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To: Alas Babylon!

AB, I suggested the very same thing as post one; In addition, thought we should have teams by states/counties/districts with dossiers of possible candidates, the incumbent, their financials, voting records, where they speak, boards they sit on and who's in their pockets... things that could come up for our guys (just in case), and previous misreportings/rumors debunked before they come to the table (obviously, if true... that's different). Kudos, i'm in.

U.S. must prove it's a staying power
Mark Steyn

On the radio a couple of weeks ago, Hugh Hewitt suggested to me the terrorists might try to pull a Spain on the U.S. elections. You'll recall (though evidently many Americans don't) that in 2004 hundreds of commuters were slaughtered in multiple train bombings in Madrid. The Spaniards responded with a huge street demonstration of supposed solidarity with the dead, all teary passivity and signs saying "Basta!" -- "Enough!" By which they meant not "enough!" of these murderers but "enough!" of the government of Prime Minister Aznar, and of Bush and Blair, and troops in Iraq. A couple of days later, they voted in a socialist government, which immediately withdrew Spanish forces from the Middle East. A profitable couple of hours' work for the jihad.
I said to Hugh I didn't think that would happen this time round. The enemy aren't a bunch of simpleton Pushtun yakherds, but relatively sophisticated at least in their understanding of us. We're all infidels, but not all infidels crack the same way. If they'd done a Spain -- blown up a bunch of subway cars in New York or vaporized the Empire State Building -- they'd have re-awoken the primal anger of September 2001. With another mound of corpses piled sky-high, the electorate would have stampeded into the Republican column and demanded the U.S. fly somewhere and bomb someone.

The jihad crowd know that. So instead they employed a craftier strategy. Their view of America is roughly that of the British historian Niall Ferguson -- that the Great Satan is the first superpower with ADHD. They reasoned that if you could subject Americans to the drip-drip-drip of remorseless water torture in the deserts of Mesopotamia -- a couple of deaths here, a market bombing there, cars burning, smoke over the city on the evening news, day after day after day, and ratcheted up a notch or two for the weeks before the election -- you could grind down enough of the electorate and persuade them to vote like Spaniards, without even realizing it. And it worked. You can rationalize what happened on Tuesday in the context of previous sixth-year elections -- 1986, 1958, 1938, yada yada -- but that's not how it was seen around the world, either in the chancelleries of Europe, where they're dancing conga lines, or in the caves of the Hindu Kush, where they would also be dancing conga lines if Mullah Omar hadn't made it a beheading offense. And, as if to confirm that Tuesday wasn't merely 1986 or 1938, the president responded to the results by firing the Cabinet officer most closely identified with the prosecution of the war and replacing him with a man associated with James Baker, Brent Scowcroft and the other "stability" fetishists of the unreal realpolitik crowd.

Whether or not Rumsfeld should have been tossed overboard long ago, he certainly shouldn't have been tossed on Wednesday morning. For one thing, it's a startlingly brazen confirmation of the politicization of the war, and a particularly unworthy one: It's difficult to conceive of any more public diminution of a noble cause than to make its leadership contingent on Lincoln Chafee's Senate seat. The president's firing of Rumsfeld was small and graceless.

Still, we are all Spaniards now. The incoming speaker says Iraq is not a war to be won but a problem to be solved. The incoming defense secretary belongs to a commission charged with doing just that. A nostalgic boomer columnist in the Boston Globe argues that honor requires the United States to "accept defeat," as it did in Vietnam. Didn't work out so swell for the natives, but to hell with them.

What does it mean when the world's hyperpower, responsible for 40 percent of the planet's military spending, decides that it cannot withstand a guerrilla war with historically low casualties against a ragbag of local insurgents and imported terrorists? You can call it "redeployment" or "exit strategy" or "peace with honor" but, by the time it's announced on al-Jazeera, you can pretty much bet that whatever official euphemism was agreed on back in Washington will have been lost in translation. Likewise, when it's announced on "Good Morning Pyongyang" and the Khartoum Network and, come to that, the BBC.

For the rest of the world, the Iraq war isn't about Iraq; it's about America, and American will. I'm told that deep in the bowels of the Pentagon there are strategists wargaming for the big showdown with China circa 2030/2040. Well, it's steady work, I guess. But, as things stand, by the time China's powerful enough to challenge the United States it won't need to. Meanwhile, the guys who are challenging us right now -- in Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, North Korea and elsewhere -- are regarded by the American electorate like a reality show we're bored with. Sorry, we don't want to stick around to see if we win; we'd rather vote ourselves off the island.

Two weeks ago, you may remember, I reported on a meeting with the president, in which I'd asked him the following: "You say you need to be on the offense all the time and stay on the offense. Isn't the problem that the American people were solidly behind this when you went in and you toppled the Taliban, when you go in and you topple Saddam. But when it just seems to be a kind of thankless semi-colonial policing defensive operation with no end . . . I mean, where is the offense in this?"

On Tuesday, the national security vote evaporated, and, without it, what's left for the GOP? Congressional Republicans wound up running on the worst of all worlds -- big bloated porked-up entitlements-a-go-go government at home and a fainthearted tentative policing operation abroad. As it happens, my new book argues for the opposite: small lean efficient government at home and muscular assertiveness abroad. It does a superb job, if I do say so myself, of connecting war and foreign policy with the domestic issues. Of course, it doesn't have to be that superb if the GOP's incoherent inversion is the only alternative on offer.

As it is, we're in a very dark place right now. It has been a long time since America unambiguously won a war, and to choose to lose Iraq would be an act of such parochial self-indulgence that the American moment would not endure, and would not deserve to. Europe is becoming semi-Muslim, Third World basket-case states are going nuclear, and, for all that 40 percent of planetary military spending, America can't muster the will to take on pipsqueak enemies. We think we can just call off the game early, and go back home and watch TV.

It doesn't work like that. Whatever it started out as, Iraq is a test of American seriousness. And, if the Great Satan can't win in Vietnam or Iraq, where can it win? That's how China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Venezuela and a whole lot of others look at it. "These Colors Don't Run" is a fine T-shirt slogan, but in reality these colors have spent 40 years running from the jungles of Southeast Asia, the helicopters in the Persian desert, the streets of Mogadishu. ... To add the sands of Mesopotamia to the list will be an act of weakness from which America will never recover.

http://www.suntimes.com/news/steyn/132340,CST-EDT-steyn12.article




Pacifists are cowards and deluded morons

http://calsun.canoe.ca/News/Columnists/Robinson_Ian/2006/11/12/2326533.html

Yesterday was Remembrance Day and I am grateful I did not encounter someone wearing a white poppy.

Because the urge to backhand the wearer across the face and tear the symbol of disrespect from that individual's lapel would, I fear, be almost overpowering.

I try to be a civilized man, but when I hear of those profaning one of the most sacred symbols of our culture, it makes me a little crazy.

The red poppy symbolizes those who have been slain in the defence of our country and culture.

It sprang from the poem written by Canadian military physician Lt.-Col. John McCrae, In Flanders Fields during the First World War.

"In Flanders fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses row on row

That mark our place"

Apparently, poppies grow very well in ground torn by artillery and fertilized with human corpses.

The simple, powerful verses urge us to remember those who died defending freedom. It commands that we never forget those sacrifices. It demands we remain forever vigilant in the defence of liberty.

Canadian men and women fighting in Afghanistan are the direct inheritors of that tradition of sacrifice that extends from Lt.-Col. McCrae's time through those who fought in the Second World War and Korea and I am proud of them, as all Canadians should be.

The white poppy was first introduced in England when Great Britain wasn't so great, in 1933. That nation was in the thrall of the morally bankrupt creed of pacifism -- that weakness was one of the root causes of the Second World War -- and designed as an anti-war symbol to "honour" civilian dead.

It is one thing to honour civilian dead of wars. It is another to attach that to the current anti-war movement whose website -- just Google "White Poppy" and click on the first thing that pops up -- boasts the motto: "War is a crime against humanity. I renounce war, and am therefore determined not to support any kind of war. I am also determined to work for the removal of all kinds of war."

So fighting Kaiser Wilhem in 1914 was evil. Never mind that the Germans waged aggressive war against the West, conquered Belgium and huge chunks of France.

So fighting Adolf Hitler in 1939 was wrong. We should have sat upon our hands and waited for him to finish off the Jews and enslave all of Europe and Russia.

Fighting the Empire of Japan, according to these fools, was also wrong. We should have stood idly by while the Japanese Army raped and pillaged its way across China and the the Far East and enslaved millions.

When the totalitarian North Koreans and Chinese swept across an internationally recognized border, we should have engaged them in spirited debate. After all, all war is a "crime against humanity."

And when Islamic fascists decided to declare war on the Western world because our values don't include draping our women beneath barbecue tarps to protect men from lustful thoughts, we should have just shrugged our shoulders and let them kill us.

Every war fought by Western nations over the last century can be declared a moral war. We didn't start them. But we finished them and as a nation and as individuals, we are are better for it.

The only true crime against humanity is the morally bankrupt creed of pacifism.

Pacifists are cowards.

All of them.

Any human who refuses to act in defence of his person, his family, his nation, his culture, is a deluded moron. A dangerous deluded moron.

The white poppy shouldn't be white.

It should be yellow.

That way it would match the stripe up the backs of those who wear it.

http://calsun.canoe.ca/News/Columnists/Robinson_Ian/2006/11/12/2326533.html



For Conservatives, It’s Back to Basics
(Advice from the NYTs? I don't think so)

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/12/weekinreview/12kirkpatrick.html?_r=1&ref=weekinreview&oref=slogin
-------

Since MSNBC decided to tell us how Rummy feels (yeah right, hence no link), I took a cue from a commenter to go see Rummy in person instead (video). Most excellent.

Landon Lecture Series Page (KSU)
(Rummy starts at 16:00
http://ome.ksu.edu/lectures/landon/past.html#2006

The Donald Rumsfeld I Know That You Don't Know
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1737301/posts


355 posted on 11/12/2006 8:11:05 AM PST by AliVeritas (In Victory, Be magnanimous, in Defeat, Defiant!)
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To: AliVeritas
Great post here, I have always liked and respected Rummy and always will, anyone who thinks that he did not carry out the will of our President is undoubtedly mistaken.
497 posted on 11/12/2006 9:45:27 AM PST by rodguy911 (Support The New media, Ticket the Drive-bys, --America-The land of the Free because of the Brave-)
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To: AliVeritas

Three very different and very powerful references, but ones that come together very well. I'm particularly moved by the piece on the white poppy.

Thank you. One of the best things about FR is the education we get on things we should already know, but most of us don't.


906 posted on 11/12/2006 5:46:09 PM PST by Phsstpok (Often wrong, but never in doubt)
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