Posted on 07/21/2010 6:49:47 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Republicans will shortly need to stand for something more than just being against much of the Obama agenda. Only a superior and detailed alternative can win more lasting support than just a midterm correction.
Obama, after all with nationalized health care, amnesty, cap-and-trade, financial overhaul, government absorption of private enterprise, takeover of the student-loan industry, and gorge-the-beast deficits that will ensure a generation of higher taxes at least seems to have some sort of plan to change America.
The absurdity of $1.5 trillion annual deficits is easy to run on; but where in the budget should we freeze or cut spending? To restore fiscal sanity, we need details rather than vague promises to reduce red ink to a particular percentage of GDP. Is there to be an across-the-board spending freeze or targeted cuts? How much, if at all, does defense get cut? If it does, where and how?
Fairly or not, we are at the stage where, at least in the short term, each proposed dollar of tax cuts needs to be matched by a proposed dollar of spending reduction. The supply-side notion of expanding federal revenue through tax cuts and business stimulation remains of course valid. But in the here and now, the public needs concrete reality, not assurances about more money to come in within a year or two.
Amnesty under the euphemism of comprehensive immigration reform would be a disaster. But in critiquing Obamas policies, Republicans need to explain precisely how employer sanctions, increased patrols, and the completion of the fence will result in near-zero illegal entry. Then they must detail what exactly to do with the existing population of illegal aliens, which may well exceed 12 million of whom most are neither felons nor unemployed.
What exactly is earned citizenship, and how does it differ from amnesty? Does one have to go back to Mexico to apply for readmission for American residency or to obtain citizenship? How would fines be levied and collected? Are we to close the border first, and let various agencies incrementally deport illegal aliens over several years as they come across them?
If the Republicans are not prepared to answer these questions and more, then they will get hit with the charge of advocating mass deportations and with 60 Minutesstyle stories of a valedictorian Victoria Lopez or a football star Jorge Garcia detained during a traffic stop and cruelly put on a bus to Oaxaca.
Obama seems lost on Afghanistan. He avoided General McChrystal for months. He foolishly, as with his promises on Guantanamo, set an arbitrary date for phased troop withdrawals. And he is imprisoned now within his own self-created paradox of the supposed good war in Afghanistan turned bad, and the bad war in Iraq turned good.
But what is the alternative? Can Republicans articulate a simple three-step policy that will set out: (1) our objectives and aims in Afghanistan, (2) how we are going to achieve them, and (3) a rough estimate of the costs and sacrifices necessary? Can they explain why continuing the war is preferable to leaving? Without some specificity about what would constitute victory and how we can secure it, we are back to Nixons campaign promise of a secret plan to abruptly end the Vietnam War, which turned out to be Vietnamization stretched out over four years.
Obamas reset foreign policy is heading for a Carter-like collision with reality. But so far has anyone in the opposition explicitly explained why the new alignment policy is wrong, and how it can be changed? Should we reemphasize our ties with Britain, Colombia, Israel, and India, while ceasing to talk to Iran and Syria? What would the conservative reset-button diplomacy with Russia and China look like?
It is easy to denounce the pathetic apology tours, but what exactly is the Republican vision of how to explain an exceptional America without being haughty? Instead of U.N. guidance, is there to be a determined effort to encourage democratic and free-market nations to join America in resisting autocracy? Can we hear that Guantanamo both is a humane detention center and fulfills a need in a war in which terrorist killers do not fit the traditional criteria of the Geneva Conventions, as Eric Holder himself once explained? Could a Republican explain how these new $1.5 trillion deficits cripple U.S. foreign-policy options?
Cap-and-trade looms as a calamity. The billions Obama has spent on wind and solar subsidies seem to be yet another boondoggle. Fine but exactly how are we going to transition to new fuels without going broke? Will the Republicans explain why oil, natural gas, clean coal, and nuclear, hydroelectric, wind, and solar power are all necessary, and state the rough percentage of our energy profile that each should make up? Can they retool Drill, baby, drill for the post-BP age?
The more we learn about Obamas health-care solution, the more we see that it will be the source of vast new problems. Okay. But do the Republicans have a way to manage costs for the aged and ill, who in their last year often exceed the aggregate health-care expenditure of their entire life up until then? Can the opposition address that issue in ways other than dismissing death panels? Do kids between age 23 and their first job need health insurance? And if so, how are they going to get it? How does the middle-class family with a house, two cars, and a 401(k) not lose everything if the suddenly out-of-work father develops lymphoma? Or does it lose everything?
Entitlement costs are slowly strangling the American economy. Medicare and Social Security are unsustainable. We can all agree on that, and on the fact that the Democrats usual response is to demagogue anyone who points it out. But what exactly would Republicans do? Raise the age for Social Security eligibility? Raise Medicare premiums? The days of simply adding on prescription-drug benefits without the means to pay for them are long over. And yet the last time Republicans offered the solution of quasi-private retirement and health-care accounts, in 2005, they were massacred politically. Have they got better ideas now or a better notion of how to present these largely good ideas?
Cannot Republicans insist on an ethics pledge, so that the careers of a Charles Rangel and a Chris Dodd are not followed by another Jack Abramoff and Duke Cunningham?
Republican politicos will quite accurately lecture that presenting such detailed alternative plans would be foolhardy: The key now is simply to be against what an unpopular Obama is for. I accept that offering detailed solutions might well turn the public as much against the proposed medicine as against the original malignant disease.
Yet at some point, blanket Obama-bashing without a comprehensive alternative will turn stale. Critics of Obama if they are to be taken seriously will have to be about more than not being Obama. Instead, conservatives must identify exactly how to undo the Obama agenda and do so in a way that does not earn them the disdain that the Republican Congress earned between 2001 and 2006, and the Republican administration between 2005 and 2009.
We need some notion of a contracted agenda, so that conservative voters can hold conservative politicians to account in this age of anti-incumbency. Voters wanted closed borders, balanced budgets, ethical members of Congress, and less government between 2001 and 2006. They believed that all of that had been promised and then were sorely disappointed.
In short, conservative voters want to see something specific as much to keep their own honest as to defeat the other.
NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, the editor of Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome, and the author of The Father of Us All: War and History, Ancient and Modern.
If you line up the entire senior contingent of the GOP, you still wouldn’t be able to come up with an idea.
The only diff between the Obamaclowns and the Republiclowns is that the latter are slightly less loony.
All should be taken to the toilet and flushed....twice.
Three point plan
Stop the spending
Stop the Spending
Stop the spending
Bankruptcy is not an option.
The Tea Party shows the way. Support the Constitution. Support limited government. Spend less money. That’s “not Obama” in a way that resonates with people.
The gutless punk Republicans are afriad to embrace the one surge from WE the People that they can surf to an historic victory - the Tea Party Movement.
Don’t they understand that the media elites they are listening to are intentionally misleading them? Trent Lott and Lindsey Graham are NOT the way and following them will be a lonely path.
The Program must be revolutionary. Domestically, the commerce clause and taxing authority must be first priority. Starve the Beast!
As much as a plan, Republicans need principles they can stand on and demonstrate to the American people. Tell establishment Republicans they need a plan, and they will rush to copy Democrats. Ideas are a dime a dozen, and the intellectuals have the market cornered. We need the Constitution and liberty, less government scheming, and more freedom from individuals to get things moving again.
” Tell establishment Republicans they need a plan, and they will rush to copy Democrats. “
DING!!
We have a WINNAH!!!
Add a fourth: Republicans need to clean house and get rid of the rhinos. They also need to get their finances in order.
My plan would be start with FinReg and in order going back 50 years repeal every bill and act of the government.
Hansen is right.
Establishment Republicanism now has a track record of being 100% on board with bailouts, farm welfare, corporate welfare, financial firm welfare, ethanol production, big government, pork, global warmism, the “special place” of faggots in society, and so on and so forth.
Not merely disagreement in the ranks, mind you — a VOTING TRACK RECORD of SUPPORT for this nonsense.
Turning around and embracing conservative truth is going to be really, really tough for these jokers.
They can’t agree on a principled solid platform that offers rational alternatives to the ‘Rats — mainly because they pretty much believe the SAME as the ‘Rats.
Republicans NUMBER ONE concern is not the viability of sovereign America — it is GETTING THEIR SORRY ASSES RE-ELECTED so they can continue the party-hearty Washington gravy train they have boarded. Just like the ‘Rats.
When a principled, Reagan or Thatcher-like leader comes along, they do their damndest to run her out of town. I’m talking about Sarah Palin, of course. The establishment (R) pukes reserve their worst venom not for the internal enemies of this country (that would be the ‘Rats) but for those reformers that threaten to upset their apple cart of Washington goodies.
I hate the ‘Rats with a visceral hatred that will not be quenched.
But I hate the puke sellouts in the (R) party perhaps even more, because they squandered the trust of good Americans, trampled on us, and raped us and left us for dead.
If they regain power and haven’t learned their lesson, it’ll be the LAST chance they ever get. If they screw this up, may the party die and rot in hell. I hope things are different going forward — but being as they’re the Stupid Party, I’m not counting on it.
shhhhh ... The unspoken fourth, you don’t want to scare them before they are pushed off the cliff
In past elections, conservative candidates who talked in detail about all the policies they wanted to enact got portrayed as out-of-touch wonks in the media. Then they were sunk with a well-placed, simplistic torpedo charge by the leftists, who never mentioned any details of their OWN policies until after they were law.
These are not the Lincoln-Douglas debates. That world is not coming back (although the internet has some of its flavor.) The left killed us with sound bites and images, now they can die by them.
“once in office, repeal and undo everything the low-life Democrats did in the last two years.”
Get real. Unless “conservatives!” have a filibuster AND veto proof majority (which is highly unlikely), that just plain and simple ain’t gonna happen. If we don’t fix it in 2012 or impeachment before then, as Willie says its “Turn out the lights, the party’s over” except its not all good things must end, its all bad things are here to stay.
Be sure to keep in mind that William F. Buckley was a member of the Bilderbergers and Council of Foreign Relations. That places him in the “new world order” group. To be sure, he was a brilliant man who was instrumental, along with Goldwater, of getting conservative thought in the public eye. But, his aforementioned memberships are not consistent with today’s true conservatism.
The same thing can be said about Fred Barnes and William Kristol of the Weekly Standard.
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