paulus Invictus
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To: CHARLITE
...Carter has demonstrated in his dealings and policies that he is not much more than a bewildered schoolboy, way out of his depth...

I disagree.

Karter is a cracker-commie.

60 posted on 12/15/2004 12:52:05 PM PST by JesseHousman
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